Art for Eyes and Ears
Landscape/Soundscape at the Arthur Ross Gallery
Serial EarthQuakers
Alumni writers dig up their satiric LA-earthquake novel.
Notes and Whispers
An “extraordinary evening” at the Penn Museum.
Down the Rabbit Hole and into Art
A graphic-memoir of healing through dementia in Aliceheimer’s.
Briefly Noted
March|April 2017
Arts Calendar
March|April 2017
Block the Vote
Law School’s Sparer Symposium tackles voting rights and gerrymandering.
“Penn Will Not Bend”
Gutmann: Penn opposes executive order on immigration and refugees.
Data Defenders
Data Refuge project preserves federal data on climate change.
Wham! Smack! Pow! You’re Dead
PG-13 films: heavy on violence, light on consequences.
Star Struck
Looking back—way back—with Penn astrophysicist Bhuvnesh Jain.
New Portal to the Past
Digital Penn Museum expands online access to collections and more.
Doctoral Distiller
Doctoral student—and whiskey distiller—Zach Cohen.
Shakespeare Shakeup
Shakespeare has some company in Fisher-Bennett Hall.
Libraries Acquire Franklin’s Formative First Publication
Only copy of Franklin’s first printing job acquired by Penn Libraries.
Pancreas Research Program Established
$12 million to establish Human Pancreas Analysis Program at Penn.
The Elusive Legacy of MLK
MLK Social Justice Lecture features Charles M. Blow and Joy Reid.
Talks About Trump
Panels examine foreign policy, the economy, and “truth” in the Trump era.
Commencement Speaker: Cory Booker
Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey to speak at Commencement.
Biden Coming to Penn
Biden joins Penn to lead Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement.
Serve and Rally
Tennis looks to improve standing; women’s lacrosse to dominate.
Scoreboard
From Dec. 5, 2016 to Feb. 5, 2017
Pressure and Proof
Alumnus, journalist, and self-described math geek Alan Schwarz saw something rotten in the number of kids diagnosed with ADHD and treated with amphetamines. He responded with a powerful series in The New York Times—and an even more powerful book.
Good Ghosts
Celebrating the Palestra—the beloved “cathedral of college basketball”—at 90 years young.