Though his political career spanned almost five decades, Tom Foglietta never let the power go to his head.
By most accounts, he was a down-to-earth individual who was always willing to lend a hand to a neighbor.
The mouth-watering aromas of escarole soup, gnocchi and, of course, turkey will waft throughout the Pierandozzis’ home on Thanksgiving Day.
Like most people who have opted to cook on the holiday, Cindy and Mike Pierandozzi will spend most of their time in the…
Police found the 50-year-old victim bloodied and bruised. The brick used in the attack was discovered nearby.
Detectives are searching for the thugs who beat a homeless man with a brick and left him for dead on the 1200 block of Annin Street.
Soccer goalie Lauren Scairato took a beating this season with Neumann-Goretti, and not just from the injuries that go with the position.
Her team’s record was bruising, too: 0–10–2 overall.
He was a 70-year-old trapped inside a little boy’s body. Referred to as “Old Man” by those who knew him best, Jamall El possessed knowledge and interests expected of someone decades older. His love of golf and the 1970s TV show Sanford and Son only validated the nickname.
The recent presidential election notwithstanding, few topics generate as much controversy and ill will in local neighborhoods as parking during Eagles home games.
The battle to keep fans out of the area turned north more than a month ago, when a group of…
From the crudest slapstick to the most erudite wordplay, good comedies possess an undeniable sense of fun. When humor works, it is able to transport us to that sandbox deep in our psyche for one purpose: to play.
Some Bok football players are sitting in the Great Valley High visitors’ locker room, their heads buried in their laps. Others are huddled in the corners, trying to deal with the pain.
It was a range of emotions that followed Saturday’s 35–0 loss to Great Valley in the…
In The Third Man, Carol Reed’s look at the post-World War II black-market scene in Vienna, Harry Lime, the arch villain portrayed by Orson Welles, muses on the relative merits of regimes’ contributions to society.