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Vol. 65 No. 21 January 29, 2019
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Tuesday January 29, 2019 Volume 65 Number 21 www.upenn.edu/almanac Penn Medicine: 25 Years of Charles Bernstein: Bollingen Prize for Poetry Integration, Innovation and Ideals University of Pennsylvania Professor Charles is the Donald T. Re- After 25 years, the combined mission of pa- Bernstein has been named the winner of the gan Professor of Eng- tient care, medical education and research that 2019 Bollingen Prize for American Poetry; it lish and Compara- defines Penn Medicine is a proven principle. As is is among the most prestigious prizes given to tive Literature in the Penn Medicine’s model has evolved over this American writers. School of Arts and Sci- quarter century, it has continually demonstrat- The Bollingen Prize is awarded biennially to ences (Almanac Febru- ed itself to be visionary, collaborative, resilient an American poet for the best book published ary 8, 2005). He is also and pioneering, all while maintaining Frank- during the previous two years, or for lifetime known for his transla- lin’s core, altruistic values of serving the greater achievement in poetry, by the Yale University tions and collabora- good and advancing knowledge. Library through the Beinecke Rare Book and tions with artists and Penn Medicine’s reach and impact would im- Manuscript Library. The Prize was originally libretti. With Al Filreis, press the lifelong teacher and inventor as well. conferred by the Library of Congress with funds Penn’s Kelly Family One of the first integrated academic health sys- established in 1948 by the philanthropist Paul Professor of English, tems in the nation, the University of Pennsylva- Mellon. -
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Payments received through 09/30/2017 Who Pays SoundExchange: Q1 - Q3 2017 Entity Name License Type ACTIVAIRE.COM BES AMBIANCERADIO.COM BES AURA MULTIMEDIA CORPORATION BES CLOUDCOVERMUSIC.COM BES COROHEALTH.COM BES CUSTOMCHANNELS.NET (BES) BES DMX MUSIC BES ELEVATEDMUSICSERVICES.COM BES GRAYV.COM BES INSTOREAUDIONETWORK.COM BES IT'S NEVER 2 LATE BES JUKEBOXY BES MANAGEDMEDIA.COM BES MEDIATRENDS.BIZ BES MIXHITS.COM BES MTI Digital Inc - MTIDIGITAL.BIZ BES MUSIC CHOICE BES MUSIC MAESTRO BES MUZAK.COM BES PRIVATE LABEL RADIO BES RFC MEDIA - BES BES RISE RADIO BES ROCKBOT, INC. BES SIRIUS XM RADIO, INC BES SOUND-MACHINE.COM BES STARTLE INTERNATIONAL INC. BES Stingray Business BES Stingray Music USA BES STORESTREAMS.COM BES STUDIOSTREAM.COM BES TARGET MEDIA CENTRAL INC BES Thales InFlyt Experience BES UMIXMEDIA.COM BES SIRIUS XM RADIO, INC CABSAT Stingray Music USA CABSAT MUSIC CHOICE PES MUZAK.COM PES SIRIUS XM RADIO, INC SDARS 181.FM Webcasting 3ABNRADIO (Christian Music) Webcasting 3ABNRADIO (Religious) Webcasting 8TRACKS.COM Webcasting 903 NETWORK RADIO Webcasting A-1 COMMUNICATIONS Webcasting ABERCROMBIE.COM Webcasting ABUNDANT RADIO Webcasting ACAVILLE.COM Webcasting *SoundExchange accepts and distributes payments without confirming eligibility or compliance under Sections 112 or 114 of the Copyright Act, and it does not waive the rights of artists or copyright owners that receive such payments. Payments received through 09/30/2017 ACCURADIO.COM Webcasting ACRN.COM Webcasting AD ASTRA RADIO Webcasting ADAMS RADIO GROUP Webcasting ADDICTEDTORADIO.COM Webcasting ADORATION Webcasting AGM BAKERSFIELD Webcasting AGM CALIFORNIA - SAN LUIS OBISPO Webcasting AGM NEVADA, LLC Webcasting AGM SANTA MARIA, L.P. -
Intramural Mail Codes (Revised 9/21/09) DESCRIPTION STREET
Intramural Mail Codes (Revised 9/21/09) INTRAMURALC DESCRIPTION STREET ADDRESS RM./STE. ODE 3440 MARKET 3440 MARKET ST. STE. 300 3363 3440 MARKET 3440 MARKET ST. 3325 3601 LOCUST WALK 3601 LOCUST WK. 6224 3701 MARKET STREET 3701 MARKET ST. 5502 ACCTS. PAYABLE - FRANKLIN BLDG. 3451 WALNUT ST. RM. 440 6281 ADDAMS HALL - FINE ARTS UGRAD. DIV. 200 S. 36TH ST. 3806 ADDICTION RESEARCH CTR. 3900 CHESTNUT ST. STE. 5 3120 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION - SANSOM PLACE EAST 3600 CHESTNUT ST. 6106 AFRICAN STUDIES - WILLIAMS HALL 255 S. 36TH ST. STE. 645 6305 AFRICAN STUDIES, CTR. FOR 3401 WALNUT ST. STE. 331A 6228 AFRICAN-AMERICAN RESOURCE CTR. 3537 LOCUST WK. 6225 ALMANAC - SANSOM PLACE EAST 3600 CHESTNUT ST. 6106 ALUMNI RELATIONS 3533 LOCUST WK. FL. 2 6226 AMEX TRAVEL 220 S. 40TH ST RM. 201E 3562 ANATOMY/CHEMISTRY BLDG. (MED.) 3620 HAMILTON WK. 6110 ANNENBERG CTR. 3680 WALNUT ST. 6219 ANNENBERG PSYCHOLOGY LAB 3535 MARKET ST. 3309 ANNENBERG PUBLIC POLICY CTR. 202 S. 36TH ST. 3806 ANNENBERG SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION - ASC 3620 WALNUT ST. 6220 ANTHROPOLOGY - UNIVERSITY MUSEUM 3260 SOUTH ST. RM. 325 6398 ARCH, THE 3601 LOCUST WK. 6224 ARCHIVES, UNIVERSITY 3401 MARKET ST. STE. 210 3358 ARESTY INST./EXEC. EDUC.- STEINBERG CONFERENCE CTR. 255 S. 38TH ST. STE. 2 6356 ASIAN & MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES - WILLIAMS HALL 255 S. 36TH ST. 6305 ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES - WILLIAMS HALL 255 S. 36TH ST. 6305 ASTRONOMY - DRL 209 S. 33RD ST. RM. 4N6 6394 AUDIT, COMPLIANCE & PRIVACY, OFFICE OF (FORMERLY INTERNAL AUDIT) 3819 CHESTNUT ST. 3106 BEN FRANKLIN SCHOLARS - THE ARCH 3601 LOCUST WK. -
2020-2021 Academic Calendar
Table of Contents 2020-2021 Academic Calendar .................................................................................................................. 4 Catawba College: A Strength of Tradition .................................................................................................. 7 Non-Discrimination Policy / Title IX Policy ................................................................................................. 9 Admissions Information ........................................................................................................................... 10 Scholarships and Financial Assistance ...................................................................................................... 20 Satisfactory Academic Policy (SAP) ...................................................................................................... 23 Expenses and Fees ................................................................................................................................... 32 The Campus Facilities .............................................................................................................................. 37 Emergency Response Plan ....................................................................................................................... 41 Student Life & Activities........................................................................................................................... 42 Clubs and Organizations ..................................................................................................................... -
0927 Daily Pennsylvanian
Parkway M. Soccer falls Movin’ on up in double-OT Past 40th Street — the Penntrification of West Philly. party See Sports | Back Page See 34th Street Magazine See page 4 The Independent Student Newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania ◆ Founded 1885 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2007 dailypennsylvaniapennsylvan ian.com PHILADELPHIA | VOL. CXXIII, NO. 84 U. City: Newest dining destination? Penn InTouch changes far on the horizon While student groups call for Penn InTouch improvements, changes likely to take months By REBECCA KAPLAN many believe needs a major Staff Writer overhaul. [email protected] Regina Koch , the IT Techni- Any senior hoping for a sim- cal Director for Student Regis- ple, streamlined class-registra- tration and Financial Services, tion system should stop holding said improving Penn InTouch their breath: Penn InTouch will now is an official project. not be updated this year. “We have to replace some But there is still hope for of the technology because the freshmen, sophomores and ju- systems are 15 years old,” she niors, who will likely see a big said. improvement to the system by Wharton senior Alex Flamm , the time they graduate. the Undergraduate Assembly Last Tuesday, members of representative spearheading the Undergraduate Assembly, the campaign for Penn InTouch Student Financial Services and change, said SFS and ISC are Information Systems and Com- planning a large change sooner puting met to find new ways to than anticipated. improve Penn InTouch, the on- line organization system that See INTOUCH, page 3 Sundance Kid set Staci Hou & Kien Lam/DP File Photos for film screening Top: Morimoto, a Japanese restaurant in Center City owned by Steven Starr. -
Dear Friends of the Kelly Writers House, Summertime at KWH Is Typically Dreamy
Dear Friends of the Kelly Writers House, Summertime at KWH is typically dreamy. We renovation of Writers House in 1997, has On pages 12–13 you’ll read about the mull over the coming year and lovingly plan guided the KWH House Committee in an sixteenth year of the Kelly Writers House programs to fill our calendar. Interns settle into organic planning process to develop the Fellows Program, with a focus on the work research and writing projects that sprawl across Kelly Family Annex. Through Harris, we of the Fellows Seminar, a unique course that the summer months. We clean up mailing lists, connected with architects Michael Schade and enables young writers and writer-critics to tidy the Kane-Wallace Kitchen, and restock all Olivia Tarricone, who designed the Annex have sustained contact with authors of great supplies with an eye toward fall. The pace is to integrate seamlessly into the old Tudor- accomplishment. On pages 14–15, you’ll learn leisurely, the projects long and slow. style cottage (no small feat!). A crackerjack about our unparalleled RealArts@Penn project, Summer 2014 is radically different. On May tech team including Zach Carduner (C’13), which connects undergraduates to the business 20, 2014, just after Penn’s graduation (when we Chris Martin, and Steve McLaughlin (C’08) of art and culture beyond the university. Pages celebrated a record number of students at our helped envision the Wexler Studio as a 16–17 detail our outreach efforts, the work we Senior Capstone event), we broke ground on student-friendly digital recording playground, do to find talented young writers and bring the Kelly Family Annex, a two-story addition chock-full of equipment ready for innovative them to Penn. -
Tlu Lictutstilnatttatt ^ W T? Fmmrlrrl 1885
tlu lictutstilnatttatt ^ W T? fmmrlrrl 1885 ■•■''' lily . , , Vol. \CIX.\o.6l I'llll AHHPHIA.July I. 1983 Minority admissions fall in larger Class of 1987 Officials laud geographic diversity B> I -At KfN ( (II I MAN the) are pleased with the results ol a \ target class ol 1987 contains dtive 10 make the student bod) more liginificantl) fewei minority geographicall) diverse, citing a students but the group is the Univer- decrease in the numbet ol students sity's most geographicall) diverse from Ihe Northeast in the c lass ol class ever. 198". A- ol late May, 239 minority ot the 4191 students who were at -indents had indicated the) will cepted to the new freshman class. matriculate at the i niversit) in the 2178 indicated b) late \lav that the) fall as members ol the new will matricualte, a 4" percent yield. freshman class, a drop ol almost 5 Provost l hi'ina- Ehrlich said that percent from last year's figure of increasing geographic diversit) i- 251. one ol the I Diversity's top goal-. Acceptances from t hicano and "I'm ver) pleased particularl) in Asian students increased this vear, terms of following out goal of DP Steven Siege bin the number of Hacks and geographic diversit) while maintain- I xuhcranl tans tearing down the franklin Held goalpost! after IRC Quakers" 23-2 victor) over Harvard latino- dropped sharply. Hie new ing academic quality," he said. "The freshman class will have 113 black indicator- look veiv good." -indents, compared wilh 133 last Stetson -.ml the size ol the i lass veat a decline ol almost 16 per ol 1987 will not be finalized until cent tin- month, when adjustments are Champions But Vlmissions Dean I ee Stetson made I'm students who decide 10 Bl LEE STETSON lend oilier schools Stetson said he said the Financial MA Office i- 'Reflection oj the econom\' working to provide assistance winch plan- "limited use" ol the waiting will permit more minority students list to fill vacancies caused by an Iwentv two percent ol the class Quakers capture Ivy football crown to matriculate. -
January at PENN 2005.Indd
GILB: Yellowed Images of a Van- skate rental $2.50; Public skating hrs. (*$1 ACADEMIC CALENDAR ished Country; records East and West Ger- off admission): Mon. 1:15-3:15 p.m.*; many when divided; Arthur Ross Gallery. Tues. noon-2 p.m.*; Wed. 1:15-3:15 p.m.*; 10 Spring Semester Classes Begin. Through January 30. See Films. Thurs. noon-2 p.m.*; Fri. 7-9:30 p.m. when 17 Martin Luther King, Jr. Day (ob- Non-Retinal: Kovert Konflagration no hockey game is scheduled; Sat. 12:30- served). No classes. Kovenant; sculptor revisits the 2002 Vir- 2:30 p.m., 8-10 p.m., midnight-2 a.m.; Sun. January 21 Add Period Ends. ginia vs. Black case; Slought Foundation. 12:30-2:30 p.m.; info.: http://hstrial-rrob- Through January 31. ertson1.homestead.com/HOME.html. CHILDRENʼS ACTIVITY Architecture Against Death; features Rape Aggression Defense; 12-hour two texts by Jean-Michel Rabaté, Arakawa, sessions give hands-on physical defense A T P E N N 15 Celebrate the Indian Festival of and Madeline Gins installed on the walls of training for women; session I: January Whenever there is more than meets the eye, Lights; ages 8-12; celebration the gallery; Slought Foundation. Through 15, 22 & 29, 6-9 p.m.; session II: January see our web site, www.upenn.edu/almanac/. of Diwali accompanied by the January 31. 17 & 24, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 4040 Chestnut exchange of sweets, and light- Sun Ra Meets Napoleon; historical St.; free/students, staff & faculty; regis- Cock a doodle doo! ing of small oil lamps made materials pertaining to ancient Egypt; ter: (215) 898-3590; for spring schedule Welcome the Year of by the children; $10; register: (215) 898- Slought Foundation. -
February a T P E N N
February A T P E N N Whenever there is more than meets the eye, see our web site, Margaret Mead www.upenn.edu/almanac/. Film Festival February 23 through 25 Counter clockwise, ACADEMIC CALENDAR Now from upper right: Lisa Yuskavage; Philadelphia • On and Off the Res’ 16 Drop Period Ends. artist’s unsettling and provocative w/Charlie Hill paintings; ICA. Through February 4. • Seven Hours to Burn CHILDREN’S ACTIVITIES Hella Jongerius and Jurgen Bey; • Stairway to Heaven 6 Story Hour; 11 a.m.; Bookstore. Dutch designers’ “Droog” products • The Laughing Club Also February 13, 20 (10 a.m.) and 27. made from recycled mass-produced of India objects; ICA. Through February 4. See Films, below. CONFERENCE Mei Ling Hom: Silkworm Grind; 2 HIV/AIDS in Africa: The Critical installation focusing on Asian women’s Link Between Human Rights and Health; experiences; ICA. Through February 4. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bodek Lounge, Hous- Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie; 6th ton Hall. Registration required: (215) fl., Rosenwald Gallery, Van Pelt-Dietrich 823-4206 or [email protected] Library Center. Through February 5. (African Studies Center). MFA First Year Exhibition; Upper and Lower Galleries, Meyerson Hall. EXHIBITS Through February 11. Admission donations and hours Pomo Indian Basket Weavers: Their Baskets and the Art Market; text, Arthur Ross Gallery, Fisher Fine video and photos of 120 turn-of-the- Arts Library: free, Tues.-Fri., 10 a.m.-5 century Native American baskets; 2nd p.m., Sat. & Sun., noon-5 p.m. fl., Dietrich Gallery, University Museum. Burrison Gallery, Faculty Club, Through February 25. -
Licensee Count Q1 2019.Xlsx
Who Pays SoundExchange: Q1 2019 Entity Name License Type Aura Multimedia Corporation BES CLOUDCOVERMUSIC.COM BES COROHEALTH.COM BES CUSTOMCHANNELS.NET (BES) BES DMX Music BES GRAYV.COM BES Imagesound Limited BES INSTOREAUDIONETWORK.COM BES IO BUSINESS MUSIC BES It'S Never 2 Late BES MTI Digital Inc - MTIDIGITAL.BIZ BES Music Choice BES MUZAK.COM BES Private Label Radio BES Qsic BES RETAIL ENTERTAINMENT DESIGN BES Rfc Media - Bes BES Rise Radio BES Rockbot, Inc. BES Sirius XM Radio, Inc BES SOUND-MACHINE.COM BES Stingray Business BES Stingray Music USA BES STUDIOSTREAM.COM BES Thales Inflyt Experience BES UMIXMEDIA.COM BES Vibenomics, Inc. BES Sirius XM Radio, Inc CABSAT Stingray Music USA CABSAT Music Choice PES MUZAK.COM PES Sirius XM Radio, Inc Satellite Radio 102.7 FM KPGZ-lp Webcasting 999HANKFM - WANK Webcasting A-1 Communications Webcasting ACCURADIO.COM Webcasting Ad Astra Radio Webcasting Adams Radio Group Webcasting ADDICTEDTORADIO.COM Webcasting Aloha Station Trust Webcasting Alpha Media - Alaska Webcasting Alpha Media - Amarillo Webcasting Alpha Media - Aurora Webcasting Alpha Media - Austin-Albert Lea Webcasting Alpha Media - Bakersfield Webcasting Alpha Media - Biloxi - Gulfport, MS Webcasting Alpha Media - Brookings Webcasting Alpha Media - Cameron - Bethany Webcasting Alpha Media - Canton Webcasting Alpha Media - Columbia, SC Webcasting Alpha Media - Columbus Webcasting Alpha Media - Dayton, Oh Webcasting Alpha Media - East Texas Webcasting Alpha Media - Fairfield Webcasting Alpha Media - Far East Bay Webcasting Alpha Media -
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Homecoming 20 19 PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOMMY LEONARDI C’89 Jan | Feb 2020 THE PENNSYLVANIA GAZETTE 53 Merit Awards Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw are over, inviting them to your talks and back Tennessee when you were 11. With artist parents, Faculty Award of Merit to campus for exhibits. you grew up surrounded by art and by music—not An Associate Professor in You have engaged alumni in numerous other classical music, but the Beatles, Bob Marley, and History of Art, you are a ways. As part of Experience Penn, you have ac- the Rolling Stones. Through rock, you have said, scholar, a teacher, and a cu- companied alumni on behind-the-scenes tours you discovered music’s power to communicate. rator. As you explore race, at the Prospect New Orleans and Art Basel Mi- Your fi rst experience as a musician was as a gender, sexuality, and class ami, providing context and spurring incisive fl utist in your high school band, having found in art from the United discussion. Audiences at Trustees’ Council of a fl ute in your attic and taught yourself to play States, Latin America, and the Caribbean, you Penn Women and Penn Spectrum events have at age 15. At Bowling Green State University, move seamlessly from the classroom to the mu- also benefi ted from your expertise. you began formal music studies; three years seum. In this, you represent the full arc of knowl- This past spring, you dazzled Penn alumni later—at the age of 21—you took your fi rst com- edge: from discovery, to teaching, to communi- and friends as one of three panelists on stage position class. -
Honor and Duty: the Collegiate Education of a Yeoman Farmer's Son
The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Dissertations Summer 8-1-2021 Honor and Duty: The Collegiate Education of a Yeoman Farmer’s Son in Antebellum Mississippi David Taylor Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Taylor, David, "Honor and Duty: The Collegiate Education of a Yeoman Farmer’s Son in Antebellum Mississippi" (2021). Dissertations. 1928. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/1928 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HONOR AND DUTY: THE COLLEGIATE EDUCATION OF A YEOMAN FARMER’S SON IN ANTEBELLUM MISSISSIPPI by David Eugene Taylor A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School, the College of Education and Human Sciences and the School of Education at The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Approved by: Kyna Shelley Holly Foster Lilian Hill Thomas O'Brien August 2021 COPYRIGHT BY David Eugene Taylor 2021 Published by the Graduate School ABSTRACT This endeavor reviews the mindsets and ideologies emerging from the South in the era known as "King Cotton," a time which predated the American Civil War and in which cotton was the primary export of the South. It is historically relevant to Higher Education in that it views this mindset through the eyes of young, white, single males and in particular, one male, a student of Mississippi College in Clinton, Mississippi.