SEPTA Union officials announce strike
Transit union officials announced at midnight that negotiations had broken down with SEPTA officials, and hundreds of workers are going on strike.
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Transit union officials announced at midnight that negotiations had broken down with SEPTA officials, and hundreds of workers are going on strike.
President Amy Gutmann today will announce that Ronald Daniels, dean of the law school at the University of Toronto, has been named the new University provost, who will replace interim Provost Peter Conn. He will formally assume the office on July 1.
A female Wharton undergraduate was arrested last week and charged with beating a Temple medical student to death in a Delaware apartment.
School of Arts and Sciences Dean Rebecca Bushnell announced today that math professor Dennis DeTurck will replace her as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences starting Jan. 1. Bushnell will be vacating the post to become dean of the School of Arts and Sciences.
NASHVILLE -- The Daily Pennsylvanian was recognized on Saturday as one of the top college newspapers in the country for the fourth consecutive year.
A flyer with a doctored Chicago Sun-Times news story is circulating on campus telling students that if they vote in Pennsylvania they will lose any grant money from their home state. The document cites an altered Associated Press story about a student from Pennsylvania, which was changed to say that the student registered to vote in the state. The story asserts that students from out of state lose grant money if they vote in Pennsylvania. In fact, students who register and vote in Pennsylvania will not lose state grant money, regardless of where they are originally from. The first paragraph of the actual AP story reads as follows: "Some college students from Pennsylvania who plan to vote Nov. 2 will do so at their own financial peril. That is because students who go to school out of state and register to vote on campus lose their eligibility for Pennsylvania state grant money." (Emphasis added). The doctored flyer changes the first paragraph to read: "College students in Pennsylvania who plan to vote on Nov. 2 will do so at their own financial peril. That is because students who go to school out of state and register to vote on campus lose their eligibility for home state grant money."
Old-timers in the neighborhood just east of the Schuylkill near South Street might remember a restaurant named Linoleum. But for those who are new to the area, L2 is owner Nathan Dolente's second try at a restaurant in the same spot.
The trial for the Penn Neurosurgery professor accused of rape was once again postponed yesterday, another in a long string of delays that will prolong the case for nearly two years.
The female protester who was kicked at the Republican Youth Convention in New York is considering taking legal action against her attacker.
A New York ABC television affiliate captured footage of a Republican Youth Convention attendee dragging to the ground and kicking an AIDS activist who had entered the event undercover as part of a larger protest against the George W. Bush administration.
The University received a generous donation from the state yesterday toward its goal of redeveloping the land on the west side of the Schuylkill River between University Avenue and Spruce Street.
Nearly 250 young Pennsylvania Republicans were in for a treat on Tuesday afternoon. While they were playing in a friendly softball game in North Middleton Township, President George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) showed up to join their barbecue.
Former Penn President Judith Rodin has been named the next head of the Rockefeller Foundation -- one of the country's largest philanthropic organizations.
As the summer months arrive, and students in and around campus begin the search for a summer job, national statistics for gaining summer employment may not be on their side.
Philadelphia is a tough place to be a Republican.
Serenaded by the Penn Glee Club and blessed by the words of Sen. Arlen Specter, more than 50 graduates of the Fels Institute of Government marched across the stage Sunday evening with Masters degrees in hand.
Penn's popularity in the market of higher education continues to grow, and the percentage of students who choose to attend once accepted remains high.
(This article appeared in the 4/5/04 joke issue)In a surprise appearance in Pennsylvania yesterday, Democratic Presidential nominee John Kerry announced that he has selected University President Judith Rodin as his running mate.
A former Penn football player was arrested early Tuesday morning and charged with assaulting his girlfriend, who is nine months pregnant, according to the Philadelphia Police Department.
Los Catrines and Tequila's Bar, located discreetly in a block of office buildings at 1602 Locust St., quite possibly offers the most authentic Mexican food -- and assortment of tequilas -- in the city.