News brief: Week of affordable dining in Center City
Week of affordable dining in Center City
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Week of affordable dining in Center City
Only several blocks from the lively corner of 40th and Walnut streets, the intersection at 40th and Market boasts far less impressive retail and activity.
The University is planning to partner with community groups to revitalize the Parkside area of West Philadelphia, but some involved with the project are skeptical of whether such efforts will produce tangible results.
Taco Bell is slated to finally open on campus next week, nearly six months after the original completion date.
The University announced this month that is has tripled its purchase of wind energy, ensuring its status as the leading university purchaser of wind-generated power.
The area around Temple University is making some of the same moves Penn has in an attempt to revitalize itself.
A lot of dead grass, garbage and barbed wire at 52nd and Jefferson streets is slated to become the site of one of West Philadelphia's most extensive retail developments.
A lawsuit has been filed against the College Board and a test-scanning company due to the incorrect scoring of 4,000 SAT tests.
With final papers and exams looming, students are likely to be in no mood to worry about how to deal with their piles of belongings during the summer.
U.S. News & World Report released graduate school rankings last week, but Penn officials say the results are not wholly indicative of its graduate schools' achievements.
Papa John's Pizza has returned to University City after a 10-month hiatus.
Gia Pronto is no longer just a hotspot for Penn students.
The College Board has announced that an additional 27,000 tests from last October's SAT weren't properly checked for errors.
Architecture students have been given the opportunity to transform a 1960s landmark into a modern icon for Philadelphia.
What began 30 years ago as a concentrated effort to simplify college applications has become a prominent force in the realm of higher education.
When someone wishes Penn Linguistics professor Bill Labov a Murry Christmas, he can tell that the speaker is a Philadelphia native.
Concerns for those applying to college are multiplying as more incidences of possible SAT mis-scoring have come to light.
A strong rain meant lower SAT scores for about 4,000 students who took the test last October, and 103 of the victims have applied to Penn.
Plans to build homeless shelter in a vacant building at 45th and Chestnut streets have collapsed due to community opposition, but Penn has a new idea for the space.
The University City Science Center is preparing for a massive expansion that will more than double its current size, and some say Penn could be among the beneficiaries.