Crime log | Interactive map
View Larger Map
Below are your search results. You can also try a Basic Search.
View Larger Map
The December home invasion and sexual assault at 44th and Spruce streets sparked debate about security west of Penn's campus.
The murder of Philadelphia Police officer John Pawlowski last Friday night has been felt heavily by Penn Police Department staff, many of whom are former Philadelphia Police officers.
Though no new cases of meningococcal infection have been reported at Penn, the scare has continued to ripple through both the city and other schools in the Northeast.
The first student diagnosed with meningococcal infection last Thursday was discharged from the hospital today, and the other two students are both doing well, according to Student Health Services officials.
The three students who were hospitalized for meningococcal infections last week are now recovering, and the condition of two other students hospitalized with flu-like symptoms is not serious, University officials said yesterday.
View Larger Map
College senior Alexander Jacobs has been awarded a 2009 Gates Cambridge Scholarship.
Since 1975, the boundaries of the Penn Police Patrol Zone haven't budged: north to south from Market Street to Baltimore Avenue and east to west from 30th to 43rd streets.
With the end of rush last week and the beginning of a new pledging season, there will be a large amount of traffic in and out of Greek houses.
View Larger Map
For many, the horrors of the Holocaust serve as a permanent example of the need for societies to protect all of their members.
When President Barack Obama declared in his inaugural speech two days ago that "America is a friend of each nation ... and we are ready to lead once more," many hoped that a new era had dawned in U.S. foreign policy.
On a day when the world's attention was focused on Washington, D.C., members of the Penn community who were unable to make the trip could still get into the spirit on Penn's campus.
Jan. 20, 10:38 p.m.
The crimes have been counted and the verdict is in: Penn and its surroundings are getting safer.
The armed home invasion and sexual assault involving two Penn graduate students over winter break has received close media attention.
After managing the volatile atmosphere surrounding the 2005 presidential inauguration and managing the police response to 9/11 in the nation's capital, Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey had advice to share with students in College Hall last Friday.
"If Botswana does not tackle its AIDS problem head on, then the country will not survive," announced then President of Botswana Festus Mogae in 2000.
Members of the university and local community gathered in Irvine Auditorium to celebrate Iftaar and discuss the situation in Darfur- after sunset yesterday, which signaled the end of another day of fasting for Muslims observing Ramadan.