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Alp Ercil’s $10 Million Gift Establishes Penn Climate Sustainability Initiative

The University of Pennsylvania has announced a $10 million gift from alumnus Alp Ercil, M&T’95, to establish the Penn Climate Sustainability Initiative, which will draw upon Penn’s strengths in interdisciplinary teaching and research to address climate and sustainability from multiple perspectives.

“Penn has promised to lead on the greatest challenges of our time, and climate change may be the greatest challenge of all,” said Penn Interim President J. Larry Jameson. “Thanks to the groundbreaking work of Penn researchers and scientists, we are already seeing amazing breakthroughs. We are tremendously grateful to Alp Ercil for his inspirational commitment, which will allow us to accelerate our efforts. We will draw on our collective strengths in climate science and policy to advance our understanding of these challenges and discover solutions that will make a difference around the world.”

Building on Penn’s leadership in fostering collaboration across academic disciplines, the Climate Sustainability Initiative will create a unique university-wide initiative that brings together all 12 schools on campus, as well as interdisciplinary programs like the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy, the Environmental Innovations Initiative, and the Center for Science, Sustainability, and the media.

The Penn Climate Sustainability Initiative will also accelerate the campus-wide Climate and Sustainability Action Plan and enhance Penn’s contribution to the global policy debate.  

“Penn has the key pieces in place to make a significant contribution to the urgent issue of climate change,” said Mr. Ercil. “I am thrilled to help advance this work, accelerate innovation, and strengthen Penn’s role at the forefront of this field.”

Leading on climate change is one of the key priorities of In Principle and Practice, Penn’s strategic framework. The University’s commitment to this issue is broad, ranging from leading in energy science and policy to designing and caring for the built environment. To realize these goals, Penn will support and recruit the best minds in the field, fuel initiatives that advance knowledge and promise solutions, and adopt institutional best practices for the sake of the future of the planet.   

Mr. Ercil’s commitment will serve as a catalyst for this work, providing needed funds for priority initiatives to be determined in partnership among Interim President Jameson, Provost John L. Jackson Jr., and a soon-to-be appointed Vice Provost for Climate Science, Policy, and Action.

“This support from Alp Ercil comes at the perfect time, as we implement our strategic framework and prepare to introduce the new Vice Provost for Climate Science, Policy, and Action,” said Provost Jackson. “The Penn Climate Sustainability Initiative will advance Penn’s strengths in this critical field by accelerating interdisciplinary connections and building collaborations on our campus and beyond.”

Mr. Ercil is the founder and chief investment officer of Asia Research and Capital Management, Ltd., a Hong Kong and Dubai-based investment management firm founded in 2011. He is a 1995 graduate of Penn’s management & technology (M&T) program, a dual-degree program in which he earned a BS in economics from Wharton and a BS in systems engineering from Penn Engineering. An active Penn volunteer, Mr. Ercil is a current member of the Penn Asia Leadership Committee and an emeritus member of Undergraduate Financial Aid Leadership Council (UFLC). He also participates in the Alumni Ambassador Program. His past gifts to Penn have supported the Ercil Endowed Scholarship, the M&T Integration Lab, and the UFLC Challenge Fund.

Kotaro Sasaki: Richard King Mellon Associate Professor at Penn Vet

caption: Kotaro Sasaki

Andrew M. Hoffman, the Gilbert S. Kahn Dean of Penn Vet, has named Kotaro Sasaki the Richard King Mellon Associate Professor of Biomedical Sciences.

Dr. Sasaki’s research is focused on the development and pathophysiology of urogenital and reproductive organ systems, and his laboratory is working on advancing the understanding of human infertility, reproduction, and endocrinology. Dr. Sasaki possesses an exceptional record of academic accomplishments. His work on converting stem cells into male germ cells and understanding how the human body generates spermatozoa was awarded an Open Philanthropy grant of $2,585,990 in addition to grants from the NIH and other funding agencies. Dr. Sasaki is a recipient of the Endocrine Society’s 2023 Early Investigator Award, which supports early-career investigators in endocrine-related research; the 2023 Zoetis Award for Veterinary Research Excellence; and the 2023 ENS@T Award for best scientific work in the field of adrenal tumors.

“Dr. Sasaki is transforming our understanding of the development and diseases of reproductive and adrenal organs by integrating meticulous comparative physiology with highly creative, pioneering approaches using stem cell-derived organoid models,” said Christopher J. Lengner, the Harriet Ellison Woodward Associate Professor and chair of Penn Vet’s department of biomedical sciences. “His scholarly contributions and novel insights are not only addressing fundamental questions regarding germ cell and adrenal biology, but they are also providing a foundation for the development of novel therapeutic approaches.”

Dr. Sasaki earned his MD from Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine and his PhD from Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, both in Japan. He completed his surgical pathology residency at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and a renal pathology fellowship at the University of Washington Medical Center. After completing his clinical training, Dr. Sasaki pursued a postdoctoral fellowship at Kyoto University before joining Penn Vet’s faculty as an assistant professor in 2018.

The awarding of a named, endowed professorship is the highest honor bestowed upon a faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania and reflects a commitment to scientific discovery, mentorship, and academic service.

School of Arts & Sciences: Appointments to Endowed Chairs

Marlyse Baptista: President’s Distinguished Professor of Linguistics

caption: Marlyse BaptistaMarlyse Baptista has been named the President’s Distinguished Professor of Linguistics. Dr. Baptista is a contact linguist who researches the morphology (the form of words and phrases), syntax (the grammatical arrangement of words in a sentence), and development of a wide range of languages. She specializes in Pidgin and Creole languages and their source languages and in theories of language emergence, contact, and change. She has a particular interest in cognition and theoretical models of language contact and language emergence. Dr. Baptista and her collaborators use experimental methods involving artificial language learning to investigate how languages and their speakers converge, diverge, and innovate in multilingual settings. She also uses fieldwork data and tools from generative syntax to study the grammatical properties of Pidgins and Creoles. Dr. Baptista’s current research investigates the cognitive processes involved in contact situations and focuses on the role of convergence in second language acquisition, bilingualism, and Creole genesis and development. She directs the Language Contact and Cognition Lab in the department of linguistics and is a faculty member in MindCORE.

Andrew Santiago-Frangos: M. Jane Williams and Valerie Vargo Presidential Assistant Professor of Biology

caption: Andrew Santiago-FrangosAndrew Santiago-Frangos has joined Penn as the M. Jane Williams and Valerie Vargo Presidential Assistant Professor of Biology. A molecular biologist with a focus on biochemistry and structural biology of natural bacterial immune systems, Dr. Santiago-Frangos comes to Penn from Montana State University, where he was a postdoctoral fellow. He is a leading junior scholar in his field, having published 19 publications since 2015 in journals including Nature Communications, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Current Biology, and Nature Structural & Molecular Biology. He has a patent that was licensed to a new startup company, VIRIS Detection System. Dr. Santiago-Frangos has received awards from the Life Sciences Research Foundation and the Burroughs-Wellcome Fund, and has received a highly competitive MOSAIC Postdoctoral Career Transition Award to Promote Diversity from the NIH, National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS). Dr. Santiago-Frangos has mentored graduate and undergraduate students. His enthusiasm for teaching and mentoring has been recognized by a teaching award while serving as a PhD student teaching assistant at Johns Hopkins University, and by recent awards from Penn’s Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships.

The professorship was established through generous planned gifts from the estates of M. Jane Williams, CW’65, and Valerie L. Vargo, MT’65, who forged a lifelong friendship as undergraduate classmates at Penn. Ms. Williams received a BA in history from Penn and an MEd and MBA from Temple University. She pursued a 50-year career as a fundraising professional, holding senior positions at prominent institutions, including as assistant vice president for development and alumni relations at Penn and vice president for development at New York University Medical Center. She served on the Trustees’ Council of Penn Women and supported many other priorities at Penn.

Ms. Vargo graduated from Penn with a degree in medical technology and earned a graduate degree at Temple University. Her medical and microbiology background took her across the country during her career, including at a veteran’s hospital in California and with the quality assurance division of American Home Products. Her career culminated in an extended international assignment in Paris, France. After retirement, she earned real estate credentials and worked for Berger Realty in Ocean City, New Jersey.

In addition to the professorship, Ms. Williams’ and Ms. Vargo’s estate gifts support the Mary Jane Williams and Valerie Vargo AFCRI Breast Cancer Research Fund, the Mary Jane Williams and Valerie Vargo Epilepsy Fund, and the Valerie Vargo and Mary Jane Williams Fund for the Rena Rowan Breast Center at the Perelman School of Medicine.

Doris Wagner: DiMaura Professor of Biology

caption: Doris WagnerDoris Wagner, a professor of biology, has been named the DiMaura Professor of Biology. Dr. Wagner is the inaugural director of the Penn Plant Adaptability and Resilience Center, which is a new initiative for plant-based sustainable solutions to address climate change. A leader in the fields of plant biology, chromatin modification, and epigenetics, she investigates reprogramming of cell identity and function during developmental transitions and in response to environmental inputs in plants. She has received grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Health, including serving as the lead PI on the NSF research collaborative network initiative called EPIC: Epigenomics of Plants, International Consortium. She is editor-in-chief of Current Opinions in Plant Biology.

Dr. Wagner is committed to science education, undergraduate research, and innovation in teaching, participating annually in the Biomedical Research Academy for high school students and leading several workshops at Penn’s Center for Excellence in Teaching, Learning, and Innovation. In addition to her service as graduate chair of biology, she has served on the Penn Women’s Biomedical Society, the Penn Epigenetics Program Executive Board, the Penn Genome Frontiers Institute Executive Board, the University Genomic Initiative Committee, and the University Graduate Council. Additionally, she has served on two committees of Penn Arts & Sciences, Curriculum and Personnel.

Paul W. DiMaura, C’65, and Karen DiMaura established the DiMaura Professorship. Their efforts to promote conservation biology at Penn also include undergraduate scholarship support and research internships for the next generation of ecologists.

Penn Nursing to Launch Online Master’s Degree Program in Nursing and Healthcare Leadership in Summer 2025

Penn Nursing has announced that it will launch a new online nursing and healthcare leadership master’s (MSN) program beginning in the summer of 2025. This innovative 10-credit unit (CU) program, which combines and enhances the curriculum of the nursing and healthcare administration (NADM) and health leadership (HLMP) master’s programs, will provide students with a comprehensive and dynamic learning experience that prepares graduates for leadership roles in the ever-changing healthcare environment.  

“We’re thrilled to be able to offer our students a new leadership program in an online format to meet the needs of busy nursing professionals,” said program director Meghan Fitzpatrick. “And by streamlining the curriculum to 10 CUs, we’re able to make the program more cost-effective for our students.”

In addition to providing students with a more efficient and cost-effective path to earning their MSN, the curricular changes include 500 field hours and exceed the standards set forth in the American Association of Colleges of Nursing’s Level 2 Essentials.

To apply or learn more about the program, please visit its website and register for an upcoming information session.

Deaths

Leonard Bachman, Anesthesiology

caption: Leonard BachmanLeonard Bachman, a professor of medicine at Penn’s School of Medicine and the former chief of anesthesiology at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, died from cancer on May 24. He was 99.

Born in Baltimore, Dr. Bachman was an Eagle Scout and star wrestler in high school and college. After graduating, Dr. Bachman joined the U.S. Navy’s college training program for officers and earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry at Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania during World War II. He then went on to earn his MD from the University of Maryland in 1949. He served in Navy hospitals in Maryland and Massachusetts and at medical centers in Boston. After postdoctoral work at Johns Hopkins University, he was recruited to CHOP as chief of anesthesiology in 1955. At the same time, he joined Penn’s School of Medicine as an assistant professor of anesthesiology. He became an associate professor in 1961 and a full professor in 1966. While at CHOP, Dr. Bachman helped develop a pediatric intensive care unit and created groundbreaking tools and technology for anesthesiologists.

Dr. Bachman left Penn in 1973 to become director of health services for Pennsylvania Governor Milton Shapp, and from 1975 to 1979, he served as the secretary of health for Pennsylvania. During his tenure, he confronted Legionnaires’ disease, Hurricane Agnes, swine flu, and dozens of health policy controversies. He also created state-funded healthcare centers and championed access to health services and the public’s role in planning and procedures. In 1979, he was appointed to the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS), where he was named a rear admiral in the commissioned corps and placed in charge of PHS hospitals, clinics, medical disaster response teams, environmental and drug addiction initiatives, and other national health programs. He retired in 1994, but continued to serve for more than a decade as a medical consultant to the U.S. Marshals Service.

Dr. Bachman also taught at George Washington University’s school of medicine and elsewhere, and earned three honorary college degrees. He served as president of the Pennsylvania Society of Anesthesiologists and was active with a dozen other professional organizations. He won the 1990 Abigail Geisinger Medal from the Geisinger Health Foundation, the 2004 Robert M. Smith Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the 2018 Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award, among other awards. He served on boards and committees for his synagogues in Philadelphia and Washington and was a member of the Society Hill Civic Association.

Dr. Bachman is survived by his children, Emily, Joseph, Daniel, and Jacob; seven grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; and other relatives.  

Donations in his name may be made to Rangeley Health and Wellness, Box 722, Rangeley, Maine 04970; and Tifereth Israel Congregation, 7701 16th St., NW Washington, D.C. 20012.

Michael Cohen, Physics & Astronomy

caption: Michael CohenMichael Cohen, an emeritus professor of physics and astronomy in the School of Arts & Sciences, died on June 30. He was 94.

Born in Manhattan, New York, Dr. Cohen attended Horace Mann School and then Cornell University, where he was a member of Telluride House and the team that won the 1951 William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa with a BS in physics in 1951, he enrolled in the graduate program in physics at the California Institute of Technology. At CalTech, Dr. Cohen researched the behavior of liquid helium under famous physicist Richard Feynman. Dr. Feynman was notoriously picky about graduate students, and Dr. Cohen was one of only 30 trainees Dr. Feynman took on throughout his career. In an interview with the American Institute of Physics, Dr. Feynman remembered how he’d given up on a particular set of calculations because he’d decided they were “too hard.” However, he recalled that Dr. Cohen “found they weren’t as hard as I thought” and cracked them.

Dr. Cohen earned his PhD in 1956 from CalTech, then stayed on to complete a postdoctoral fellowship with Dr. Feynman. On the strength of his mentor’s recommendation, Dr. Cohen then did a second postdoc at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton with J. Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb. Then, heeding the counsel of “Oppie,” he came to Penn in 1958 as an assistant professor of physics. He became an associate professor two years later and a full professor in 1973.

Dr. Cohen spent the rest of his career at Penn. A condensed matter physicist, he studied the quantum mechanics of liquid helium, as well as ferroelectrics and phospholipid membranes. He enjoyed leading a problem-solving seminar for graduate students preparing for the PhD qualifying exam; for this work, he jokingly described himself as “the department’s Stanley Kaplan.” He also reveled in campus politics, serving as a longtime member of Penn’s faculty senate.

In 1962, with George Stranahan and Robert Craig, Dr. Cohen co-founded the Aspen Center for Physics in Aspen, Colorado. According to The New York Times, the center has “proved pivotal in the development of the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, for a long time the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, and the formulation of string theory, regarded by many physicists as the most promising candidate for a ‘theory of everything’ that would explain all the universe’s physical phenomena.” When the center became an independent nonprofit in 1968, Dr. Cohen was elected its first treasurer. He followed this with a term as the center’s vice president, and then, for another 48 years, as an honorary trustee.

In retirement, Dr. Cohen wrote an introductory textbook in classical mechanics, which is available for free here.

Dr. Cohen is survived by his sister, Vera Gottlieb; his three children, Adam (C’90) (Mary), Jonathan, and Alison (Nurit Bloom); his seven grandchildren, Will, Theo, Leah, Aiden, Naomi, Vivi, and Daph; and his caregiver, Jeanette Edwards.

Donations in Dr. Cohen’s memory may be made to the Aspen Center for Physics. If you choose to give, you can notify Dr. Cohen’s family of the donation by clicking the email notification box and entering cohena@omrf.org.

Matthew Hoyt, Engineering Graduate Student

caption: Matthew HoytMatthew Hoyt, a student in Penn Engineering’s online master of computer and information technology (MCIT) program, died on June 24. He was 51.

Mr. Hoyt, who grew up in Mount Lebanon, Pennsylvania, obtained a master of accounting degree from Brigham Young University in 2006. One of his professors nominated him for the Postgraduate Technical Assistant Program with the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which took Mr. Hoyt across the country. Mr. Hoyt then held roles as a senior associate at KPMG LLP and an associate director at UBS Investment Bank before ultimately working as a senior accounting manager, specializing in accounting policy, for PNC.

A love of computer programming eventually led Mr. Hoyt to pursue a second master’s degree in computer and information technology from Penn Engineering’s department of computer and information science, starting in 2022. He was working towards this degree at the time of his death.

Mr. Hoyt is survived by his wife, Lillian Hoyt; his mother, Phyllis Deborah Hoyt; his four children, Jackson, Elise, Andrew, and Charlotte; and his siblings, Brooke (Jason) Mayhall, Jason (Kjerstin) Hoyt, BJ Hoyt, and Shannon (Tim) Dickman.

Donations to Mr. Hoyt’s family can be made here.

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To Report A Death

Almanac appreciates being informed of the deaths of current and former faculty and staff members, students and other members of the University community. Call (215) 898-5274 or email almanac@upenn.edu.

However, notices of alumni deaths should be directed to the Alumni Records Office at Suite 300, 2929 Walnut St., (215) 8988136 or email record@ben.dev.upenn.edu.

Governance

Trustees Meeting: July 31

A meeting of the executive committee of the Board of Trustees was held on July 31, 2024, via Zoom.

Trustees Chair Ramanan Raghavendran presented a resolution to approve the transfer of assets. The Gene Therapy Program (GTP) at Penn Medicine, which is led by James Wilson, the Rose H. Weiss Orphan Disease Center Director’s Professor, has grown rapidly over the past ten years during a time of volatility of biotechnology funding, largely supported by industry-sponsored research funds. The Perelman School of Medicine (PSOM), the Penn Center for Innovation (PCI), and Dr. Wilson have been exploring ways to transition the functions and operations of GTP from Penn Medicine into externally managed entities. This transition will further advance clinical research, while fostering continued gene therapy product development that is better managed by industry. A third-party services company has shown interest in securing the service center functions and a third-party R&D company has shown interest in securing the R&D Product Functions. The resolution was approved.

Interim President J. Larry Jameson presented a resolution to appoint Stephen J. MacCarthy as Interim Vice President for University Communications, effective August 1, 2024. Mr. MacCarthy had served in that role for 12 years and has returned to it while a search is conducted for a new Vice President for University Communications.

Penn Professional Staff Assembly 2024-2025

We extend our deep appreciation and gratitude to the Penn Professional Staff Assembly (PPSA) board members for their dedication in providing a wide range of valuable resources to full-time staff at Penn. Despite the challenges and transitions our community has collectively experienced leading into and through the last academic year, the PPSA has continued to meet the needs of staff in collaboration with the Division of Human Resources and a multitude of colleagues across campus.  During the 2023-2024 fiscal year, PPSA events drew thousands of registered participants. We are thankful to all our board members who generously contribute their time to this organization, and to the many Penn staff who engage with our events! Visit ppsa.upenn.edu to learn more about the PPSA, join our list, and to register for upcoming events for the 2024-2025 academic year.

As we look forward to the year ahead, we are pleased to introduce the new and continuing members of the PPSA board, council & independent committee representatives, and appointed positions.

  • —Natalie Dury Green, PPSA Past-Chair

2024-2025 Executive Committee Tri-Chairs

Chair: Tonya Bennett, Director of Educational Technology, Penn Vet
Chair-Elect: Dawn Maglicco Deitch, Executive Director, Office of Government and Community Affairs
Past Chair: Natalie Dury Green, Director of Operations Master in Law Program, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

Members at Large

2023-2025 Term
Alisha George, Assistant/Web Editor, Almanac
Erin Johansen, Senior Director of Principal Gifts
Justin Purohit, Manager Accounting Operations, Office of the Comptroller
Xime Trujillo, Senior Research Coordinator, Environmental Innovations Initiative

2024-2026 Term
Joseph-James Ahern, Senior Archivist, University Archives
Lamesha Brown, Director, College Achievement Program
Elona Canaj, Business System Analyst, Penn Vet
Monica Jacobe, Director of Advising, Wharton Undergraduate Division

Appointments

LISTSERV Manager: Adam Sherr, Director of Crossfunctional Training, Senior Application Data Analyst, Office of University Registrar
Secretary: Dee Patel, Director of Content, Wharton Marketing & Communications
Treasurer: Jillian Powell, Director of Budget and Analysis, Provost Administrative Affairs
Webmaster: Mayumi Hirtzel, Information Systems and Computing
Communications Manager: Andy Maynard, Director of Data Services DAR, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

Committee Representatives

Veronica Aplenc
Gwendolyn Beetham
Samantha Fellman
Noemi Fernandez
Kris Forrest
Tomas Isakowitz
Kait Johnstone
Justin Knoebel
Cynthia Kwan
Andy Maynard
James McGonigle
Christina Rodriguez
Bethany Schell
Adam Sherr
Kathy Tang
Xime Trujillo

Honors

Stephanie Acquaye: 2024-2026 Jonas Scholar

caption: Stephanie AcquayeJonas Nursing, a leading supporter of doctoral nursing education in the U.S., and the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) have announced that Stephanie Acquaye, a current PhD student in Penn Nursing, has been selected as a Jonas Scholar for the program’s 2024-2026 cohort. This program aims to improve healthcare by expanding the pool of PhD and DNP-prepared nurses needed to educate the next generation of nurse leaders.

Ms. Acquaye, a Hillman Scholar in Nursing Innovation, joins a select group of doctoral nursing students chosen for their passion for teaching, academic excellence, and research prowess. As a Jonas Scholar, she will receive financial support, mentorship, and a curriculum tailored to providing students with the learning experiences they need to successfully transition into a faculty role.

Ms. Acquaye joins a diverse group of doctoral nursing students, with over 50% of its 2024-2026 cohort representative of Black, Latino, and other communities of color, ensuring that burgeoning nursing leaders reflect the patient population of their diverse communities. This group of 63 scholars contains a multitude of research interests focused on some of the country’s most pressing challenges, including underserved populations in nursing, mental health, and veterans’ health. Ms. Acquaye’s research focuses on health disparities in breastfeeding and is spervised by Diane Spatz, the Helen M. Shearer Professor of Nutrition and a professor of perinatal nursing in the department of family and community health.

Deborah Becker: NLN Fellow

caption: Deborah BeckerDeborah Becker, a practice professor of nursing in the department of biobehavioral health sciences in Penn Nursing, has been selected as a fellow of the National League for Nursing (NLN) Academy of Nursing Education.

Fellows have made enduring and substantial contributions to nursing education as teachers, mentors, scholars, public policy advocates, practice partners, and administrators. They provide visionary leadership and are recognized for their expertise in nursing education. The induction ceremony will take place during the NLN’s Education Summit 2024 in September in San Antonio, Texas.

“It is an honor to be selected as a fellow of the Academy of Nursing Education,” said Dr. Becker. “This recognition reflects my contributions to advancing nursing’s role through teaching, leadership, creativity, and mentoring exceptional nursing students. I am very excited to work with the esteemed nurse leaders and educators who will be my colleagues in the Academy of Nursing Education.”

Dr. Becker joins the 18th class of fellows, which has now reached 406 members. The fellows are leaders in nursing education who teach in a range of programs across the spectrum of higher education. They are affiliated with top-ranked teaching hospitals, academic institutions, and other organizations committed to advancing the quality of healthcare in the U.S. and globally.

The Academy of Nursing Education review panel undertakes a competitive application process before recommending fellowship candidates to the NLN Board of Governors, the oversight body for the academy. Evaluations consider applicants’ contributions to innovative teaching and/or learning strategies; nursing education research; faculty development activities; academic leadership; promotion of public policy initiatives that advance nursing education; and/or collaborative educational, practice, or community partnerships.

2024 Cohort of Penn Fellows

Provost John L. Jackson, Jr. and Vice Provost for Faculty Laura W. Perna have announced the appointment of the sixteenth cohort of Penn Fellows.

The Penn Fellows Program provides leadership development to select Penn faculty in mid-career. Begun in 2009, it includes opportunities to build alliances across the University, meet distinguished academic leaders, think strategically about university governance, and consult with Penn’s senior administrators.

Health Track

Kara Anne Bernstein, the George W. Raiziss Professor II in Biochemistry and Biophysics in the Perelman School of Medicine, focuses her research on proteins that contribute to cancer development and the accurate repair of DNA double-strand breaks, using the budding yeast and mammalian systems.

Kenrick Cato, a professor of clinical informatics in the School of Nursing, focuses his research on using electronic patient data to support decision-making for clinicians, patients, and caregivers and on using and modeling nursing data to optimize the value of nursing in healthcare.

Philip Gehrman, a professor of clinical psychology in the Perelman School of Medicine, focuses his research on insomnia and other sleep disorders in the context of mental health conditions, using a variety of research approaches to understand how sleep and mental health are intertwined.

Priti Lal, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine in the Perelman School of Medicine, focuses her research on the application of high-throughput technology to gain insights into the biology of human cancers, with focus on urothelial and prostate cancers.

Amol Navathe, a professor of medical ethics and health policy in the Perelman School of Medicine, has expertise in policy analysis and design, the economic behavior of physicians and hospitals, and the application of informatics and predictive analytics to healthcare.

Paul M. Titchenell, an associate professor of physiology in the Perelman School of Medicine, focuses his research on the regulation of metabolism by hormones and nutrients, especially insulin, the master regulator of organismal anabolic metabolism.

Humanities Track

Vaughn A. Booker, the George E. Doty, Jr. & Lee Spelman Doty Presidential Associate Professor of Africana Studies in the School of Arts & Sciences, is a historian of 20th-century African American religions, especially practices of simultaneously (re)making religious and racial identities, communities, and forms of authority.

Ian Fleishman, an associate professor of cinema and media studies in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses his work on sex and violence and their influence on the evolution of narrative form and its underlying epistemological shift from modernism to postmodernism.

Scott Francis, an associate professor of French and Francophone studies in the School of Arts & Sciences, studies reformation theology, gender and the Querelle des Femmes, alterity, rhetoric, and print culture.

Sarah Guérin, an associate professor of the history of art in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses her research on the material conditions of medieval art, with an emphasis on the socio-economic circumstances and theological conceits surrounding the production and use of art.

Bakirathi Mani, the Penn Presidential Compact Professor of English in the School of Arts & Sciences, specializes in South Asian American public cultures, particularly how empires in the U.S. and in postcolonial South Asia shape South Asian American racial formations.

Jennifer Morton, the Penn Presidential Compact Professor of Philosophy, focuses her research on the philosophy of action, moral philosophy, the philosophy of education, and political philosophy.

Teemu Ruskola, a professor in the Penn Carey Law School, focuses his research on the study of Chinese law and society in a comparative and global context, with an interest in China’s place and role in the development of social theory.

Jorge Téllez, an associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses his research on the legacies of colonialism in Latin American cultural production, past and present, with an emphasis on Mexico.

Elly R. Truitt, an associate professor of the history and sociology of science in the School of Arts & Sciences, studies the circulation of scientific objects and natural knowledge throughout central and western Eurasia and north Africa, from antiquity into the early modern period.

Social Science Track

Rachel B. Baker, an associate professor in the policy, organizations, leadership, and systems division in the Graduate School of Education, studies access to and success in higher education, with a focus on students in broad-access institutions.  

Arthur van Benthem, an associate professor of business economics and public policy in the Wharton School, specializes in environmental and energy economics, the unintended consequences of environmental legislation, and the economic efficiency of energy policies.

Sarah Bush, an associate professor of political science in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses her research on how international actors try to aid democracy, promote women’s representation, and influence elections globally, as well as the politics of climate change.

Ioana E. Marinescu, an associate professor in the School of Social Policy and Practice, focuses her research on wage determination and monopsony power, antitrust law for the labor market, the universal basic income, unemployment insurance, and green jobs.

Xi Song, an associate professor of sociology in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses her research on statistical, demographic, and computational techniques to understand how patterns of social inequality are created and changed within and across generations.

STEM Track

Allyson Mackey, an associate professor of psychology in the School of Arts & Sciences, studies how changes in the brain give rise to changes in the mind, both as development unfolds and in response to experience.

Ryan Hynd, a professor of mathematics in the School of Arts & Sciences, focuses his research on partial differential equations, especially in mathematical models for fluid mechanics, control theory, finance, and with eigenvalue problems.

E. James Petersson, a professor of chemistry in the School of Arts & Sciences, studies the roles of proteins in the understanding of diverse biological phenomena, especially how proteins fold and change shape, with applications in neuroscience and medicine.

Five Penn Vet Students: AKC Outreach Scholarships

The American Kennel Club (AKC) has awarded five students from Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine AKC Veterinary Outreach Scholarships. The AKC and the Kennel Club of Philadelphia are supporters of Penn Vet’s AKC Scholarship program.

The scholarships support students affiliated with AKC events and programs who advocate for animal health and medicine. Penn Vet recipients of the AKC Scholarship are:

Christina Capparell, V’26, a 2022 University of Delaware graduate, was a sports medicine summer veterinary intern at Penn Vet’s Working Dog Center (WDC). While at the WDC, Ms. Capparell investigated osteoarthritis incidence in working dog breeds. Before arriving at Penn Vet, she worked as a veterinary technician in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania.

Robert “Zach” Cochran, V’26, is a 2020 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill graduate. Before arriving at Penn Vet, Mr. Cochran was a post-baccalaureate researcher at the National Institute of Environment Health Science (NIEHS), a division of the National Institutes of Health that investigates the effects of the environment on human health.

Alaina Duessel, V’26, is a 2020 graduate of Allegheny College, where she majored in environmental science. Ms. Duessel was a veterinary technician in Butler County, Pennsylvania, before arriving at Penn Vet.

Laura Grant, V’26, from Mt. Arlington, New Jersey, is a graduate of the University of Maryland where she majored in animal science. Ms. Grant has a particular interest in the diagnosis, treatment, and health of small animals.

Julianna King, V’26, is a 2021 Ohio State University graduate. Ms. King is a NIH/BI veterinary research intern investigating the potential of canines to detect hemangiosarcoma through scent. She serves as treasurer of the student-run Canine Club and as a Purina student representative.

“The AKC Veterinary Outreach Scholarship is not only a testament to the hard work of these five Penn Vet students, but also a recognition of the potential they possess to make significant contributions to our profession,” said Claire Bruno, assistant dean of admissions and student life at Penn Vet. “I am incredibly proud to count Christina, Zach, Alaina, Laura, and Julianna among our students. Their success reflects the core values of Penn Vet, and I am confident that they will continue to achieve wonderful things.”

Founded in 1884, the AKC is the world’s largest and oldest not-for-profit all-breed canine registry, with over 200 recognized breeds. The AKC is a recognized and trusted expert in breed, health, and training information for all dogs, actively advocates for responsible dog ownership, and is dedicated to advancing dog sports.

Penn AITech Distributes Almost $2.6 Million in Research Grants

The Penn Artificial Intelligence and Technology Collaboratory for Healthy Aging (Penn AITech) at the University of Pennsylvania focuses on identifying, developing, evaluating, commercializing and disseminating innovative technology and artificial intelligence methods and software to support aging. The collaboratory is an initiative involving Penn’s School of Nursing, the Perelman School of Medicine, and other departments across the University of Pennsylvania funded by the National Institute on Aging (NIA), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The Collaboratory Pilot Cores invite applications for pilot studies using technology and artificial intelligence (AI) to optimize care management and health outcomes for older Americans, including those with Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD) living in their homes independently, and those receiving clinical care or skilled home and community-based services.

The PennAITech pilot program solicits annually pilot studies that develop or test technology and AI to detect risk, predict needs, address disparities, improve access to care, and support decision making for chronic illness management and safe aging in place for older adults with or without ADRD and their caregivers. The pilots selected for funding receive guidance and mentoring from the PennAITech expert team.

In year three, through a competitive national grant review process, eleven applicants from academia, industry and health systems across the United States were selected for funding. The list of awardees selected for PennAITech funding include:

Total Year Three Awards: $2,583,609

  • Pilot 1: Improved Algorithms for Wearable, Passive, Noninvasive BP Monitoring for Seniors (Investigators: Xina Quan and Keith C. Drake, PyrAmes)
  • Pilot 2:  AI-powered Web Application to Analyze Knee Joint Space for Aging Population (Investigator: Soheyla Amirian, University of Georgia)
  • Pilot 3: Task-Oriented Multimodal Conversational AI for Assisting Seniors with Daily Tasks (Investigator: Rui Zhang, Penn State University)
  • Pilot 4:  Mobile Technology as a Cognitive Biomarker of Alzheimer’s Disease (Investigator:  Chun Lim, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center)
  • Pilot 5:  Building Deep Digital Twins for Prediction of AD/ADR/MCI in Older Adults (Investigator: Mohammad H. Mahoor, DreamFace Technologies, LLC)
  • Pilot 6:   Aliviado Dementia Care Machine Learning Algorithm Development for Caregiving (Investigator: Ab Brody, RN, FAAN, New York University)
  • Pilot 7:  AI/ML Analyses of Mobility Changes Among Elderly Using Continuous Gait Data (Investigator: Nicholas Kalaitzandonakes, Foresite Healthcare)
  • Pilot 8:  Developing a Home Cognitive Vital Sign to Detect Cognitive Changes AD (Investigator: Daniel Press, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center)
  • Pilot 9:  Motor Function Assessment for Mild Cognitive Impairment, Frailty, and Fall Risk (Investigator: Trent M. Guess, University of Missouri)
  • Pilot 10:  Detecting Cognitive Impairment Using Large Language Models from Speech (Investigator: Hualou Liang, Drexel University)
  • Pilot 11:  MUSICARE-VR: Music Intervention with Virtual Reality for Alzheimer’s Care (Investigator: Xiaopeng Zhao, University of Tennessee, Knoxville)

“As our portfolio of funded projects continues to grow, we are excited about the potential of these new solutions to advance ways to support older adults and significantly improve the aging experience in the coming years,” said George Demiris, a Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor with joint faculty appointments in Penn Nursing’s department of biobehavioral health sciences and in the department of biostatistics, epidemiology, and informatics in Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine, and one of the principal investigators of PennAITech. “Our team is excited about these new collaborations and looking forward to supporting the new cohort of awardees.”

Jason Karlawish, a professor of medicine, medical ethics and health policy, and neurology, co-director of the Penn Memory Center and associate director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center in the Perelman School of Medicine, and co-principal investigator of PennAITech, added, “PennAITech offers a nurturing environment for the implementation and evaluation of groundbreaking technologies and innovative approaches to aging. We are looking forward to providing our support to this group of awardees as they advance the development of their innovative solutions.”

Features

Two New Exhibits at the Institute of Contemporary Art

caption: Joanna Piotrowska, Untitled, 2014, silver gelatin hand print, 51 x 41 cm, edition of 5 + 2 AP, Courtesy the artist and Phillida Reid, London. Photo courtesy of the ICA.

Joanna Piotrowska: Unseeing Eyes, Restless Bodies
Through December 10

This presentation marks the first U.S. solo museum exhibition dedicated to Joanna Piotrowska (b. 1985), a Polish artist based in London whose work examines the human condition through performative acts, photography, and film. Self-defense manuals and psychotherapeutic methods are used as reference points as Ms. Piotrowska explores the complex roles that play out in everyday life. The exhibition features large-scale, silver gelatin prints of subjects that probe human behavior and the dynamics of domestic relations, exploring intimacy, violence, control, and self-protection with an emphasis on gesture and touch. Throughout the galleries, the artist creates a space with domestic references from which contrasting image placement and content create an uncanny experience that reveals moments of care as well as hierarchies of power.

Joanna Piotrowska: Unseeing Eyes, Restless Bodies is curated by Hallie Ringle, the Daniel and Brett Sundheim Chief Curator.

caption: Wendy Red Star’s “Rez Pop J.” Image Courtesy of the artist and Sargent’s Daughters. Photo courtesy of the ICA.

Where I Learned to Look: Art from the Yard
Through December 10

This exhibition celebrates the foundational role of yards in shaping contemporary art in America. Building upon existing scholarship on yard art, artwork created to exist in the transitional space between the home and wider world, artist and art historian Josh T Franco examines the lineage of this robust American art form, which has historically existed outside of museum and gallery spaces. Featuring over 30 works, the exhibition spotlights both community- and academically-taught artists over the past five decades including David Driskell, vanessa german, Donald Judd, Noah Purifoy, and Finnegan Shannon, revealing connections across communities in creative world-building with what is available. This exhibition is part of ICA’s Sachs Guest Curator Program, which since 2007 has funded artists and interdisciplinary creatives to curate ambitious contemporary art presentations and actualize projects that leverage the space of resources of ICA to examine emerging and underrecognized creative practices.

Where I Learned to Look: Art from the Yard is curated by Josh T Franco, the Sachs Guest Curator, in collaboration with Hallie Ringle, the Daniel and Brett Sundheim Chief Curator, with support from Denise Ryner, the Andrea B. Laporte Curator.

Events

2024 Milken-Penn GSE Education Business Plan Competition

The 2024 Milken-Penn GSE EBPC finalists will present their pitches on September 10 in New York City as part of HolonIQ’s Back to School Summit. 

The finalists are Games & Learning, Hilight, Honest Game, Saturday Art Class, SAT IT Labs, Start Lighthouse, and trubel&co.

This year’s finalists use artificial intelligence, video games, visual arts, and cutting edge technology to promote literacy, social-emotional learning, college access, and more. 

Attendees can watch the final pitches, Q&A with judges, and vote in real-time for the Audience Choice Prize winner. They can network with education entrepreneurs and edtech investors, and gain insights from industry leaders.

Registration for the Milken-Penn GSE EBPC finals is free, but space is limited. Visit https://www.educationcompetition.org/finals/ to register. 

Update: Summer AT PENN

Fitness & Learning

8/25     Sunday Reset with Hava Rose; explore the art of journaling as a meditative practice in a workshop that will jump-start your meditation and creative practices; 2-4 p.m.; ICA; register: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/991391989127?aff=oddtdtcreator (Institute of Contemporary Art).

 

College of Liberal & Professional Studies

Online webinars. Info and to register: https://www.lps.upenn.edu/about/events.

8/24     Global Master of Public Administration Virtual Information Session; 10 a.m.

 

Morris Arboretum & Gardens

In-person events at Morris Arboretum & Gardens. Info and to register: https://www.morrisarboretum.org/see-do/events-calendar.

8/25     Peppers & Peaches Tasting; sample some peaches and summer herbs and hear tips from produce suppliers on how best to store and cook your stone fruits; 11 a.m.

 

Readings & Signings

8/22     Book Launch: Biennial Boom: Making Contemporary Art Global; Paloma Checa-Gismero, Swarthmore College; 6 p.m.; ICA; RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/checa-gismero-aug-22 (Annenberg School for Communication).

8/24     NSO Speakeasy Open Mic Night; features performances by the Class of 2028; no need to sign up ahead of time—just show up with your work, ready to share your talents with your classmates; 9:30 p.m.; Arts Café, Kelly Writers House (Kelly Writers House).

 

Special Events

8/21     Later @ ICA with Heyday Athletic; us for an evening of art, games, cocktails, and light snacks at ICA’s newly launched monthly after-hours night; 6-9 p.m.; ICA; register for cornhole tournament: https://icaphila.org/events/later-ica-with-heyday-athletic/ (Institute of Contemporary Art).

 

Talks

8/21     Programmable Strain-responsive Biopolymer Networks Adapt to High Magnitudes of Mechanical Loading; Yan Luo, mechanical engineering & applied mechanics; 10:15 a.m.; room 337, Towne Building (Mechanical Engineering & Applied Mechanics).

8/26     Decoding Opioid Receptor Antagonism in the Context of Cellular Signaling Dynamics; Cornelius Gati, University of Southern California; 11 a.m.; Gaulton Auditorium, BRB (Biomedical Graduate Studies).

 

This is an update to the Summer AT PENN calendar, which is online now. The September AT PENN calendar will be published next Tuesday, August 27. To include events in a future AT PENN calendar or weekly update, send the salient details to almanac@upenn.edu.

Crimes

Weekly Crime Reports

Division of Public Safety University of Pennsylvania Police Department Crime Report

About the Crime Report: Below are the Crimes Against Persons and/or Crimes Against Property from the campus report for August 5-11, 2024. The Crime Reports are available at: https://almanac.upenn.edu/sections/crimes. Prior weeks’ reports are also online. –Eds.

This summary is prepared by the Division of Public Safety (DPS) and contains all criminal incidents reported and made known to the Penn Police, including those reported to the Philadelphia Police Department (PPD) that occurred within our patrol zone, for the dates of August 5-11, 2024. The Penn Police actively patrol from Market Street to Baltimore Avenue and from 30th Street to 43rd Street in conjunction with the Philadelphia Police.

In this effort to provide you with a thorough and accurate report on public safety concerns, we hope that your increased awareness will lessen the opportunity for crime. For any concerns or suggestions regarding this report, please call DPS at (215) 898-7297. You may view the daily crime log on the DPS website.

 

Penn Police Patrol Zone

Market Street to Baltimore Avenue and from 30th Street to 43rd Street

Crime Category

Date

Time

Location

Description

Aggravated Assault

08/06/24

7:05 AM

3915 Market St

Unknown offender stabbed the complainant with a screwdriver and fled the area

 

08/10/24

7:13 AM

3600 Chestnut St

Complainant stabbed in the hand by his partner and was transported to the hospital by medics

Assault

08/07/24

11:09 AM

3800 Walnut St

Report of a simple assault

 

08/08/24

5:58 AM

1 Convention Ave

Offender struck complainant in the back of the head with a closed fist

 

08/09/24

12:32 PM

4000 Spruce St

Complainant struck in the head with a closed fist and kicked the ground by offender/Arrest

 

08/09/24

4:04 PM

4000 Market St

Unknown offender struck complainant in the face with a closed fist

 

08/11/24

8:56 PM

100 S 30th St

Unknown offender smacked the complainant and fled the area prior to police arrival

Auto Theft

08/05/24

11:07 AM

100 S 42nd St

Complainant reported damage to vehicle’s window and steering column consistent with an auto theft attempt

 

08/10/24

9:40 AM

200 S 42nd St

Theft of a motor vehicle from highway

 

08/11/24

1:53 PM

129 S 30th St

Motor vehicle theft from garage

Burglary

08/10/24

10:11 AM

4032 Spruce St

Multiple items were taken, including two donation boxes; no signs of forced entry

Harassment

08/09/24

9:52 AM

3025 Walnut St

Unwanted phone calls and emails received

 

08/11/24

10:32 AM

4034 Sansom St

Complainant received unwanted snap chat message from known offender

Other Offense

08/07/24

3:47 AM

3549 Chestnut St

Offender cited for defiant trespassing

Retail Theft

08/08/24

6:29 PM

3744 Spruce St

Retail theft of consumable goods

 

08/10/24

2:49 PM

4233 Chestnut St

Retail theft of alcohol

 

08/10/24

9:59 PM

4233 Chestnut St

Retail theft of alcohol

 

08/10/24

3:54 PM

4233 Chestnut St

Retail theft of alcohol

Sex Offense

08/11/24

9:54 PM

3600 Blk Market St

Confidential/Arrest

 

08/11/24

11:03 PM

3700 Blk Chestnut St

Confidential/Arrest

 

08/11/24

11:39 PM

3600 Blk Chestnut St

Confidential/Arrest

Theft from Building

08/06/24

4:37 PM

4111 Walnut St

Packages taken from lobby area in apartment building

 

08/07/24

4:25 PM

3730 Walnut St

Tote bag taken from study room

 

08/09/24

11:09 AM

3730 Walnut St

Complainant reported tablet and accessories were taken from a table on the second floor

 

08/09/24

10:39 PM

3820 Locust Walk

Articles of clothing taken from laundry room

Theft from Vehicle

08/06/24

6:52 AM

3400 Chestnut St

Power tools taken from vehicle

 

Philadelphia Police 18th District

Schuylkill River to 49th Street & Market Street to Woodland Avenue

Below are the Crimes Against Persons from the 18th District: 11 incidents were reported for August 5-11, 2024 by the 18th District, covering the Schuylkill River to 49th Street & Market Street to Woodland Avenue.

Crime Category

Date

Time

Location

Aggravated Assault

08/10/24

7:14 AM

3609 Chestnut St

Assault

08/07/24

11:09 AM

3800 Blk Walnut St

 

08/07/24

12:00 PM

3000 Blk Market St

 

08/07/24

9:03 PM

4600 Blk Walnut St

 

08/09/24

10:37 AM

3225 Walnut St

 

08/11/24

8:57 PM

129 S 30th St

 

08/11/24

11:30 PM

3600 Chestnut St

Assault/Arrest

08/09/24

1:21 PM

S 40th & Spruce Sts

Rape

08/10/24

5:34 PM

N 34th & Market Sts

Rape/Arrest

08/11/24

10:40 PM

S 37th & Chestnut Sts

Robbery

08/05/24

12:05 AM

4742 Pine St

The Division of Public Safety offers resources and support to the Penn community. DPS developed a few helpful risk reduction strategies outlined below. Know that it is never the fault of the person impacted (victim/survivor) by crime.

  • See something concerning? Connect with Penn Public Safety 24/7 at (215) 573-3333.
  • Worried about a friend’s or colleague’s mental or physical health? Get 24/7 connection to appropriate resources at (215) 898-HELP (4357).
  • Seeking support after experiencing a crime? Call Special Services - Support and Advocacy resources at (215) 898-4481 or email an advocate at specialservices@publicsafety.upenn.edu
  • Use the Walking Escort and Riding services available to you free of charge.
  • Take a moment to update your cellphone information for the UPennAlert Emergency Notification System
  • Download the Penn Guardian App which can help Police better find your location when you call in an emergency.
  • Access free self-empowerment and defense courses through Penn DPS.
  • Stay alert and reduce distractions; using cellphones, ear buds, etc. may limit your awareness.
  • Orient yourself to your surroundings. (Identify your location, nearby exits, etc.)
  • Keep your valuables out of sight and only carry necessary documents.

Bulletins

Penn Parking & Commuter Services Moves to Penn Bookstore

Penn Parking & Commuter Services has moved to the first floor of the Penn Bookstore (near the Sansom Street entrance).

Operations began on Tuesday, July 30 at the new location, where the team assists the University community with its parking and commuting needs in an expanded space. The location is open weekdays, 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m.

The move from 3401 Walnut, the department’s home of nearly 30 years, coincides with the launch of an expanded menu of flexible permits and programs for new parkers, which are being offered based on community feedback.

Parking & Commuter Services joins the PennCard Center and Onboard@Penn at the bookstore, solidifying the site as an accessible one-stop hub for a variety of Penn services.

Keep up with Penn Parking & Commuter Services at the department’s streamlined website.

The Atlantic Now Available Through Penn Libraries

Online full-text access to The Atlantic has been a perennial request of Penn Libraries. The magazine has a long, distinguished history as a cultural reporter and opinion-maker since its start in 1857 as a showpiece for Boston literati. Faculty in the political science department and other Penn academic programs frequently include Atlantic articles in their course reserve lists, and diligent students often report frustration over the website’s metered paywall access. Additionally, title changes over the years have made The Atlantic one of the more difficult items to find in the Penn Libraries catalog.

The Penn Libraries’ Atlantic website subscription provides web-only content and print-magazine content. Faculty can now easily share URLs to specific articles with students, and all students, faculty, and staff can enjoy everything The Atlantic has to offer, from cultural commentary to the Caleb’s Inferno crossword. Currently, the subscription does not include The Atlantic’s mobile app.

Additionally, PDF versions of whole monthly issues (advertisements included) are available for download from the latest issue back to the first issue published in November 1857. While some of this content is currently available through Nexis Uni and Factiva, the new Atlantic website subscription provides images and publisher’s formatting. That said, readers interested in discovering and viewing specific articles in older issues of The Atlantic may still find it easier to use Penn Libraries’ searchable full text subscription to The Atlantic Magazine Archive, covering 1857 through 2014.

How To Access

Accessing The Atlantic online is easy.

  1. Visit the Sign In page from anywhere on theatlantic.com.
  2. Click on “Sign in through your institution.” Do not create a personal account or sign in using the Facebook or Google options.
  3. When prompted, type University of Pennsylvania where it asks you to enter your institution name and click “Continue.”
  4. Enter your PennKey when prompted.
  5. Enjoy The Atlantic.

Giving and Volunteer Opportunities from the Netter Center for Community Partnership

Dear Penn Community,

Thank you for your spirit of volunteerism. Many benefit from your willingness to share. We receive many expressions of gratitude from community members and agencies with whom we partner. The Penn community continues to work towards being good neighbors in our shared community.  We thank you for your overwhelming support and for your generosity.

We are pleased to report that the Penn VIPS Change Drive collected approximately $500 for the MK Bogle Scholarship Program, which supports graduating high school students with a history of performing community service and who have been accepted at an accredited college or university. This sum was added to the many donations from our sponsors. We thank all our sponsors.

Please also see below for a list of different volunteer activities, both on and off campus. Let us help you volunteer.

The following volunteer activities are available to the Penn community:

August 7–August 21 School Supplies Drive

Don’t forget to collect school supplies for the annual Penn Volunteers in Public Service (VIPS) school supplies drive. Donations are shared with West and Southwest Philadelphia public schools involved in the University Assisted Community (Sayre, Lea, Comegy’s West, for example), as well as students from Mastery Charter School. We also receive requests for items from local shelters, day care centers, and directly from families.

Support school children by providing books, pens, pencils, book bags, calculators, crayons, rulers, dictionaries, elementary school story books and other items children need to help them be successful in school.  Below is a complete list of suggested items for donation: Agendas or planners, backpacks, binder dividers, small binders, feminine products, hand sanitizer, hygiene products, stickers, paper towels, highlighters in different colors, tissues, pencils, erasers, glue, glue sticks, lined paper/notebooks (hard and spiral), three-ring binders, three-hole punches, loose-leaf paper or spiral notebooks, subject dividers, index cards, folders, blue and black pens, mechanical pencils, pencil pouches, rulers, tape, reams of paper for duplicating, scissors, books (fiction/nonfiction), and certificates and other incentives.

The following is a sample of the areas where you can conveniently drop your donations:

Department

Volunteer

Email Address

Van Pelt Library

Rachelle Nelson,

Illene Rubin

nelsonrr@pobox.upenn.edu;

rubinir@upenn.edu

Netter Center

Isabel Sampson-Mapp

sammapp@upenn.edu

Finance

Sharon Barkley

barkleys@upenn.edu

FMC

Maryanne Nuzzo

nuzzo@upenn.edu

Comptroller’s Office

Celestine Silverman

celes@upenn.edu

Nursing

Landy Georges

lgeorges@nursing.upenn.edu

Residential Services

Linda Kromer

lkromer@upenn.edu

Physics & Astronomy

Michelle Last

michlast@sas.upenn.edu

Biology Department/Leidy Laboratories

Leah Dennis

leahd@sas.upenn.edu

Become a Mentor in the Penn Workplace Mentoring Program

Encourage 7th graders to do well in school. Talk to them about the importance of college, share your area of expertise in your job with them, and help them to think about their futures. Make a difference in the life of a young person.

 Mentors meet with students once a month from September to May. All sessions are held on Penn’s campus. Training is held in September.

Teach at the Nonprofit Institute sponsored by the Netter Center

Have a special knowledge on advisory boards, grant writing, risk management, strategic planning, etc.? Want to teach members of the surrounding community how to more effectively manage/create their nonprofits?

The Nonprofit Institute, a five-day program offering a variety of classes designed to help start-up nonprofits gain important skills needed to create a successful organization. Classes range from 1.5 hours to 3 hours. The institute is held twice a year, in the fall and spring.

Teach at the University Assisted Community School (UACS Nights)

Have a special talent? Want to teach it to members of the surrounding community? Do so through our exciting program called University Assisted Community Schools Nights. Teach adult learners your expertise in areas such as resume writing, interview skills, computers, professional development, dance, cooking, and/or a subject you are passionate about.  Teach once a week for a one- or two-hour period for four to six weeks. We also welcome classes that can be taught in a single two-hour session. Classes are normally held from 6–8 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday evenings.

Adopt A Classroom

An exciting opportunity for you and your colleagues to “adopt” a Philadelphia school classroom and help teachers with needed supplies.

Provide needed classroom items like reams of paper, pens, pencils, tissues, hand sanitizer, notebooks, folders, glue sticks, disinfecting wipes, calculators, index cards, scissors, backpacks, pencil sharpeners, dividers, protractors, highlighters, markers, construction paper, book covers, combination locks, personal organizers, Post-It notes, tape, and staplers and staples.

Work with classrooms involved in community schools operated by the Netter Center for Community Partnerships. Schools include Lea, Sayre, West, Hamilton, Comegys, and more. You would have the opportunity to select the age group you prefer. A classroom would be assigned to you and a wish-list provided.

You and your colleagues can spend the summer collecting the supplies. Arrangements will be made in September for you to make your donations to your adopted class.

Dropsite Volunteers

Become a dropsite volunteer and participate in the various drives held throughout the course of the year. Assist with collecting donated items that are shared with a variety of agencies in the community. 

Penn VIPS provides the collected donations to local agencies and schools, which makes a huge difference to members of the surrounding community.

Drives take place as follows:

  • March–Change Drive to Benefit the Scholarship Program
  • August–School Supplies Drive
  • November–Food Drive
  • December–Toy/Gift Drive
  • December–New Coat Drive

Dropsite volunteers advertise the various drives, help designate the beneficiaries of the drives, and help with the distribution of the donated items.

Leftover conference bags, tee-shirts, pens, etc.?

Donate them to Penn VIPS. We will share them with school children and members of the community.

Contact Isabel Sampson-Mapp at sammapp@upenn.edu for additional information about any of these opportunities.

—Isabel Sampson-Mapp, associate director, Netter Center for Community Partnerships

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