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Peiss
Chatterjee |
The University Continuing Educational
Association awarded two gold medals to Penn Summer Sessions for excellence
in marketing and publications. The Penn Summer Sessions teamValerie
C. Ross, Bryan Lathrop, Emma Foley, Mandy Danti and Elizabeth Sachsbeat
out 400 entries this year to win honors in the publications and campaign
categories.
Among the 184 artists, scholars and
scientists recognized with a 2002 Guggenheim Fellowship are Professors
of History David Ludden and Kathy Peiss and Professor of
Chemistry Marsha I. Lester. Guggenheim Fellows are appointed for
distinguished achievement in the past and exceptional promise for future
accomplishment.
University President Judith Rodin
has added another honorthe Philadelphias Visiting Nurses Association
2002 Caring Awardto her list of achievements. Past recipients include
Rosalyn Carter and the late Sen. John Heinz. Rodin was recognized for
having improved community relationships, especially in West Philadelphia.
Better math skills are on the horizon
for the Penn-assisted and Henry Lea elementary schools thanks to a $300,000
grant from the GE Fund to the Graduate School of Education and
the Engineering School. The award will help create an annual summer
institute where teachers can prepare for the school year and a year-long
professional development study group that focuses on mathematical concepts.
Associate Professor of Neurology Anjan
Chatterjee received the Norman Geschwind Prize in Behavioral Neurology
at the 54th annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. The award
recognizes Chatterjees research on human cognition.
Charlene W. Compher, assistant professor
of nutrition science in the School of Nursing, has been elected chairperson
of the Dietitians in Nutrition Support Practice Group of the American
Dietetic Association. The three-year post provides leadership and representation
to almost 4,000 dietitians.
Ann L. OSullivan, associate
professor of primary care nursing, was honored by the National State Nurses
Association for her role as a Robert Wood Johnson Executive Fellow inaugural
lecturer and supporter.
Lecturer Wendy Grube is now
president of the Philadelphia Colposcopy Society. She is only the second
nurse to have achieved this honor.
A two-year, $302,000 grant from the
National Endowment for the Humanities is helping the University of
Pennsylvania Museums Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary Project
become more technologically savvy. Originally conceived as an 18-volume
dictionary of Sumerian, the worlds oldest written language, the
project is now being implemented as a Web-based work that will also be
published on CD-ROM.
Anna Sophia Agbe-Davies work,
Up in Smoke: Tobacco, Pipe-Making, and Bacons Rebellion,
has earned her a Jamestown Scholars Dissertation Fellowship. Co-sponsored
by the Organization of American Historians and the National Park Service,
the award honors Ph.D. candidates who have contributed to the understanding
of Jamestown.
Student honor
Penn sophomore Chien Kuoh Too is
one of 16 U.S. undergraduates honored as a Goldman Sachs Global Leader.
The Goldman Sachs Foundation and the Institute of International Education
created the Global Leaders Program to reward academic excellence and leadership
potential of 100 of the most accomplished second-year students worldwide.
Originally published on May 9, 2002