How to lend a (socially distanced) helping hand this holiday season
While the pandemic has restricted in-person activities, Penn has found ways to adapt and still safely give back and volunteer.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.
While the pandemic has restricted in-person activities, Penn has found ways to adapt and still safely give back and volunteer.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
Partial or full student loan forgiveness is “regressive,” according to a recent working paper by Wharton’s Sylvain Catherine, who argues that any policy that is a universal loan forgiveness policy or a capped forgiveness policy is going to give most of the dollars in forgiveness to upper-income individuals.
FULL STORY AT Knowledge at Wharton →
A DNA mutation that occurs frequently in the development of many pancreatic tumors appears to make these cancers vulnerable to an existing type of drug known as PARP inhibitors, according to a new study from scientists in the Perelman School of Medicine.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
The associate professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering, in collaboration with Farshid Ashtiani, a postdoctoral scholar in Aflatouni’s research group, won the top prize for their proposal for “Integrated Photonic-mmWave Deep Networks.”
FULL STORY AT Penn Engineering Today →
The Racial Justice Task Force focused on both short- and long-term recommendations over the course of four months. The recommendations were presented to AD Grace Calhoun and the Division of Recreation and Intercollegiate Athletics (DRIA) executive team and unanimously approved. These recommendations provide direction and intention to DRIA’s efforts to become a more diverse, inclusive, anti-racist organization.
FULL STORY AT Penn Athletics →
Examining countrywide data, the researchers hoped to gauge how many obstetrician-gynecologists have their waiver to prescribe buprenorphine.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
Immune cells called “killer T cells” normally stay in the bloodstream and do not enter organs and other tissues, according to a new study out of the Perelman School of Medicine published in Cell.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
For this year’s Computer Science for Philly Week, Penn GSE’s Yasmin Kafai and her team designed CodeQuilt Philadelphia, a collaborative activity that allows students to take ownership of their own stories about coding.
FULL STORY AT Graduate School of Education →
The album Catharge, with music composed by James Primosch, Dr. Robert Weiss Professor of Music, has received a Grammy nomination for Best Choral Performance. Carthage was recorded by The Crossing, with Donald Nally conducting.
FULL STORY AT Penn Arts & Sciences →
The lecturer in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics and the Integrated Design Program has awarded for demonstrating a prolific spirit of innovation in creating or facilitating outstanding inventions that have made a tangible impact on the quality of life, economic development, and welfare of society.
FULL STORY AT Penn Engineering Today →