5/18
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
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Penn In the News
Mortgage Repayment: Questions About Monthly Payment Management (Second of a Series)
Jack Guttentag of the Wharton School answers questions about mortgage repayment.
Penn In the News
A Dangerous Loophole in Federal Law Is Putting Women’s Lives at Risk
Susan Sorenson of the School of Social Policy & Practice comments on domestic violence victims being at the highest risk of homicide when they are leaving a relationship.
Penn In the News
A Lesson in Donor Cultivation: Morgan State University
Marybeth Gasman of the Graduate School of Education writes about the importance of donor cultivation.
Penn In the News
This Is Not a Love Story
Susan Sorenson of the School of Social Policy & Practice is quoted about domestic violence.
Penn In the News
There's a Lesson In Spain's Surreal, Unfinished Cities
Christopher Marcinkoski of the School of Design and his new book, The City That Never Was, are featured.
Penn In the News
Disrupting the Competitive Landscape: Covering the 2016 Wharton China Business Forum
Undergraduate students Megan Foo of the Wharton School and Nelson Dong of the School of Arts & Sciences co-author a blog post about their experiences covering the 2016 Wharton China Business Forum.
Penn In the News
Can Your BMI Predict How Long You’ll Live?
Rexford Ahima of the Perelman School of Medicine is quoted about body mass index.
Penn In the News
The Power of an Empty Podium
Jonathan Moreno of the Perelman School of Medicine and the School of Arts & Sciences writes about the symbolic power behind an empty podium to represent the absence of Donald Trump at the Iowa Republican debate.
Penn In the News
This Simple Workplace Change Could Improves Surgery Survival Rates
Jeffrey Silber of the Perelman School of Medicine is quoted as the lead author of a study that found that better nursing work environments affects surgery survival rates.
Penn In the News
Can Science Predict Political Turmoil?
Jonathan Moreno of the School of Arts & Sciences and the Perelman School of Medicine writes about the connection between science and predicting political turmoil.