Through
5/1
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Even though Lisa Kucharski is a computer science engineering major, she plans to take all the different classes offered by College House Computing this semester.
Archive ・ Penn Current
All the 196 chairs in 200 College Hall were occupied 10 minutes before feminist artist Judy Chicago was due to begin her speech on March 27. Relative latecomers lined the room’s walls, and Chicago herself had to scrounge for seating. The acclaimed pioneer of feminist art gathered the folds of her maroon dress and sat herself on the stairs leading to the stage to wait for her introduction. She adjusted her large, rose-tinted glasses and smiled brightly at the first row of the audience sitting barely two feet away.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Penn hosted an international conference on community schools last week. The International Conference on Higher-Education-Assisted Community Schools held March 29 to 30, and sponsored by the Center for Community Partnerships, brought together faculty members from more than 45 higher education institutions and their school and community partners. We asked the center’s director to comment on the growth of college- and university-assisted community schools.
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Richard Gelles, Joanne and Raymond Welsh Chair of Child Welfare and Family, on recent school shootings (“CBS Morning News,” March 23)
Archive ・ Penn Current
Bill Berner bubbles over with enthusiasm as he shows a visitor around his workplace, a cavernous warehouse full of scientific equipment. The wild-haired, large-eyed Berner resembles Albert Einstein and would be right at home on a Saturday morning kids’ science show. And the job he has at Penn — designing, setting up and maintaining the equipment for demonstrations in physics classes — fits this image perfectly.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Three Penn scientists have received research awards from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation this year. Intended to enhance the careers of the very best young faculty members, 100 of these grants are awarded across the nation annually in six fields: chemistry, computer science, economics, mathematics, neuroscience and physics.
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Novelist Tom Wolfe has spent more than three decades chronicling American culture and its foibles with uncanny accuracy and wit. His latest novel, “A Man in Full,” explores the New South and American race relations today, just as his celebrated novel “The Bonfire of the Vanities,” first serialized in Rolling Stone, captured the class structure and politics of New York in the 1980s.
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Jack St. Clair Kilby did not set out to change the world when he began tinkering with the idea of an integrated circuit back in the 1950s. “In 1958 my goals were simple — lower the cost, simplify the assembly and make things faster and cheaper,” he said of the research effort he led at Texas Instruments that produced the first integrated circuit.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA Like so many other things in our society, the time-honored tradition of the faraway pen pal is about to be radically transformed by the Internet age.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA -- The University of Pennsylvania Police Department (UPPD) received national accreditation through the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, Inc. (CALEA), at CALEA spring conference held in Greensboro, North Carolina this past weekend. The University of Pennsylvania Police Department becomes the first nationally accredited campus police agency within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Twenty eight other campus police agencies across the United States are also currently accredited by CALEA.