Crime continues to be significantly lower in 2008 compared to 2007, but some property crimes - like burglaries, bike theft and theft from buildings - have all increased from last year. Violent crimes, such as robberies and assaults, are down 37 percent for the year, according to the Division of Public Safety.
Reporter's Notebook: For Chicagoans, election is personal
CHICAGO - As one of the country's largest cities waited anxiously, people didn't have anything else to do but talk about what might happen for one of their own on election night. After covering the election for nearly a year, all I wanted to hear when I arrived in Chicago on Monday was what regular people had to say before they pulled the lever for a candidate.
Windows 7 upgrade on the way
When Microsoft upgrades to its newest operating system, Penn is likely to follow suit. Microsoft recently announced the development of Windows 7, the seventh version of the Windows operating system and the successor to Windows Vista. Penn officials said they will consider testing and using the system, despite fairly recent upgrades to Vista.
Extra money from a research study
There are a couple of conventional ways to earn extra cash at Penn - serving food, working at a College House front desk, maybe getting a paid summer internship if you're lucky. But some students turn to the slightly unconventional to earn extra spending money for that dinner in Center City or night out on the town.
Reporter's Notebook: For Chicagoans, election is personal
CHICAGO - As one of the country's largest cities waited anxiously, people didn't have anything else to do but talk about what might happen for one of their own on election night. After covering the election for nearly a year, all I wanted to hear when I arrived in Chicago on Monday was what regular people had to say before they pulled the lever for a candidate.
Windows 7 upgrade on the way
When Microsoft upgrades to its newest operating system, Penn is likely to follow suit. Microsoft recently announced the development of Windows 7, the seventh version of the Windows operating system and the successor to Windows Vista. Penn officials said they will consider testing and using the system, despite fairly recent upgrades to Vista.
SAS receives $6 million grant to support graduate studies
Penn graduate students will soon be seeing more financial aid and less pressure to finish their degrees in time. Yesterday the School of Arts and Sciences received a $6 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to support graduate education in the humanities.
Struggling to cinematic success
Despite its title, "An Intimate Conversation with Mira Nair: Between Two Worlds," last night's event hardly resembled an intimate conversation. Instead, the South Asian director Mira Nair, responsible for hits such as Mississippi Masala, The Namesake and Monsoon Wedding, drew a movie premier-worthy audience to Penn's International House.
This Weekend: Mediterranean fare and Monet
Cold, rainy weather getting you down? Then imagine this: the salty air of the Mediterranean Sea, with the smooth sounds of a classical guitar and a robust voice in the background. Add in some of the world's most renowned works of art, and opa! You have the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Friday affair.
Group helps students cope with their grief
Just before first-year Med student David Fajgenbaum's mother died of brain cancer in October 2004, he promised to do something in her memory. Three months later, he founded Ailing Mothers and Fathers, a support group for students "coping with the illness or death of a loved one," at Georgetown University, where he was an undergraduate at the time, Fajgenbaum said.
Employees speak out about McFirings
If you have ever visited the McDonald's at 40th and Walnut streets late on a Saturday night, you may have encountered a scene of drunken chaos. But while some students complain that the store's management is "ridiculously absurd" and its customer service "a joke," members of the store's overnight staff say that students play a part in the mayhem as well.
More youth turned out to vote on Tuesday than in any other recent election, but the number still underwhelmed some experts. Only half of all eligible voters under age 30 voted Tuesday, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement.
Order in the Court
For 32 Penn students, arguing is more than just something you do with your roommate or in philosophy recitation - it's a structured competition. For those students, their affinity for arguing paid off last month at the Coast Guard Academy Mock Trial Tournament in New London, Conn.
Profs analyze election results
Political Science professor Rogers Smith noted that Tuesday's "election marks a historic juncture," at a panel yesterday in Houston Hall. And while it is still too early to analyze the triumphs and problems that will accompany this election, Smith and his colleagues tried to demystify the results.
A cappella group book strikes a chord
According to Mickey Rapkin, "there are a lot of untold stories, a lot of gossip you don't know about, behind college a capella." Rapkin, a senior editor at GQ Magazine and author of Pitch Perfect: The Quest for Collegiate A Capella Glory," spoke to a crowd of about a dozen people at the Penn Bookstore last night.
Gov. Ed Rendell was jubilant, and Republican Sen. Arlen Specter more muted, as they discussed the outcome of Tuesday's presidential election. Before an audience of about 500 civic and business leaders, Rendell and Specter - Pennsylvania's most prominent politicians - made the differences in their views clear at a breakfast hosted by Philadelphia-based political watchdog group Committee of Seventy.
You have one new message (and maybe an STD)
Discussing sexually transmitted diseases can be awkward, uncomfortable and wholly unpleasant. But one Web site is trying to make it a little easier through an eCard service. Inspot.org, a Web site developed by the Internet Sexuality Information Services, Inc.
News Brief: Former Law student faces trial on attempted murder charges
Joseph Cho, a former Penn Law student accused of trying to kill his neighbors, will go to trial on attempted murder charges. Cho was held for court on charges of attempted murder, aggravated assault and other related offenses at a preliminary hearing in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas yesterday, according to court records.
Report: Tuition and aid continue to rise
The price of a college education increases every year, but luckily, so do most schools' commitments to provide financial aid. At four-year public and private colleges, average tuition prices and financial-aid packages both increased for the current academic year, according to a report published by the College Board last week.
Former Marketing professor Scott Ward will plead guilty this month to child pornography charges. Ward, who is already serving a prison sentence for producing and importing child pornography, was charged in August with two counts of inducing a minor to engage in sex to create photos or videos.








