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Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
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Penn In the News
DNA Research Suggests Large-scale Collapse of Native American Ancestors
Theodore Schurr of the School of Arts & Sciences is quoted about mitochondrial DNA findings in a study that supports accounts that European arrival in the Americas destroyed indigenous populations.
Penn In the News
Just Turned 40? An Architect Says It’s Time to Design for Aging
Matthias Hollwich of the School of Design is featured about architecture that serves older adults for places like retirement communities.
Penn In the News
Spoiled Milk
More than a few people probably chuckled a little, back in January, when the University of Maryland at College Park came under fire for a press release about research that linked drinking a brand of chocolate milk to recovery from concussions. Many said at the time that the press release seemed like unpaid advertising, given that the findings were never subject to peer review.
Penn In the News
Duke Official Apologized for Lack of ‘Civility’ in Parking Dispute As Sit-in Over Racial Issues Continues
A top official at Duke University issued a public apology Monday afternoon, as protesters refused to leave a building until three administrators have been terminated and other demands met. Tallman Trask III, Duke’s executive vice president, was accused by a contract employee of hitting her with his car while she was trying to enforce parking restrictions before a football game in 2014, and calling her a racial slur.
Penn In the News
Survey: College Students Seek Balance on Free Speech
Most college students embrace the ideal of an open learning environment on campus that exposes them to all types of speech and viewpoints, but a large majority also believes that schools should be allowed to restrict slurs and other intentionally offensive language, according to a new national survey. The survey — released Monday and sponsored by the Knight Foundation and Newseum Institute in partnership with Gallup — sheds light on the complexities of student viewpoints on free speech and other First Amendment issues in a year of significant tumult on campuses nationwide.
Penn In the News
Why Pa. Budget Crisis Has Been Terrible for Vulnerable Children
Graduate student Samantha Waxman of the School of Social Policy & Practice writes about the impact of the Pennsylvania budget crisis on children. Debra Schilling Wolfe of the School of Social Policy & Practice is quoted.
Penn In the News
Unionizing Pays Big Dividend for Professors at Regional Public Universities
Full-time instructors at regional public universities earn an average of about $21,000, or nearly 25 percent, more in pay and benefits annually if they belong to a union, concludes a groundbreaking new study of compensation at such institutions. The location and size of the employer also makes a big difference. Those in larger suburban public universities, the highest-paying category of institutions studied, earned an average of nearly $17,000, or 20 percent, more in pay and benefits annually than those at midsize rural institutions, the lowest-paying category.
Penn In the News
Colleges Drill Down on Job-listing Terms
Peter Cappelli of the Wharton School comments on difficulties in matching workers with jobs.
Penn In the News
Medical Marijuana: How to Prevent Addiction
David Casarett of the Perelman School of Medicine pens an opinion piece about the recent attention on opioid addiction.
Penn In the News
The Calculated Value of a President With a STEM Degree
Thirteen years ago, when James W. Wagner, an engineer turned administrator, introduced himself to alumni of Emory University as the new president, he was uniformly greeted with one question: Was he there to start an engineering school? After all, why else would Emory, which has always fashioned itself as a classic liberal-arts institution, hire away the provost of Case Western Reserve University, an institution popular among engineering majors?