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A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
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WHAT: The Penn Science Cafe, the lecture series that pulls science out of the lab and takes it out for a night on the town. It is chance to ask your questions directly to leading scientific experts. WHO: Mark Devlin, professor in Penn's Department of Physics and Astronomy WHERE: The MarBar 40th and Walnut streets, PhiladelphiaWHEN: 6 p.m., Monday, Sept. 26 Doors open at 5:30 p.m.
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Sometimes Cecilia Paredes is an octopus. Sometimes she’s a skunk. Last summer, at the 2005 Venice Biennale, she was a macaw. “I interpret animals, basically,” says Paredes, an internationally renowned artist who is also associate faculty master at Hamilton College House. “I put make-up on and transform myself into animals. It’s a kind of metamorphosis.”
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Even though we turned the spotlight on the College of General Studies two weeks ago for our Staff Q & A with Kristine Billmyer, this issue we’re visiting that office again to talk with Camille Durocher. That’s because she and her CGS coworkers worked tirelessly over the Labor Day weekend to help 100 displaced college students from Tulane, Xavier and University of New Orleans enroll at Penn for the fall semester.
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Recognizing Rodin Former Penn President Judith Rodin was honored at the American Psychological Association’s 113th annual meeting in August with an award for Outstanding Lifetime Contribution to Psychology. Rodin, who is now president of the Rockefeller Foundation, was recognized for her “vision and daring,” as well as her scholarly research, which, according to the APA brings “psychology to health, and health to psychology.” On stage
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For those of us who have spent years guessing what David Lynch’s films and TV series mean, don’t count on him to unravel the mysteries of his work in his Sept. 28 talk: “It’s better not to know so much about what things mean or how they might be interpreted or you’ll be too afraid to let things keep happening,” he’s said.
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EXPERT COMMENT/Penn faculty on the city’s future. More than three weeks have passed since Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, setting in motion a series of catastrophic events that left many dead and many more homeless. As the city begins to grapple with the daunting task of rebuilding, we asked professors across Penn for comments on what the disaster revealed and where the city should go from here. “A smaller city”
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Dear Benny, A friend told me I can get a discount on my membership at Pottruck through my Keystone Health Plan East insurance plan. Is this true, and how does it work? —Willing to Jog for Money Dear Fit and Thrifty, Your friend was right, you are indeed eligible for a discount—if you hit the gym often enough.
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By THE CURRENT STAFF Ask Benny: Can I get cash back for working out? Out and About: Saturdays at the stadium
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Q&A/Penn Design’s computer animation expert, and a recent recipient of a Pew Fellowship award, talks about the low-tech rewards of clay and how his students help him keep up with the latest software. One side of Joshua Mosley’s Powelton Village studio is filled with all the high-tech equipment you’d expect from someone who teaches computer animation. There’s the pair of super-sized flat screen monitors, the digital cameras, the sound equipment, the tangle of wires that let all the electronics talk to one another.
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It’s late September, summer is gone and football season is back. In football-crazy college towns like Ann Arbor, Knoxville, Columbus and State College, autumn’s return brings tailgaters as far as the eye can see on Saturday mornings and crowds of more than 100,000 packing stadiums later in the day. It’s a weekly spectacle of fandom that surpasses even what you’ll find at America’s NFL stadiums.