Latitudes Reading Group hosts discussion on Philadelphia youth curfew
Curfews are often associated with young teenagers and the 1950s. Yet Philadelphia currently enforces a curfew that affects even some students at Penn.
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Curfews are often associated with young teenagers and the 1950s. Yet Philadelphia currently enforces a curfew that affects even some students at Penn.
According to College senior Genevieve Deutch, “Penn doesn’t teach us basic life skills such as balancing a checkbook or picking up a girl on the dance floor.” To remedy this, the Penn chapter of the Alpha Delta Phi Society — of which Deutch is president — invited nationally acclaimed beer home-brewer George Hummel to speak about his profession. A small but interested group of students came to hear him speak in the basement of Meyerson Hall Thursday night.
For some Penn students, such as Fine Arts major and College senior Allie Zuckerman, “Penn is a pre-professional, business-oriented school — not really focused on the arts.” Friday’s Philly Arts and Culture Fair aimed to shift that perception.
Seven student lobbyists of the Penn Israel Coalition claimed their seats at a round table in Congressman Chaka Fattah’s (D-Pa.) district office Friday afternoon as they prepared for their final meeting of the day. They were about to begin a video conference with Maisha Leek, chief of staff for Fattah.
As college basketball fans across the country fill out their NCAA brackets, Penn students are unable to pick their Quakers.
Several protesters stormed out of Irvine Auditorium Tuesday night holding up signs declaring “Global AIDS Budget Cuts Kill!”