Through
5/7
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
Penn Carey Law has said that it will remove the name of former U.S. Supreme Court chief justice Roger Brooke Taney from one of its buildings. Taney wrote the 1857 majority opinion that upheld slavery.
Penn In the News
Seth Kreimer of Penn Carey Law is quoted on the accompaniment of cellphone camera technology by cases of police prosecuting critics who recorded them.
Penn In the News
Indira Gurubhagavatula of the Perelman School of Medicine says that ResMed Inc. has struggled to meet the spike in demand for sleep apnea treatments.
Penn In the News
Penn Carey Law will remove from a campus building the name of a former U.S. Supreme Court chief justice who wrote an 1857 majority opinion upholding slavery.
Penn In the News
Stephen Gluckman& of the Perelman School of Medicine says there is no evidence of immunodeficiency being related to COVID-19 vaccines.
Penn In the News
Witold Henisz of the Wharton School said more and more companies have been compelled to weigh in on social and political issues. "Millennial workers and consumers demand that companies take stands and look to (their) CEOs especially where the government has failed to act or taken a stand of which they disapprove. This will continue to grow as a strategic challenge for companies," he said.
Penn In the News
Stephen Gluckman of the Perelman School of Medicine debunked false claims that vaccines can create immunodeficiency.
Penn In the News
Susan Ellenberg of the Perelman School of Medicine said understanding comorbidities can reveal different populations’ risk of disease. “A comorbidity may contribute to the severity of the disease under consideration ... but the underlying cause of death would not be the comorbidity,” she said.
Penn In the News
Daniel Taylor of the Wharton School weighed in on stock-trading methods that protect executives from allegations of insider trading. "Some amount of chicanery is legal. And it is the looseness in the rules covering 'pre-planned' stock sales that are to blame," he said.
Penn In the News
Paul Offit of the Perelman School of Medicine said COVID-19 booster shots are most important for older adults who got the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines.