Student held for attempted murder
Philadelphia Police arrested College junior Bryan Warner on Wednesday, alleging that he shot a man Jan. 26 at a deli at 52nd and Spruce streets.
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Philadelphia Police arrested College junior Bryan Warner on Wednesday, alleging that he shot a man Jan. 26 at a deli at 52nd and Spruce streets.
It was 1:30 a.m. on Dec. 10, 1967, and then-College sophomore Tom Davis was relaxing in the basement of his Locust Walk fraternity house watching reruns of The Untouchables with some of his Phi Kappa Sigma brothers.
They say not to judge a book by its cover, but that can be difficult when the cover is made of human skin.
Just as the semester comes to a close for Penn students, so concludes a busy season of ethics reform in City Hall.
Psychology graduate student Andrew Geier was preparing to leave an Office of Student Conduct meeting last week when OSC Director Michele Goldfarb stopped him.
There will be no University investigation of the Office of Student Conduct, which has come under fire for its response to the Hamilton nude photo case, President Amy Gutmann announced yesterday.
The couple pictured in the now-infamous Hamilton College House sex-scene photo could be prosecuted under state law for exposing themselves in public.
The couple pictured in the Hamilton College House sex-scene photos were apparently engaging in safe intercourse, any other consequences notwithstanding.
Penn officials dropped all charges against the student embroiled in a controversy over free expression yesterday.
"Ivy League Grind: It's the Naked Truth," screeched the headline on the front page of yesterday's Philadelphia Daily News.
The University has decided to drop all disciplinary charges against the Engineering junior accused of violating the school's Code of Student Conduct, Sexual Harassment Policy and Policy on Acceptable Use of Electronic Resources.
What started out as two risque pictures has turned into a very serious matter for one Penn student.
For a company that started out on Penn's campus, the cookie has crumbled pretty well.
A broad ethics-reform package targeting Philadelphia's perceived "pay-to-play" culture has coasted through a City Council committee, and a final vote could be possible as early as December.
Olympic soccer in Franklin Field and handball at the Palestra could become realities if the backers of Philadelphia's emerging bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics have their way.
By settling the recent strike, SEPTA may have solved its biggest short-term problem, but plenty of challenges lie ahead for the transit agency.
Today's elections may not feature any high-profile battles for elected office, but a question of ethics has gained the attention of a number of Philadelphians.
There may finally be some light at the end of the subway tunnel.
Three of the major service providers at Penn reported yesterday that nearly all of their employees have shown up for work for the past two days despite the lack of public transportation.
There may not have been much public transit service yesterday, but at least the weather was nice enough to walk home.