Thursday, June 2
EVENTS
Acme Sav-on Pharmacy KleinLife, 10100 Jamison Ave. 10 a.m. Wellness information, programming, inoculations, health screenings. Free. 215–698–7300.
Driscoll promotes financial literacy
State Reps. Mike Driscoll and Leslie Acosta have introduced legislation that would require public high school students in Pennsylvania to complete a financial literacy capstone course in order to graduate.
Aria doc offers stroke tips
Strokes kills 130,000 Americans each year, and Dr. David H. Sirken, chief of the Division of Neurology and Stroke Program medical director for Aria Health, is providing advice to identify the symptoms and reduce the risk of…
Cut the grass and clean up!
Members of Boy Scout Troop 252 and members of All Saints Church place flags at about 100 graves of U.S. military veterans…
Excellent police work: Officer Joseph O’Reilly was named Officer of the Year in the 7th Police…
The Philadelphia Republican Party opposes Mayor Jim Kenney’s sugary drinks tax and an alternative plan introduced by City Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown that would impose a 15-cent tax on beverage containers, other than milk or baby formula.
Fox Chase Elementary School unveiled the lab as well as a mobile greenhouse and raised vegetable gardens on May 9. Tanks with…
A husband and wife who allegedly tried to use a home repair scam to rip off a 92-year-old Morrell Park man last Sunday ended up behind bars when a quick-acting police officer caught them red-handed.
Philadelphia Water Department announces Northeast cleanups
The TTF Watershed Partnership and Philadelphia Water Department will clean up and mark storm drains around Rising Sun and Adams avenues on Saturday, June 4, from 9 a.m. to noon.
I was there when she walked down an aisle of sorts at her nursery school graduation, the type of ceremony in which little tykes wear miniature caps and gowns, stare out at the sea of faces, and in a few cases try to bolt.
A Castor Gardens woman has pleaded guilty to one count of animal cruelty in a case involving…
The new owner of a Holme Circle nursing home formerly operated by the city’s Roman Catholic archdiocese wants to expand the Immaculate Mary Center for Rehabilitation and Healthcare, but many neighbors don’t seem sold on the idea.
Surveillance photo
Sterling