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Snow day at school? Use Penn’s Snow Day Child Care
Some schools in the Philadelphia region can close hours before the first snowflake even touches the ground, but Penn very rarely shuts down due to inclement weather, leaving many parents or guardians scrambling to find a babysitter for their children.
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ENIAC Day to celebrate dedication of Penn’s historic computer
Philadelphia City Council has officially declared Feb. 15 as “ENIAC Day,” celebrating the 65th anniversary of the historic computer’s dedication at Penn, and the beginning of the digital age that it helped to usher in. The Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, or ENIAC, was built to calculate ballistic trajectories for the Army during World War II, a time- and labor-intensive process that had previously been performed by teams of mathematicians working with mechanical calculators. Under the direction of John Mauchly and J. Presper Eckert of Penn’s Moore School of Electrical Engineering (now the School of Engineering and Applied Science), construction of the 27-ton, 680-square-foot computer began in July 1943 and was announced to the public on Feb. 14, 1946. As the first electronic general-purpose computer, ENIAC was a major step forward from its technological predecessors: calculating machines that had their roots in ancient math tools like the abacus.
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Young Friends event spills secrets inside little black book of prostitution
Prostitution has often been dubbed “the oldest profession” for its seemingly persistent presence throughout human history. In his 1939 article on the “History of Prostitution,” published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, author F. Arnold Clarkson wrote that the earliest human records, about 4000 B.C.E., make reference to sex workers.
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Earn quick cash by participating in (nonmedical) Penn research experiments
At research labs across Penn’s campus, students, staff and faculty are participating in research experiments on human behavior, and making a little pocket money for their efforts.
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'The Obama Victory' Honored With American Publishers Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence
The Obama Victory: How Media, Money, and Message Shaped the 2008 Election has been honored with the 2010 American Publishers Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence (PROSE Award) in the area of government & politics. Each year the PROSE Awards recognize the best professional and scholarly books, journals, and electronic publications for outstanding contributions to their fields.
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Penn student provides eyewitness account of uprising in Egypt
Photo Credit: Eric Trager Eric Trager, a Ph.D. candidate in Penn’s Political Science Department, was in Cairo when demonstrations against the Mubarak regime erupted and turned violent.
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Immune Cells Protect Body from Invaders, According to Penn Researchers
PHILADELPHIA - So-called barrier sites -- the skin, gut, lung – limit the inner body’s exposure to allergens, pollutants, viruses, bacteria, and parasites. Understanding how the immune system works in these external surfaces has implications for understanding such inflammatory diseases as asthma, psoriasis, IBD, and food allergies, all of which occur at the body’s barriers.
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Assessing the good and the bad in new federal financial reform
In the wake of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, America’s confidence in the U.S. government’s ability to regulate big banks and insurance conglomerates has been severely shaken.
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Penn accepts 2011 RecycleMania challenge
RecycleMania, the annual waste reduction and recycling competition, kicks off on Sunday, Feb. 6, at 600 colleges and universities across the country. This eight-week contest pits schools against each other in a friendly rivalry to determine which institution can out-recycle the others and minimize waste.
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Penn breaks ground for nanotechnology center
On Feb. 17, Penn President Amy Gutmann will join University Trustees and the deans of the Schools of Arts and Sciences (SAS) and Engineering and Applied Science at the 3200 block of Walnut Street for a groundbreaking ceremony for the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology.