Silcox | No ‘rally’ caps on Locust — just winter hats
I can’t say I’ve ever been to a pep rally.
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I can’t say I’ve ever been to a pep rally.
Food service provider Bon Appetit will continue to serve up juicy red slices and wedges in burgers, sandwiches and salads at Penn, despite a tomato embargo affecting other campuses serviced by the company.
With senior Jeremy Lin’s record-tying performance, the Crimson ended up just six points short in a loss Sunday to No. 14 Connecticut, 79-73.
Unplugged electronics in dorms this winter break is all Penn’s Eco-Reps want this holiday season.
Dining options near campus will expand with the opening of Tom Drinker’s West and Sang Kee Noodle House, both on Chestnut Street.
One year after construction began and one year before it is scheduled for completion, the South Street Bridge reconstruction is progressing as planned.
Freshmen, please take note. In the excitement of meeting your new best friends this fall, you are bound to reach a point when the topic of next year’s housing comes up.
New Congressional legislation introduced by a local representative aims to better oversee Veterans Affairs hospitals.
Penn Medicine celebrated the opening of the new Roberts Proton Therapy Center, beginning what Penn President Amy Gutmann called “a new chapter” in Penn’s history.
When I was 6 years old, my dad woke me early one November morning to see something special. We sat at my bedroom window and watched a spectacular Leonid meteor shower in the autumn night sky above Washington, D.C.
With SEPTA back on track, students and commuters are returning to normalcy in their travels around the city.
Six days after members of SEPTA’s largest union walked out of their jobs, the transit strike has come to an end.
Kaplan Test Prep celebrated the grand opening of its new University City branch in the Radian building with number two pencils and Scantron sheets Sunday in the first event of the week-long series at the center.
After widespread belief that a potential transit strike last Saturday had been averted, over 5,000 SEPTA employees put the brakes on their buses, trains and trolleys and hit the picket lines early Tuesday morning.
Commuters, city residents and sports fans alike can breathe a sigh of relief, as SEPTA workers have agreed not to strike over ongoing contract negotiations.
There’s a hint of irony in the “Go Phillies!!!” messages flashing across SEPTA buses as transit employees prepare to strike on the eve of World Series play this weekend.
University City’s proposed extended-stay hotel is seeing a second life after the project’s planners chose to move the proposed site of the Campus Inn from 40th and Pine streets to 41st and Walnut streets.
The players assembled Saturday morning, game faces on, adrenaline pumping and pencils sharpened.
A new group of local university and high-school students is doing its part to get more young people on trolleys, trains and buses.
Philadelphia cyclists are showing the true potential of pedal power — and the University is encouraging this trend on campus as well.