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The home of the Jerome Fisher Program in Management and Technology, also known as Penn’s M&T Program, is getting a major facelift.
John Trojanowski and Virginia Man-Yee Lee of the Perelman School of Medicine have been conducting Alzheimer’s research for more than 30 years, and have made three major discoveries—all of which have become strong foundations for those working on Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders around the world.
Almost daily, Patricia Rose finds herself quoting education specialist Tony Wagner: “The world doesn’t care what you know.
In early September, Penn Medicine opened the nation’s fifth Steven A. Cohen Military Family Clinic.
It’s an image unlike many others, revealing what looks like a tranquil state from afar but representing a dangerous border: The Korean Demilitarized Zone. Contemporary photographer Atta Kim’s powerful print, which he exposed for eight hours, is displayed in Penn’s new
With nearly 8 million speakers throughout the Andes, Quechua is the most spoken indigenous language in the Americas. In the world, that number rises, making it as prevalent as Swedish or Hebrew. Yet, it’s unrecognizable to most people, and even declared by UNESCO as an endangered language.
Without Penn’s Veterans Upward Bound (VUB) program, Glenn Forte Jr., an Army veteran, says he wouldn’t “in a million years” be where he is today—working as an Independence Blue Cross financial investigator, and only a year away from earning his master’s degree from
A delegation of 24 students, faculty, and staff from Penn recently attended the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development, better known as Habitat III.
Earlier this month, iconic musician Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Dylan’s silence since has been deemed ill-mannered, and some people are even questioning if he’ll attend the award ceremony in Sweden in December.