Through
5/1
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Frank Lloyd Wright. Louis Sullivan. William L. Price. William L. Price? George Howe, whose PSFS Building brought the modernist style to America, believed that Price belonged in that same pantheon with Wright and Sullivan. The three, he wrote, “were among the first to grasp the architectural possibilities of the new life and the new means of construction.”
Archive ・ Penn Current
Nursing School Dean Norma Lang will step down as dean, effective this summer. Under her leadership, the School of Nursing has consistently ranked in the top two nursing schools in the country in the U.S. News & World Report survey of graduate schools. This year the School of Nursing received more National Institutes of Health research dollars than any other private nursing school in the nation.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The first Models of Excellence awards ceremony, at the Annenberg Center’s Zellerbach Theatre May 8, was one of those rare campus events where the ceremony upstaged the food at the reception afterwards. About 400 people — honorees, family and friends, supervisors, nominees, faculty and staff — saw a production worthy of the Oscars, including a video montage of Penn notables (none named Franklin) set to a thunderous musical score and congratulations to all from Vice President for Human Resources Jack Heuer and President Judith Rodin.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Fashion is no frivolous topic for Professor of Sociology Diana Crane, Ph.D. In fact, she considers the study of human duds to be an excellent way of documenting such large issues as changing gender roles, the emergence of feminism, and the fragmentation of social classes over the past century. Consider, for example, hats and T-shirts. “Between about 1850 and 1960, men weren’t fully dressed without hats,” Crane said recently. A man’s hat defined his occupation and his social position, from the English lord to the Paris rag-picker, she said.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The next two weeks on “The World Cafe” have a distinctly feminine flavor, as singer-songwrtiers Tracy Chapman, Sarah Hamer and Melissa Ferrick all pay a visit, along with Woody Guthrie’s daughter Nora. Here’s the complete rundown: Thursday, May 18 Great Big Sea discuss and play music from their latest effort, “Turn” Friday, May 19 Tracy Chapman performs music from her new album, “Telling Stories”
Archive ・ Penn Current
If everything seems just a bit quiet right now, don’t worry. It’s just that everyone’s resting up for tomorrow when the biggest celebration of the academic year begins. The University’s 244th Commencement, on Monday, May 22, is the high point in a weekend that brings Penn’s worldwide community of alumni back to Philadelphia for a chance to reminisce, catch up with old friends, party and welcome Penn’s newest alumni to the fold.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The first computer lab in a public school in Ecuador went up last spring. Next month, in Pune, India, a place where electricity works only some of the time, another new computer lab will go up. The builders are Puente (bridge in Spanish), a group of volunteer students who are bridging the digital divide between the haves and have-nots, spanning Philadelphia city streets, oceans and continents.
Archive ・ Penn Current
When city planners talk about community, it’s usually in terms of physical spaces. So it comes as a surprise that in his latest book, “Open Moral Communities” (MIT Press, 2000), Professor of City and Regional Planning Seymour Mandelbaum has almost nothing to say about the physical realm. In a brief talk at the Penn Bookstore May 5, Mandelbaum explained that his book examines the types of moral communities humans form and how they work to bind people together.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Attention all A-3s: You now have a chance to take charge of your retirement savings — if you act right away. In response to requests from weekly-paid staff, the University will allow participants in Penn’s Retirement Allowance Plan (RAP) to join the Tax-Deferred Retirement Plan (TDR) effective July 1, according to John J. Heuer, vice president for human resources. But to make the switch, employees must notify the Benefits Office no later than June 1. Each plan has advantages and disadvantages. So which one is right for you?
Archive ・ Penn Current
Kurt Conklin is a big believer in prevention. When a rainbow flag outside his Powelton Village home made him the target of anti-gay harassment, he and his neighbors — who showed their support for him by flying rainbow flags from their homes — redoubled their efforts to promote town-gown dialogue with Drexel University students as a means of forestalling future trouble.