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A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Who's running the zoom zoom zoom in the boom boom at Penn? Our reporter on Locust Walk pulled hurrying students aside on a clear spring day to inquire into their preferred beats come graduation day. Students were usually short and sweet about why they liked hip-hop over, say, chamber music. Unlike the finals many of them had just come from or were headed toward, shaking it out on the dance floor doesn't require a great deal of analytical thinking or studied comprehension of vocabulary words.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The Saturday night of Penn Relays weekend is for for stepping, not running. The Class of '23 Ice Skating Rink trembled beneath the stomping feet of fraternity brothers - like these seven acrobats from Penn's Alpha Phi Alpha chapter - and sorority sisters who performed elaborate routines during the annual Penn Relays step show organized by the Bicultural InterGreek Council (BIG-C). Photo by Mark Garvin
Archive ・ Penn Current
Time to catch up with Ireland's foremost traditional band, the Chieftains, and with those masters of "Jewish jazz," the New Orleans Klezmer All-Stars, on "The World Cafe" these next two weeks. Of course, that's not all that's happening on the show: Thursday, May 13 Elliot Smith performs music from his album "XO" Friday, May 14 David Dye visits with the Chieftains and James Galway Monday, May 17 An encore presentation of Rufus Wainwright's Cafe visit
Archive ・ Penn Current
Andrew B. Rudczynski
Archive ・ Penn Current
Photo by Tommy Leonardi For many, it's a familiar spectacle: The bleating of the bagpipes. The colorful banners of the organized classes stretching back nearly to the dawn of the century. The whimsical decorations on the graduates' caps. And all the pomp and circumstance the Office of the Secretary can arrange for the occasion.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Talk about gut-wrenching. You've just poured your soul out to a group of people you've never met, trying to convince them with slides and self-assurance why they should pour millions of their own dollars into your would-be business. Then one of them asks, "Have you done any research that would indicate that there is a real demand for this?" You pause, caught off-guard momentarily. And even though you regain your composure and soldier on, somewhere inside, you know you've just kissed the money goodbye.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Paul Hendrickson began his book about the Vietnam War with a young man attempting to toss former Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara from the deck of a Martha's Vineyard ferry. "The Living and the Dead: Robert McNamara and Five Lives of a Lost War" is a search for redemption for these two men wrestling on a boat, as well as for Hendrickson. He says that all his books are searches of a kind, for a particular past or redemption for sins.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA - John J. DiIulio, professor of politics and public affairs at Princeton University, has been appointed the [Frederick] Fox Leadership Professor of Politics, Religion and Civil Society at the University of Pennsylvania, according to Samuel H. Preston, dean of the School of Arts and Sciences at Penn. Dr. DiIulio, who also is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, senior counsel to Public/Private Ventures and founding director of the Center for Public Management at the Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., will begin his assignment at Penn July 1, 1999.
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PHILADELPHIA -- The University of Pennsylvania will hold a groundbreaking for Hamilton Square, its newest retail and entertainment complex, on Wednesday (May 12) at the northwest corner of 40th and Walnut streets, adjacent to the Penn campus. Hamilton Square includes the nation's first Sundance Cinema, a fresh food market and an 800-car parking garage. Project construction will begin immediately following the groundbreaking and is expected to be completed within a year. The complex is scheduled to open in the spring of 2000.
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PHILADELPHIA - A national survey of parents in computer households indicates parents are deeply fearful about the Internet's influence on their children. The survey project - led by Dr. Joseph Turow of the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania - shows 78% are "strongly" or "somewhat" concerned that their children might give away personal information on the Internet. An equal percentage fear children might view sexually explicit material.