Through
4/26
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA Biologists at the University of Pennsylvania and the University of Wisconsin have identified some of the first genes known to have a hand in differentiating top from bottom in plant leaves, a subtle morpho-logical distinction that has profound implications for development and func-tion across a wide range of plant species.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIAespite technological advances, the book has remained a constant source of both comfort and intellectual growth. Nearly everyone has a favorite book or books. Usually these books reflect an individual life or represent a significant moment in someone life.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA - The University of Pennsylvania Law School adds to its growing corporate-law program with the creation of the Saul A. Fox Distinguished Professorship of Business Law and the associated Fox Endowed Research Fund. This is the largest single gift establishing a chair in the history of Penn.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Bennett’s team tried the gene therapy on mice like the one on her shoulder before successfully repeating it in dogs like Lancelot (in photo behind her right arm). Bennett took Lancelot with her to Washington when she testified before Congress about the procedure May 23. Photo by Daniel R. Burke
Archive ・ Penn Current
Jok Madut Jok 240 pages, 4 black-and-white illustrations, 2 maps, $24.95 paper Slavery has been endemic in Sudan for thousands of years. Today the Sudanese slave trade persists as a complex network of buyers, sellers, and middlemen that operates most actively when times are favorable.
Archive ・ Penn News
PHILADELPHIA University of Pennsylvania researchers have unearthed a new genus of gargantuan dinosaur in a corner of Egypt that paleontologists had all but ignored since World War II, when earlier finds stored in German museums were blasted from existence by Allied warplanes. In the June 1 issue of Science, the Penn team reports on its discovery of Paralititan stromeri, one of the most massive animals ever to walk the earth, and presents evidence that the quadruped walked in ancient mangrove swamps in what is now the Sahara Desert.
Archive ・ Penn Current
John Street wore two hats when he spoke to the graduating class of the Graduate School of Fine Arts May 21—that of mayor of Philadelphia and that of proud Penn parent. The mayor, his wife, Naomi Post, and his son Sharif were all in attendance as his daughter Rashida Zakia Ng (a married name) received her master’s degree in architecture from the GSFA. Before Ng and her 167 fellow May graduates received their diplomas, though, Street had a few words for them.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Fine Arts Undergraduate Chair Julie Schneider looked like a kid in a candy store as she led me through the new Charles Addams Fine Arts Hall a few weeks back. “I’m so pleased to be here,” she said, “and could not have imagined how well it all turned out.” It turned out that the fire that destroyed what was to have been Charles Addams Hall was a blessing in disguise, for the fine arts department wound up getting a larger building — the former Faculty Club — as a consolation prize.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Leo Steinberg, professor of history of art emeritus, on a planned restoration of Leonardo da Vinci’s unfinished painting “The Adoration of the Magi” (The New York Times, May 23)
Archive ・ Penn Current
To hear Phyllis Pompa talk about Penn, you’d think she was an alumna herself. But she’s not. She’s merely a loyal and devoted staffer who sees her job as “spreading the gospel of Benjamin.” Benjamin Franklin and his university, that is. And each spring, she’s there to meet the faithful as they make their annual pilgrimage back to campus. Pompa is one of roughly 175 staff and faculty volunteers who, along with 60 undergraduate students, make the Penn grads who return for Alumni Weekend feel at home.