Through
1/1
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
If the thought of overcrowded malls and mass-produced merchandise makes holiday shopping a chore you’re already starting to dread, fear not. There are other options—and some are right here on campus.
Archive ・ Penn Current
When “The Today Show” comes calling, seeking insight and sound bites from one of Penn’s professors, there’s no need for the expert in question to travel all the way up the turnpike for a five-minute face to face. That’s because Penn has its very own satellite uplink facility (www.bioethics.upenn.edu/studio/), PennStudio, where academics can connect directly with the media without ever leaving campus.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Archive ・ Penn News
Nigerian Writer, Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka to Speak at PennWHO: Nigerian Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka WHAT: "Human Rights and Cultural Alibis" TalkWHEN: 4 p.m., Monday, Nov. 29, 2004WHERE: Room 17, Logan Hall, on the University of Pennsylvania campus
Archive ・ Penn Current
“It’s amazing to us that people are so interested in translation,” marvels Kelly Writers House Director Jennifer Snead. Historically, she says, “It’s been difficult to sell Americans on translation in general. I mean, we have this language thing.” Judging from the success of two recent translation-oriented programs at the Writers House, the Penn community, at least, may be getting over the “language thing.”
Archive ・ Penn Current
Dear Benny, With all the recent retail development at Penn, how come there’s no Walmart or Target on the campus? Any chance we’ll get one soon? —Frustrated Shopper
Archive ・ Penn Current
Immigrant enclaves have been part of U.S. cities for 200 years, changing the faces of neighborhoods from New York to Los Angeles. Today, U.S. cities continue to change, as American borders welcome 800,000 legal immigrants annually. But not much is known about how immigrants change the dynamic of specific neighborhoods. Do people tend to take flight when the demography of the neighborhood changes? Is there a negative reaction or a positive outcome? Albert Saiz and his colleague, Susan Wachter, set out to find these answers.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Snow Excuses
Archive ・ Penn Current
On Ian Lustick’s computer screen, masses of tiny multicolored squares represent thousands of people with different beliefs, economic status and ethnic backgrounds. With a few deft keystrokes, Lustick makes events shift, causing the squares to change position. To the untrained eye, it looks like nothing more than green and red squares. It’s actually much more.
Archive ・ Penn Current
When the exit poll numbers began leaking out over the Internet on Election Day, Nov. 2, it seemed as though Senator John Kerry would eek out a victory. As the long election night wore on, though, it became clear that the exit polls were unreliable, and George W. Bush was elected to a second term. A flawed exit polling process wasn’t the only reason for the misleading midday conclusion. Turns out other factors —so-called “sleeper” issues—motivated nearly a quarter of the electorate to go to the polls, presumably to vote Republican.