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Students to tackle local housing
What is the best type of affordable housing for Philadelphia? What do individual neighborhoods need most? How can architects design buildings that fit in with the character of the other structures on the street?
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Awards & Honors: Penn ranked fourth by U.S. News & World Report
The University of Pennsylvania placed fourth in the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings of “America’s Best Colleges,” up one spot from last year. Wharton’s undergraduate business program ranked first, and the school’s real estate, marketing, management, insurance and finance programs all topped out in the specialties rankings. Penn ranked 10th in best value.
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Masters and majors
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Penn Names New Executive Vice President
PHILADELPHIA -- Craig Carnaroli, senior vice president for finance at the University of Pennsylvania, has been named Executive Vice President by Penn President Amy Gutmann. Carnaroli will assume his new post effective immediately.
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'Tipping Point' Author Malcolm Gladwell to Lead Penn Reading Project Group Sunday
WHO: Malcolm Gladwell, staff writer for The New Yorker, is the author of "The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference." This book was chosen for the University of Pennsylvania's Reading Project this year. The author will lead a small discussion group of Penn students.Gladwell, who calls this book "an intellectual adventure story," covered the AIDS epidemic as a reporter for the Washington Post, and, in his research, epidemiologists exposed him to a different way of looking at the world.
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Researchers Spin Carbon Nanotubes Into Usable Fibers
PHILADELPHIA -- Materials scientists from the University of Pennsylvania and chemists from Rice University report the first large-scale manufacture of fibers composed solely of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) in the Sept. 3 issue of the journal Science. This new material is a macroscopic realization of many of the amazing mechanical, electrical and thermal properties of nano-scale ideal nanotubes.
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Penn Law School Students Help Draft a Criminal Code for the Maldives
Penn Law School Students Help Draft a Criminal Code for the MaldivesAug. 24, 2004PHILADELPHIA Some University of Pennsylvania Law School students will have a unique opportunity to help the Maldives rewrite its criminal code.The Maldives, a nation of 1,200 islands in the Indian Ocean, is in the process of reforming its criminal laws. The country's citizens are Muslim, and its current criminal code is based on the Islamic law Shari'a.
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Trojan Horses, Xenon Imaging and Remote Controlled Genes: Chemical Cages Deliver Drugs and Peer into Cells
PHILADELPHIA -- As our understanding of biology increases, the tools of research become almost as important as the researchers wielding them. Currently, one of the major obstacles to research is actually getting inside of cells and tissue to see what is going on as it happens. At the University of Pennsylvania, researchers are caging xenon, gene-blocking strands of antisense DNA and even therapeutics to facilitate their entry into cells and enable researchers to observe nature's biochemical clockwork.
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Go Left or Right? Single-Enantiomer Catalysts Could Create Safer Drugs.
PHILADELPHIA -- Many molecules are enantiomers: they have mirror- image versions that may have identical parts but are just as different as your left hand is from your right. The value of a drug, however, could depend on whether it is a lefty or a righty, so researchers at the University of Pennsylvania are creating catalysts that will force drug molecules to choose sides. Today, at the American Chemical Society 228th National Meeting, Penn chemist Marisa C. Kozlowski details the methods her lab is using to create the next generation of single-enantiomer catalysts.
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American Chemical Society Annual Meeting Highlights Penn's Masters of Chemistry Education
PHILADELPHIA -- Today, graduates of the University of Pennsylvania Masters of Chemistry Education program will explain how they turned their high school classrooms into working experiments in teaching chemistry. The presentations are the focus of an entire session of the at the American Chemical Society 228th National Meeting.