Through
5/1
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Over in the School of Engineering and Applied Science, they’re really sweating the small stuff these days. That’s because, in the words of Vijay Kumar, deputy dean for research in SEAS, “small is big.” The small stuff we’re talking about here is really small — the size of a single atom or molecule. Penn researchers are busy pushing these atoms and molecules around, one by one, to see what happens and create devices and processes that will change the way we live.
Archive ・ Penn Current
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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As Halloween approaches, Penn staff and faculty are starting to fill the candy bowls on their desks with more than just the typical peppermints. We asked around to find out what staffers consider the best treats to give this Halloween. Chocolate won hands down, with seven votes for goodies ranging from Kit Kats to Tootsie Rolls. But not everyone has chocolate on their minds. Here are some other choices:
Archive ・ Penn Current
Cesaria Evora had been singing the distinctive Afro-Portuguese blues known as morna for decades, but it wasn’t until a young Frenchman of Cape Verdean descent invited her to record an album in Paris in 1988 that the world discovered her talent. Already a sensation in Europe, “the barefoot diva” is now gaining fans in the United States through her appearances on programs like “The Late Show with David Letterman.” Penn Presents brings her to Philadelphia for the first time for a concert Nov. 4 featuring songs from her latest album, “São Vicente,” a tribute to her home town.
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U.S. Secretary of Education Roderick Paige came to Penn Oct. 10 to praise an international education research project and to get a good word in for his boss’s education agenda. Paige delivered those messages to the international panel of researchers who participated in the Six Nations Education Research Project, a seven-year project led by the Graduate School of Education.
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Former Attorney General Janet Reno and Philadelphia Police Commissioner John F. Timoney were both on hand to receive awards at the dedication of the Jerry Lee Center of Criminology Oct. 15. The ceremony recognized both Reno’s and Timoney’s work in research-based crime prevention. Founded last year with an initial $5 million gift from the Jerry Lee Foundation, the center has undertaken projects such as a $3.5 million contract with the English government to introduce and test “restorative justice” for serious adult offenses in London, Oxfordshire and the Newcastle area.
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Check off how many of these cool spots west of campus you know. We got the list from long-time neighborhood denizen Barry Grossbach, executive vice president of the Spruce HIll Community Association. See if you’re an Official West Phillyphile or maybe just a U. City Newbie. Woodlands Cemetery, Woodland Avenue and 40th Street, resting spot of artist Thomas Eakins and Penn Dental School founder Thomas Evans.
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After a delay at the Lincoln Tunnel for a bomb scare, we arrived at the Javits Convention Center, the base of operations (called the “BOO”), at about midnight Sept. 11. By 3 a.m. we were ready to go to work. The team was divided into the day shift and the night shift. It was decided that local veterinary care would be harder to obtain at night, so I was on the night shift. The night search dogs were
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Neither A. Melissa Lopez (C’99,D’02) nor Jimmy Morrison (D’03) dreamed of being a dentist growing up. Well, they both say that hardly anyone dreams of growing up a dentist. But the two dental students, after observing the low numbers of minorities training for dentistry, want to plant that dream in the hearts of young minorities.