Nearly 200 marchers seek justice for Trayvon Martin
The shouts of Penn students echoed through the city as a group of nearly 200 marched down Market Street in a public demonstration against racial injustice.
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The shouts of Penn students echoed through the city as a group of nearly 200 marched down Market Street in a public demonstration against racial injustice.
The University is mourning the loss of an influential leader in civic engagement.
Breathe in, breathe out.
Fatimah Muhammad, a 2006 College graduate and former associate director of Penn’s Greenfield Intercultural Center, is running for state representative of the 188th District — an area that circles almost all of University City. She is running against the 27-year incumbent James Roebuck Jr. in the April Democratic primaries.
With half a year behind them, Penn’s religious organizations are preparing for the second leg of this year’s White House Interfaith and Community Service Campus Challenge.
For its commitment to service learning in the past year, Penn has received a Presidential Award of the 2012 President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll.
The School District of Philadelphia is reaching out to one of Penn’s more civic-minded organizations in their search for a new superintendent.
Students passing College Green yesterday found a wall that symbolized the controversial barrier along the West Bank.
The number of Jewish students reconnecting to their homeland is on the rise.
This spring, the University City dining scene will see two new upscale restaurants.
With a budding partnership already under way, two groups are planning to redefine the role of service in American Jewish life.
This spring, Doc Magrogan’s Oyster House will open its fourth location on 3432 Sansom Street.
For many, faith was both a source of solidarity and a cause for action at this weekend’s national Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions conference — whether they attended the event or not.
Thursday night, Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz made his contribution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict debate brewing on campus this weekend.
Jewish students plan to use this weekend’s Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions conference as an opportunity to spread awareness about Israel.
Some Jewish students will be facing a conflict of interest during one particular weekend in April.
A recent study may have voters thinking twice not only about whom they vote for — but also where.
With the construction of a brand new temple scheduled to begin this spring, Penn’s devoted Mormon community continues to extend its place and presence on campus.
Some Quakers are planning to live as monks this semester.
Because Catholic education in Philadelphia has historically seen its booms and busts, recent closings of Catholic schools may not signal an end to its major influence in the city.