Crime Log | Oct. 12 - Oct. 18
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Theft:
Philadelphia buildings, including several Penn college houses, will be evacuated Thursday as part of the Citywide Home Fire Drill.
During the first full month of school, students were able to focus a little more on classes and worry a little less about safety.
Answers to the recent hacking incident may be found by looking through the University’s decentralized computing system.
Burglary:
As a freshman, she attended a Daily Pennsylvanian training session. As a sophomore, she spent five nights per week editing. And now, as a 30-year-old reporter for The New York Times, Ashley Parker spends her days and nights on Mitt Romney’s campaign trail.
Sirens erupted at Penn Park Friday afternoon, pausing activities for a brief moment as visitors glanced anxiously at the loudspeakers. “Attention. Attention. This is a test,” the voice echoed, and everyone resumed play as the announcement continued.
Upload, “like,” comment — this mundane protocol may be driving a somewhat less simple and sobering phenomenon.
Assault:
Policing in West Philadelphia is getting personal.
Theft
An effort to make campus buildings safer has drawn both positive and negative responses from students.
Copabanana has added some stringent measures to their identification policy in order to crack down on underage drinking.
Those on and around campus in the past months enjoyed a summer that was a little safer than last year’s.
Last week’s fire at Hamilton Court will not be disruptive to students moving in this week, according to University City Housing.
Firefighters arrived to contain a fire in the Hamilton Court Apartments at 39th and Chestnut streets early Tuesday morning.
Inside the Slought Foundation, a little building on the edge of West Philadelphia, a professor, a lawyer and a Wharton student led 20 people in a multidimensional discussion on undocumented immigration last night.
Before Michael Kors Chairman and CEO John Idol spoke to an audience of more than 300 last night, a table piled high with Michael Kors gift bags was the star of the show.
Tryan L. McMickens, like most professors, has a passion for education. But he took it a step further and channeled his passion into an award-winning study.
A new option will appear on Già Pronto’s salad menu this week thanks to the culinary creation of Penn’s very own College sophomore Julia Brownstein.