Through
11/26
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
When “s(how)” debuts at the Institute of Contemporary Art, you’ll be treated to more than just the works of some of today’s hottest living artists. You’ll also get a peek into the minds of tomorrow’s art movers and shakers. The exhibit, which is spearheaded by 10 Penn undergraduates, marks the culmination of a yearlong seminar on contemporary art and curating sponsored by the University’s Art History Department and the ICA.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Professor of Education Joan Goodman is convinced that early childhood education is at heart a moral undertaking. She has already co-authored one book on the subject, “The Moral Stake in Education,” with Professor of Law Howard Lesnick (“Research,” Current, Feb. 1, 2001).
Archive ・ Penn Current
Along with the latest crop of graduating Penn seniors, this year’s 247th Commencement will honor some of the world’s most noted scholars. Commencement speaker and 1984 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu will receive an honorary degree along with five other recipients.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Jeanne Arnold, current Director of the African-American Resource Center, will replace Valerie Hayes as Executive Director for the Office of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Programs on June 9. A graduate of Penn’s School of Social Work, Arnold has a wealth of experience in issues relating to cultural diversity. Before joining Penn, Arnold served as both Director of Human Resources and Community Relations and Director of Center Services for the Crime Prevention Association.
Archive ・ Penn Current
“Supreme Justice” assembles the public presentations, occasional writings, speeches, and interviews of the late Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall over a period of seven decades, from the 1930s to the 1990s. These texts, compiled by J.
Archive ・ Penn Current
When “s(how)” debuts at the Institute of Contemporary Art, you’ll be treated to more than just the works of some of today’s hottest living artists. You’ll also get a peek into the minds of tomorrow’s art movers and shakers. The exhibit, which is spearheaded by 10 Penn undergraduates, marks the culmination of a yearlong seminar on contemporary art and curating sponsored by the University’s Art History Department and the ICA.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Archive ・ Penn Current
Math and science programs in West Philadelphia schools will get a $1.5 million boost thanks to a grant from the National Science Foundation. The grant, which is approximately $500,000 a year for three years, will fund Access Science, an academically-based community service project involving faculty, undergraduate and graduate students. Access Science both tutors students and helps teachers design hands-on learning activities.
Archive ・ Penn Current
What Uncle Sam takes away, he sometimes gives back. And boy there’s not a single one among you who don’t already have plans for your income tax return. Catching up on past due bills is the general trend although some have more lavish plans, like a trip to Mexico, for that shiny penny. Sharon Mulholland Program Coordinator, Office of the Vice Dean, Wharton Undergraduate Division “We don’t plan on spending the money. My husband has just retired, so he’s consolidating and regrouping.”
Archive ・ Penn Current
Tukufu Zuberi already wears two hats at Penn: Professor of sociology and director of the Center for Africana Studies. Now he’s added a third hat—the detective’s fedora. Zuberi isn’t just any old detective, though. Starting in July, he and three comrades—Columbia Professor of Architecture Gwendolyn Wright and appraisers Wesley Cowan and Elyse Luray-Marx—will go sleuthing for the historical significance of artifacts, buildings and legends all across America in a new PBS series, “History Detectives.”