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Scott Spitzer

Manager, Web Design and Photographic Content
  • spitzer@upenn.edu
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    Articles from Scott Spitzer
    What happens to the brain after a traumatic injury?
    TBI Football Research Senior Justin Morrison (left) and researcher Michael Sangobowale with Ebony Cook, a patient in for a follow-up visit after her apartment ceiling caved in on her. It’s part of an ongoing clinical trial on traumatic brain injury that sees patients five times each, at 72 hours following injury, then again at two weeks, three weeks, six months, and a year later.

    What happens to the brain after a traumatic injury?

    Two undergrads interning with Penn Medicine’s Ramon Diaz-Arrastia spent the summer looking for biomarkers in the blood of TBI patients, and studying whether the generic form of Viagra might help promote recovery after such an injury.

    Michele W. Berger

    Penn Engineering groups awarded NSF grants to work toward ‘quantum leap’
    Optics Close Up

    Two teams in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences have received NSF grants for research in quantum information science, which explores how to send and store secure information at the nanometer level.

    Penn Engineering groups awarded NSF grants to work toward ‘quantum leap’

    One group will design robust, integrated quantum memory devices based on defects in diamond, and the other group will develop materials to encode and decode quantum information in single photons. These technologies will be part of the safest and most secure information network ever seen.

    Jacob Williamson-Rea , Evan Lerner

    Growing a ‘culture of cultivation’ on campus
    Penn Park Orchard

    The Penn Park Orchard, located at the southeastern edge of campus, is home to fruit trees, herbs, perennial flowers, and more. Planting events set for this fall will expand the orchard's boundaries. (Photo: Cole Jadrosich/FRES)

    Growing a ‘culture of cultivation’ on campus

    Even on an urban campus, there are numerous places to coax food from the soil. From the Penn Student Garden on Spruce Street to the Penn Park Orchard, Facilities and Real Estate Services staff are expanding opportunities for the community to interact with an edible landscape.

    Katherine Unger Baillie

    Biking to the shore for fallen first responders
    Division of Public Safety Tour de Shore team on the _______ bridge

    Team “Are We There Yet?,” comprised of riders from Penn’s Division of Public Safety, Penn Medicine, along with friends and family, on the Benjamin Franklin Bridge during the 2018 Tour de Shore.

    Biking to the shore for fallen first responders

    Personnel from Penn’s Division of Public Safety and Perelman School of Medicine recently participated in the Tour de Shore, a 65-mile bike ride from Philadelphia to Atlantic City, to support the families of fallen first responders.
    Pro tips from Penn’s gardeners
    Jadrosich and Bhide

    Cole Jadrosich and Lila Bhide of Facilities and Real Estate Services care for edible growing spaces around campus, including the Penn Community Garden.

    Pro tips from Penn’s gardeners

    Community garden coordinator Lila Bhide and Penn Park Orchard intern Cole Jadrosich of Facilities and Real Estate Services offer suggestions for creating a thriving, edible, urban garden.

    Katherine Unger Baillie

    Exhibit catalog to peer inside fantastical mind of Penn artist
    Tripot Piece Paul Swenbeck

    Heldscalla. An iron tripot loaned from the Independence Seaport Museum. Brass bells, electronic triggers, and a cast iron sculpture are all featured. Prism photos are in view in the background. Photo courtesy of Kohler Arts.

    Exhibit catalog to peer inside fantastical mind of Penn artist

    “Out, Out, Phosphene Candle” is one of The Sach’s Program for Arts Innovation 23 projects that received funding this spring. A collaboration between Paul Swenback, the building manager for the Institute of Contemporary Art, and Joy Feasley, the fantastical exhibit blends art, nature, and the occult at a gallery in Wisconsin, and in a forthcoming book on the exhibit.
    Penn One Health goes abroad
    James Ferrara

    James Ferrara will lead an interdisciplinary team of Penn students to Kathmandu, Nepal this summer to study a bacteria called Campylobacter.

    Penn One Health goes abroad

    In August, Penn Vet student James Ferrara will combine veterinary research and public health outreach in Nepal, where he will join a team of graduate students conducting research on Campylobacter, a bacteria found in unpasteurized milk, that is prone to cause infection.

    Jacob Williamson-Rea

    Academic ‘boot camp’
    Warrior 3

    From left to right: Jorge Pintado and Jahbril Jauregui participate in writing instruction during the Warrior-Scholar Project at Penn.

    Academic ‘boot camp’

    A group of 13 active-duty service members and veterans took part in the Warrior-Scholar Project, which introduces enlisted personnel toward an undergraduate program at a top-tier institution with a weeklong academic program.
    Fine arts professor marries art and science on the Schuylkill River banks
    Deirdre Murphy Schuylkill River

    Deirdre Murphy, a “toolmaker” for the Ecotopian Toolkit project as part of the Penn Program in Environmental Humanities, examines the banks of the Schuylkill River.

    Fine arts professor marries art and science on the Schuylkill River banks

    Fine Arts lecturer Deirdre Murphy answered a call for artists for Penn's Ecotopian Toolkit project with a piece based on the migratory patterns of birds on the Schuylkill River, right in her backyard.
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