In crisis, SEPTA may raise fares almost a third
When SEPTA announced last week that its fares would be increased, city officials were in a buzz, calling the situation a "crisis."
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When SEPTA announced last week that its fares would be increased, city officials were in a buzz, calling the situation a "crisis."
Little did College junior Robby Snitkof realize that, when he began studying Spanish, he may have been staving off some of the perils of old age.
President Bush's plan to increase the amount of financial-aid grants seemed to be a step forward in improving the availability of federal funding for students.
With students submitting the Common Application for the first time, the University saw the number of total undergraduate applicants once again reach an all-time high this year.
For East Asian Languages and Civilizations professor Nancy Steinhardt, a Yuan Dynasty building is not simply wood and stone.
Not everyone was happy to see Jack Bauer freed from a Chinese prison.
Princeton University announced this week that it will not raise its tuition for the first time since 1967, but some experts do not believe the move will spark a trend among Ivy League schools.
Last year, Director of International Admissions Elisabeth O'Connell walked into a high school and gave her typical admissions spiel.
Students accepted to Penn are being congratulated in more languages than ever before.
Penn has accepted 29 percent of early applicants for the Class of 2011, a group that will make up about 48 percent of the total class.
History professors with passionate views aren't usually a problem - when it comes to the cause of the Civil War or the Industrial Revolution.
According to Christopher Graveline, former Cpl. Charles Graner is a "truly an evil man."
Mixing dark humor with what organizers called a "delightfully strange" plot, Richard Burgin entertained an audience of about 30 with a reading from his latest work Wednesday evening.
President Bush's frequent use of so-called signing statements is "unlawful" and "inappropriate," according to Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.).
Lynn Swann, a political newcomer, is the Republican challenger to incumbent Gov. Ed Rendell.
Walking around Philadelphia reminds Penn alumnus Steven Conn of the blockbuster movie The Sixth Sense.
Irene Queju was trying to make sense of the chaotic aftermath of Hurricane Stan when duty called.
Just as a rubber bracelet fad struck America a few years ago, terra cotta ornaments were all the range in ancient India, one anthropologist says.
Weaving humor through the serious themes of politics and coming of age, poet Daisy Fried charmed an audience that smiled, laughed and applauded as if on queue.
According to one Penn professor, the American government - not extremist groups like al-Qaeda - is to blame for the war on terror.