Through
11/26
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Women’s soccer star Kellianne Toland (C’01) wants you to know she has a great family. “My parents have only missed three games — home and away. They’ve driven to Yale, to Dartmouth, to Brown.” When her friends need a hug — she lives with seven others who all know each other through soccer — they ask Toland if her parents are coming to campus. “They’re surrogate parents,” said the youngest of three and a graduate of Nazareth Academy, a Catholic girls’ school in Northeast Philadelphia.
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The University has appointed a committee to advise on the search for a new Medical School Dean/CEO of the University of Pennsylvania Health System. President Judith Rodin and Provost Robert Barchi stated in a joint announcement: “The task assigned to this committee is of great importance to the University and the Health System. Because the combined Dean/CEO job will involve both academic and administrative responsibilities of the highest order, we have asked several of our most renowned faculty and University officers to serve on the committee.”
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For its first stage production of the season, Penn Presents is giving a Broadway hit a Philly accent.
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A new secretary of the University was named as of Sept. 18, President Judith Rodin said. Leslie Kruhly moves from her former post as associate director of development and special events at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. “I’m thrilled,” Kruhly said. “I’m going to miss the museum tremendously but am looking forward to the new position. I’m hoping to bring my 20 years of working in education with trustees and with governing boards.”
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This fall’s contract fight between Philadelphia public school teachers and the school board has contained a new wrinkle: the threat of a state takeover of the Philadelphia schools if teachers strike. But would Harrisburg know what to do? Susan Fuhrman, Dean of the Graduate School of Education, examines states’ track records:
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More than the influence of a tight family, more than dedication to school, the factor that most influences poor urban teens to stay away from illegal drugs is a commitment to religion. The irony in this finding, in a newly published study by a fellow at the Center for Research on Religion and Urban Civil Society (CRRUCS), is that the dramatic data showing this has been available for years. But no one was interested in it.
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Blues-rocker John Hiatt, doo-wop legend Dion and singer-songwriter Carrie Newcomer are among “World Cafe” host David Dye’s guests these next two weeks. Carrie’s not the only newcomer, though: Erin McKeown makes her Cafe debut on Tuesday, Oct. 3. Thursday, Sept. 28 Nickel Creek stops by for a performance and interview Friday, Sept. 29 The World Cafe visits with John Hiatt in Boulder, Colo., as he performs selections from his latest release, “Crossing Muddy Waters” Monday, Sept. 2 An encore presentation of Equation’s visit
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PHILADELPHIA Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania have demonstrated that an infant skull is only a fraction as strong as that of an adult, a finding that could greatly enhance the safety of young children. The results, published in the most recent issue of the Journal of Biomechanical Engi-neering, indicate that at birth a child skull has just one-eighth the strength of an adult skull.
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Amy B. Trubek 224 pages,13 b/w illustrations, $24.95 cloth
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Ulrich takes a Xootr ride. That's his Narbeth home — a former church — at right. Photo by Candace diCarlo