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A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Folklorist Nick Spitzer C’72’s melodic baritone hints at the places he’s lived. There’s a touch of New Orleans twang by way of Texas, and a quickness of speech that blends the cadences of Philadelphia and his hometown of Old Lyme, Connecticut. So, it’s only fitting that each week on WHYY-FM, it’s Spitzer’s richly toned voice that leads listeners on a musical journey around the country.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The weather’s getting warmer and the school year is winding down, which means it’s time to ask: What will your children be doing this summer? How about giving them a chance to sharpen their athletic skills in one of the many summer camps sponsored by Penn’s athletic teams? Or, if they’re not budding pro athletes, the PennKids summer camp offers children the chance to discover the world around them and engage in fun recreational activities.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The exhibit now up on the walls of the Arthur Ross Gallery brings to Penn some remarkable drawings by 19th-century art stars like Degas, Cezanne and Ingres. Even more remarkable, perhaps, is the fact that it’s here at all.
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Associate Professor of Surgery Hansell Stedman has discovered a clue that may help solve a long-running evolutionary puzzle—how the brain was able to expand, thus distinguishing humans from their primate predecessors. He and his colleagues in the School of Medicine have found a genetic mutation that makes the jaw muscles of humans significantly smaller and weaker than those of primates. Since news of the discovery appeared in the March issue of Nature, media outlets worldwide have trumpeted the find as the “missing link” between apes and humans.
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Penn goes postal
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Archive ・ Penn Current
Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author and Emmy-winning host David McCullough joined a capacity crowd at Irvine Auditorium to celebrate this year’s School of Arts and Sciences Dean’s Scholars on March 31. McCullough, the speaker for this year’s Dean’s Forum, talked about leadership, reminding the audience that history is never a foregone conclusion. In his words: “Nothing had to happen the way it actually happened.”
Archive ・ Penn Current
Archive ・ Penn Current
Joann Mitchell will join the University on July 1 as vice president and chief of staff, filling the position recently vacated by Pedro Ramos. Mitchell is currently vice provost for administration at Princeton, where she manages the Priorities Committee, which consists of faculty, staff and students, and which recommends the operating budget and sets all departmental budgets. Mitchell also oversees Princeton’s policies on equal opportunity and affirmative action and has worked on the President’s Task Force on health and Well-Being.
Archive ・ Penn News
WHO:Philadelphia native Robert Sun, creator of the "24 game," and 50 students from Penn Alexander, Bryant and Lee elementary schools.WHAT:Students from three elementary schools will take part in a "24 tournament," and the game creator will hand out prizes to winners.WHEN:April 15, 2004, 3:30-5 p.m. (Prizes handed out at the end)WHERE:Towne Building220 S. 33rd St. (33rd Street and Locust Walk)Adults without children may have never heard of it, but the "24 game" has become something of a sensation among the elementary-school set.