Through
11/26
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
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If you missed them the first time around, here’s your second chance. Brought back by popular demand, these courses are offered through Penn’s Human Resources Learning and Education Program. Been there, done that? There are new programs to check out as well. All course locations at the Training Center, 3624 Market St., Suite 1B South, unless noted otherwise.
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After 13 years in Annapolis, Md., a small, quiet town, Penn’s new head coach of men’s lacrosse can’t wait to explore the city with his wife CeCe and children, John, 10, and Maggie, 8. He’s not just thinking shows and zoo and Art Museum, either. “I haven’t been to South Street yet,” said Matt Hogan, 41. “I want to see South Street.”
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PHILADELPHIA - The University of Pennsylvania has announced it will make the largest U.S. retail purchase of wind energy through an agreement with Community Energy Inc. The announcement was made at the dedication of Pennsylvania newest wind farms, the Exelon-Community Energy Wind Farms at Somerset and Mill Run. The event is being held at the Somerset Wind Farm and coincides with Gov. Mark Schweiker proclamation of "Wind Energy Week" for the week of Oct. 22.
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PHILADELPHIA - Physicists at the University of Pennsylvania have determined that adding a "fuzz" of chemical chains to colloidal molecules can lead them to form a predictable array of lattices. The entropy-driven phenomenon represents a way in which the power of entropy might be harnessed by scientists for constructive purposes. The finding, in which researchers led by Penn physicist Randall D. Kamien examined the effects of a halo of polymer limbs on otherwise spherical molecules suspended in liquid, is the cover story in today issue of the Journal of Physical Chemistry B.
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Oakbrook Terrace, Ill. - The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations today recognized Norma Lang, R.N., Ph.D., for her leadership role in promoting the use of performance measures to improve health care services by naming her the individual winner of the 2001 Ernest A. Codman Award.
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PHILADELPHIA - Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine have successfully used a retrovirus to modify genes in spermatogonial stem cells in a mouse - the first instance, in any species, of a transgenic animal created by inserting a gene into male germ-line stem cells.The inserted gene subsequently appeared in approximately 4.5 percent of offspring of mice transplanted with the altered stem cells, and was transmitted to at least three succeeding generations.
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PHILADELPHIA ducational researchers at the National Center on Adult Literacy at the University of Pennsylvania have been awarded a three-year, $2.4 million grant from the U. S. Department of Education to foster the use of technology, including distance learning, the Internet and CDs, in adult education and literacy programs nationwide.
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PHILADELPHIA - The music of 20th-Century composers George Crumb and George Rochberg will be featured in a Nov. 10 concert at the University of Pennsylvania.The program will consist of Crumb's "Celestial Mechanics (Makrokosmos IV)" for amplified piano (four hands) and "A Little Suite for Christmas, A. D. 1979" for piano and Rochberg's "String Quartet No. 3." The concert, which is the plenary event of the Society for Music Theory's 2001 international conference, will feature performances by pianists Lambert Orkis and James Primosch and the Cassatt String Quartet.
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PHILADELPHIA - The latest in digital technology is coming to the aid of New Orleans' Creole cemeteries. Faculty and students from the Graduate School of Fine Arts at the University of Pennsylvania and the School of Architecture/Preservation Studies at Tulane University are developing a conservation plan using digital technology, such as Geographic Information Systems, to map and create a survey of the cemeteries and their neighborhoods. The group also seeks to develop and implement practical solutions for site managers and tomb owners to help prevent tomb and landscape erosion.
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PHILADELPHIA -- Peter Stallybrass, a professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania, and Ann Rosalind Jones of Smith College have been named winners of the prestigious James Russell Lowell Prize award for their book "Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory." The prize is awarded annually by the Modern Language Association for an outstanding scholarly book written by a member of the association.