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A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
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WHO:Museum professionals from Iraq, U.S. State Department, University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and AnthropologyWHAT:Educational tour and preview of upcoming Museum exhibition for Iraqi museum professionals WHEN: Monday, March 8, 2:30 p.m. WHERE: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 3260 South S., PhiladelphiaA group of "next generation" Iraqi museum professionals, in the country for a U.S. State Department, multi-city "Cultural Heritage Institute" tour, will visit the Penn Museum Monday, March 8.
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PHILADELPHIA -- Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have devised a new method for aligning isolated single wall carbon nanotubes and, in the process, have created a new kind of material with liquid crystal-like properties, which they call nematic nanotube gels. The gels could potentially serve as sensors in complex fluids, where changes in local chemical environment, such as acidity or solvent quality, can lead to visible changes in the gel shape. The researchers describe their findings in the current issue of Physical Review Letters.
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The body has long played a role in Western perceptions of the economic. In 18th-century France, physiocrats talked of the blood-like circulation of wealth, while Scottish economist Adam Smith wrote about the “invisible hand” of the market.
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Robert holds Cort: Producer Robert Cort C’68,G’70,WG’74 returned to his alma mater Feb. 18 to unveil his 52nd film, “Against the Ropes,” to an audience of undergraduates and film aficionados from the faculty, staff and community. He gave the film its East Coast premiere at The Bridge in part as a tribute to one of his academic mentors, History Professor Emeritus Lee Benson, who was in attendance.
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The University of Pennsylvania Health System has opened a new front in the ongoing fight to ensure top quality health care: It has called in the Delta Team to provide reinforcements for patient safety. With nearly 100 members drawn from every area and level of Health System operations, the Delta Team will serve as peer educators, sharing information about best practices in patient safety after completing a one-year training program that began Feb. 5.
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By day, Larry Moses is the man with the booming voice and hearty laugh who leads diversity training for fraternities and sororities and advises the Bicultural Inter-Greek Council. When his workday is over, Moses transfers his boisterous personality to the Philadelphia-area stage, where he’s acted in close to 150 plays and directed more than 100, including “Purlie Victorious” for the Philadelphia Black Theater Festival in the mid-1980s, which was named one of the five best plays that year.
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“You can afford Penn.” This simple message has been an integral part of the pitch Penn makes to potential applicants for decades. Director of Student Financial Aid William Schilling C’66’s mission is to make sure that statement is true for everyone who attends. Thus, it was music to his ears to hear that incoming University President Amy Gutmann intends to make financial aid a top priority of her administration. Like both Gutmann and President Judith Rodin CW’66, Schilling is a scholarship kid—his attendance at Penn was made possible by a generous financial aid package.
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In our lengthy search for Penn people to answer our question this issue—”What picture, actor or actress should have gotten an Oscar nomination but didn’t?”—we may have inadvertently stumbled across the reason why the ratings for the Academy Awards telecast keep dropping each year: It seems people aren’t going to see first-run films like they used to, at least not at Penn. We spoke with several respondents who confessed to not having seen any first-run films of late, and another, who wished to remain anonymous, said, “I just wait until they’re out on cable.”
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Laurie O. Robinson, a nationally known leader in criminal justice policy, has been named director of Penn’s new Master of Science Program in Criminology. Prior to her appointment at the University, Robinson worked for nearly three decades in criminal justice reform and innovation and worked as assistant attorney general at the U.S. Department of Justice. There, she oversaw the Office of Justice Programs from 1993 to 2000.