Inside Penn

In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.

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  • NIH funds will study cancer-focused therapy on infectious diseases

    Penn Medicine and colleagues have received an additional five-year round of funding totaling $10 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to explore using a cancer treatment to combat hepatitis B virus, malaria, tuberculosis, the influenza virus, and HIV.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News

  • The Arthur Tress Collection of Japanese illustrated books gifted to Penn Libraries

    With the gift of the Arthur Tress Collection of Japanese Illustrated Books, the Penn Libraries has secured one of the best – if not the best – most complete and widest-ranging collections of Japanese illustrated books in the United States. The Tress gift joins recent gifts of Japanese prints to form an exceptional collection of the Japanese graphic arts spanning the past four centuries.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Libraries

  • Penn Vet’s Ryan Hospital opens its new $2.7 million emergency room

    Ryan Hospital’s Richard Lichter Emergency Room at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Veterinary Medicine is funded by Richard Lichter, a member of Penn Vet’s Board of Overseers. The new hospital more than doubles the amount of clinical space than the former emergency room.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Vet

  • Media, Inequality, and Change Center hosts launch symposium

    The two-day symposium, “Confronting Inequality: Reimagining the Future of Journalism and Work” introduces the new Center, a collaboration between the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University and the Annenberg School for Communication at Penn.

    FULL STORY AT Annenberg School for Communication

  • Struggling to escape poor health: 120 years of health disparities reports

    For 120 years, academic and government researchers have been documenting how African Americans and other minority patients routinely experience lower levels of access and worse outcomes throughout the U.S. health care system. Decade after decade, these reports have issued calls for change but disparities in care have persisted.

    FULL STORY AT Leonard Davis Institute

  • Shah Family Prize for Innovative Undergraduate Student Projects announced

    The Netter Center for Community Partnerships has awarded Richard Ling, Harrison Feinman, Eva Gonzalez, Hadeel Saab, and Anna Waldzinska the inaugural winners of the Shah Prize.

    FULL STORY AT The Netter Center

  • Beijing summit weaves threads of faculty research in China

    Marilyn Jordan Taylor, Ali Rahim, and Richard Weller of the Weitzman School hosted a two-day event called the Penn-China Design Dialogues in Beijing, with three panels focused on urban design, architecture, and landscape architecture.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Design

  • It only hurts when I read

    Ian Fleishman, assistant professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures, looks at wounding to study narrative.

    FULL STORY AT OMNIA

  • Penn IUR announces recipients of 15th annual Urban Leadership Awards

    The recipients of its 15th annual Urban Leadership Awards, which recognize leaders who are guiding cities toward a sustainable and vibrant future, are Egbert Perry, Co-Founder, Chairman, and CEO of the Atlanta-based company Integral, and Mauricio Rodas, Mayor of Quito, Ecuador.

    FULL STORY AT Penn IUR

  • Penn Libraries announces the gift of two iconic documents of American Jewish history

    A gift from Robert V. Waife, great-grandson of the writer Sholem Aleichem and President of the Sholom Aleichem Network, Inc. will bring two iconic documents of American Jewish History, the handwritten ethical will and tombstone epitaph of celebrated Yiddish writer Sholem Aleichem, to the Penn Libraries.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Libraries