5/10
News Archives
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Filter Stories
Archive ・ Penn Current
Cool prize for chiller plant
The Module 7 Chiller Plant, the space-age apparition next to Murphy Field, will be honored by the American Institute of Architects at its May convention. It will receive one of 14 Honor Awards, the most noteworthy way the AIA recognizes excellence in the field. Completed in August, the plant, designed by Boston-based Leers Weinzapfel Associates, provides the University with air conditioning and cooling water for campus buildings.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Pioneer millionaire
Before Reginald Lewis, before Bruce Llewellyn, before John Johnson, there was Madame C.J. Walker, a trailblazer for black entrepreneurs in America. She built a hair-care products empire in the early 20th century, in time becoming one of America’s first African-American woman millionaires, a noted philanthropist and a hero to African-Americans and women alike.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Early achievers
The competition to get into Penn gets stiffer with each passing year. Just how much stiffer is reflected in this year’s early-decision admissions figures. A record-high 2,851 prospective students applied for early decision admission to Penn’s Class of 2005, and a record-low 36.2 percent of these, or 1,033, were admitted, according to the Undergraduate Admissions Office. Last year, 38.8 percent (997) of the 2,570 early-decision applicants were admitted.
Archive ・ Penn Current
From Vesuvius to Popo
Popocatepetl is close enough to Mexico City to cover its population of 22 million people with a blanket of ash. Mount Rainier, considered the most dangerous volcano in the Cascade Range, dominates the landscape over the Seattle/Tacoma area. Catastrophic volcano eruptions such as the one that buried Pompeii during ancient times have the potential to wreak havoc on modern humans as well, said the speakers in a program, “Explosive Volcanism in Human History,” held at the University of Pennsylvania Museum on the evening of Jan. 17.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Great date spots
Valentine’s Day approaches, and all across campus, thoughts turn to romance. What to do to show that special someone that he or she truly is special?
Archive ・ Penn Current
“When I started in Wharton it was very, very scary and it was very difficult to feel that I was supposed to be there.”
The same Lisa Lord who served as mistress of ceremonies at last month’s Martin Luther King commemorative ceremony on campus claims she used to be shy.
Archive ・ Penn News
Penn Receives $20 Million Gift For University Priorities In Financial Aid, Student Life and Faculty Support
PHILADELPHIA -- The University of Pennsylvania has received a $20 million gift from Say Yes to Education, Inc. that will provide for its priorities in student life, faculty support and financial aid, according to an announcement today by Penn President Judith Rodin.
Archive ・ Penn Current
“NGOs and Human Rights: Promise and Performance”
Edited by Claude E. Welch, Jr. 408 pages, $49.95 cloth While states remain the major protectors — and abusers — of human rights, nongovernmental organizations [NGOs] such as Amnesty International have emerged as central players in the promotion of human rights around the world.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Publicity, good science meet on Web
It is often said that genius goes unrecognized in its own time. It is also often said that giants are unrecognized in their home towns. And sure enough, both of these clichés surfaced as two world-renowned architects were honored in their home town Jan. 18. Robert Venturi (Hon’80), one of the architects, invoked the first cliché. “Quite often, the greatest artists in history are not recognized in their time. This concerns me. But I see that we are still controversial, and this makes me feel better.”
Archive ・ Penn News
Astronomers Gain Best Glimpse Yet Of What Our Universe Is Made Of - And Not Much Of It Is Matter As We Know It
PHILADELPHIA In the most accurate picture yet of the makings of our universe, astronomers have determined that a measly 5 percent of its mass comes from the ordinary matter that makes up planets, stars and gases. The finding, by scientists at the University of Pennsylvania, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., and the University of Colorado at Boulder, is scheduled for publication next month in the journal Physics Review D.