Through
4/30
A complete list of stories featured on Penn Today.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Pennsylvania Current has received a gold award in the Internal and External Publications category of the 2001 Accolades Awards program, run by District II of the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE). The Current was the sole gold award recipient among the 32 periodicals submitted to the competition by schools in the Middle Atlantic states and Ontario, the region covered by CASE District II. Among other things, the judges cited the paper’s appearance and its fresh treatment of familiar stories.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Ozzie and Harriet have gotten divorced, had surrogate babies, have become single parents and may soon fight over the true parent of their cloned infant. All these changes in their lifestyle are being taken to court, and family law has to figure out what rights each of them and their children and the grandparents have.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The Penn Law School has played a groundbreaking role in American legal education over the course of its 150 years. That much was made clear when Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court, told the story of another trailblazing woman in her remarks at the Law School’s 150th anniversary celebration Nov. 17.
Archive ・ Penn Current
As part of the Provost’s Lecture Series, Larry Gross, Sol Worth Professor of Communications in the Annenberg School, delivered a lecture Dec. 5 adapted from his essay, “Visibility and its Discontents,” which appeared in the Winter 2000 issue of Images, published by the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. The essay is excerpted here:
Archive ・ Penn Current
Ancient pyramids, cliff dwellings, tools and artwork — and the sites where they’re found — are the bread and butter of traditional archaeology. But Clark Erickson, associate professor of anthropology and a curator at the University Museum, is changing the stuff of archaeology by paying close attention to the spaces between sites, where ancient people shaped the landscape itself. Erickson’s latest research deals with massive earthwork fish traps built hundreds of years ago on the savannas of northeastern Bolivia by the indigenous Baure people.
Archive ・ Penn Current
This two-week “World Cafe” cycle opens in pure harmony with a salute to a cappella music featuring the Persuasions. After that, the folks who play instruments while singing take over again. Thursday, Jan. 18 The Cafe explores all things a cappella with a special visit from the Persuasions Friday, Jan. 19 Bob Weir stops by to talk about the latest Ratdog project, “Evening Moods” Monday, Jan. 22 An encore presentation of Kate Rusby’s visit Tuesday, Jan. 23 TBA
Archive ・ Penn Current
Thomas P. Hughes, Ph.D., Mellon Professor Emeritus of History and Sociology of Science, has become the first historian and one of only a few Americans to receive an honorary doctorate from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden. Hughes received the honor along with three other recipients in a ceremony at Stockholm City Hall Nov. 10. The institute cited Hughes for his “groundbreaking contributions to the history of technology,” including noted works on the history of electricity and society and on major inventors.
Archive ・ Penn Current
A third of the way through our interview, Lipika Goyal (C’01) got a feeling of déjà vu. “I feel like I’ve said the same quotes in every publication that’s come out,” she said in response to a question about her summer research in India and Ghana. She’s been answering similar questions in one interview after another since her Rhodes Scholarship award was announced.
Archive ・ Penn Current
Why do nations so furiously rage against each other? Twenty experts, six panels, four regions and nine hours were barely enough to scratch the surface of this age-old question when the Merriam Symposium on “The Challenge of Ethnopolitical Conflict: Can the World Cope?” convened Nov. 29 in Houston Hall. The School of Arts and Sciences’ day-long forum, co-sponsored by the Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict, focused on Kosovo, Jerusalem, Rwanda and Africa’s Great Lake Region, and Kashmir.
Archive ・ Penn Current
The first thing most people think of when they think of the Graduate School of Fine Arts is architecture. Then, maybe, city planning. But what about art? Well, what about it? It’s doing quite well in the GSFA, thank you, and the recent Fine Arts faculty show at the Arthur Ross Gallery drove that point home. And to reinforce it, Dean Gary Hack had the school’s overseers on hand to check out the opening of the first faculty exhibition on campus in five years, “New Faces, New Media, New Directions,” Dec. 4.