Through
5/7
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
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Penn on the ‘Tube Penn’s YouTube channel, at www.youtube.com/univpennsylvania, enables visitors to view videos of events from all across the University’s 12 schools, and of famous guests and speakers, past and present.
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A leading global expert on public opinion, social influence and political communication has been named the University’s 29th provost.
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Over the past 15 years, the World Wide Web has transformed human knowledge, research, communication and commerce. Consumers purchase goods at sites like Amazon.com and eBay.com, friends stay connected through sites like Facebook and MySpace, and scholars work collaboratively across long distances. But Peter Conn, a professor of English at Penn and director of the Penn English Program in London, says similar examples of connectedness can be traced back at least 2,000 years.
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In the baboon world, female bonding can lead to a greater chance of survival.
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Dear Benny: I’ve read that Joan F. Goodman was recently named the University Ombudsman. Can you tell me what she will be doing in that role?—Fair and Balanced Dear Fair and Balanced, Goodman’s “day job” is as a professor of education in the Graduate School of Education. She has been a tenured faculty member at Penn since 1988 and was promoted to full professor in 1994. She will serve as ombudsman for a two-year term, effective July 1.
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The Philadelphia Phillies erased a quarter century of heartache for Philadelphia sports fans by winning the 2008 World Series, the city’s first major professional sports championship since 1983. Behind the arms of sole ace pitcher Cole Hamels and closer Brad Lidge, the Phillies defeated the Tampa Bay Rays four games to one.
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Throughout the 2008-09 academic year, the Current has taken a look at the stories behind some of Penn’s most well-known, and most obscure, pieces of public art. The tour concludes with the statue, “Benjamin Franklin.” To view a slideshow of a year of Campus Art Walk, visit the Current on the web at: www.upenn.edu/pennnews/current.
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PHILADELPHIA –- Engineers from the University of Pennsylvania, Sandia National Laboratories and Rice University have demonstrated the formation of interconnected carbon nanostructures on graphene substrate in a simple assembly process that involves heating few-layer graphene sheets to sublimation using electric current that may eventually lead to a new paradigm for building integrated carbon-based devices.
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MEDIA ADVISORY & PHOTO OPPORTUNITYWHAT:
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PHILADELPHIA –- Female baboons who have strong social relationships with other females give birth to offspring who are much more likely to survive to adulthood than baboons reared by less social mothers, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, the University of California, Los Angeles, and others. The results support a growing body of research on humans — especially women — indicating that strong social networks are crucially important to health and reduced stress.