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University of Pennsylvania Senior Studies the Humanities From the Inside Out

University of Pennsylvania Senior Studies the Humanities From the Inside Out

As a student at the University of Pennsylvania, senior Heather Holmes has co-written a book, attended the Cannes Film Festival as part of a Penn Summer program and learned firsthand what it takes to be a museum curator.

Jacquie Posey

Three Penn Nursing Freshman Among New Class of NROTC Midshipmen

Three Penn Nursing Freshman Among New Class of NROTC Midshipmen

Among this year’s group of 25 students who gathered at the University of Pennsylvania to take the oath as midshipmen in the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps battalion on Friday, Nov. 7., three are freshman from Penn’s Nursing School.
Senior Cait Breslin Complements Penn Education With Study Abroad

Senior Cait Breslin Complements Penn Education With Study Abroad

For University of Pennsylvania senior Cait Breslin, studying abroad in Buenos Aires and in Kolkata has been an important part of her college experience. And she says it is good preparation toward her long-term goal of becoming a physician.

Jeanne Leong

Classification of Gene Mutations in a Children's Cancer May Point to Improved Treatments

Classification of Gene Mutations in a Children's Cancer May Point to Improved Treatments

Oncology researchers studying gene mutations in the childhood cancer neuroblastoma are refining their diagnostic tools to predict which patients are more likely to respond to drugs called ALK inhibitors that target such mutations. Removing some of the guesswork in diagnosis and treatment, the researchers say, may lead to more successful outcomes for children with this often-deadly cancer.

Karen Kreeger

Penn Study: Olaparib Shows Promise As Treatment Option for Patients with BRCA-Related Cancers

Penn Study: Olaparib Shows Promise As Treatment Option for Patients with BRCA-Related Cancers

Olaparib, an experimental twice-daily oral cancer drug, produces an overall tumor response rate of 26 percent in several advanced cancers associated with BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations, according to new research co-led by the Abramson Cancer Center of the University of Pennsylvania.

Katie Delach

Sniffing rotten coffee beans for the sake of history

Sniffing rotten coffee beans for the sake of history

In 1793, people walking around what is now known as Old City in downtown Philadelphia may have been subject to an unpleasant odor permeating the air. A shipment of coffee beans had been dumped on Water Street between Arch and Race streets, along the Delaware River, and left to rot.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn urges University community to ‘ReThink Your Footprint’

Penn urges University community to ‘ReThink Your Footprint’

Throughout the month of November, Penn is encouraging faculty, staff, and students not just to recycle their coffee cups, but switch to reusable mugs as part of a campus-wide waste minimization awareness campaign.

Maria Zankey

NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Ifill to deliver annual Higginbotham Lecture

NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Ifill to deliver annual Higginbotham Lecture

On Thursday, Nov. 20, Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, will deliver the 2014 Higginbotham Lecture with a talk titled, “Matters of Race: Brown, Ferguson, and the Unfinished Civil Rights Agenda.”

Jacquie Posey

Penn IUR to host panel on public pensions

Penn IUR to host panel on public pensions

The rising cost of public pensions threatens the fiscal stability of many American cities, including Philadelphia. As part of local and national efforts to address the problem, the Penn Institute for Urban Research (Penn IUR) has invited experts from across the country to come to Penn on Tuesday, Nov.

By Christina Cook