A night on the other side of the flashing lights
The Early Shift
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The Early Shift
A single car crash occurred at the intersection of 38th and Spruce streets Friday around 2:45 p.m. The crash knocked down a street pole.
The Towne building — located in the Engineering Quad — was evacuated at approximately 3:30 p.m. Thursday due to an accidental chemical spill.
If developers get their way, Penn students looking to gamble at a casino will not have to go quite as far as they do now.
Penn’s Division of Public Safety was one of many groups speaking at a City Council hearing last week on the topic of surveillance cameras in Philadelphia.
The steam which powers Penn’s dorm rooms and lectures halls has gotten a lot greener in the last month.
Quakers caught and convicted for underage drinking could be looking at steeper penalties this year.
Feb. 1 — An unaffiliated female at Presbyterian Hospital reported an unattended pocketbook missing upon her return at about 9 a.m.
A female Penn student was struck by a car at the intersection of 38th and Walnut streets at approximately 2:45 p.m.
DPS became aware of a possibly dangerous chemical interaction at Vagelos Labs at 4:48 a.m. this morning, according to Vice President for Public Safety Maureen Rush. Officers responded to the situation, and spoke to the man behind the chemical interaction.
The Blarney Stone failed its ID compliance check and is the subject of an ongoing investigation.
Penn students wandering through Hill Field have two university police forces watching for their safety.
In a room filled with LCD monitors and decorated with wall-sized maps, the emergency dispatchers at the Division of Public Safety work around-the-clock to stop crime on Penn’s campus — even before it happens.
Those seeking information about the City of Brotherly Love are finding their lives much easier as of late.
See the incidents that occurred in the Penn Patrol Zone between Jan. 18 and Jan. 24
Police have made an arrest in the homicide of Perelman School of Medicine graduate student Melissa Ketunuti.
Two Penn graduate students are not letting a historic Center City building be demolished without a fight.
Former Penn professor Rafael Robb will not be granted parole from prison next week after all, according to the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole.
Penn and the Perelman School of Medicine both donated $2,500 in reward money for information leading to an arrest and conviction of the killer of Melissa Ketunuti, the Medical School graduate student who was found dead in her home on Monday in what police are treating as a homicide, said Vice President of Public Safety Maureen Rush.
Former Penn professor Rafael Robb’s parole from prison, originally scheduled for Jan. 28, is now on hold so that the parole board can consider the victim’s family’s point of view, according to NBC Philadelphia.