2010
Mathematicians Solve 140-Year-Old Boltzmann Equation
PHILADELPHIA –- Two University of Pennsylvania mathematicians have found
solutions to a 140-year-old, 7-dimensional equation that were not known to exist
for more than a century despite its widespread use in modeling the behavior of
gases.
Renata Holod appointed the College for Women Class of 1963 Term Professor in the Humanities
Renata Holod has been named the College for Women Class of 1963 Term
Professor in the Humanities in the School of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Holod is a
member of the history of art department and Curator in the Near East Section at
the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Eugene Park Named Korea Foundation Associate Professor in History
Eugene Y. Park has been named the Korea Foundation Associate
Professor in History in the School of Arts and Sciences. He has also
assumed leadership of the Center for Korean Studies at Penn.
Senior Cecilia Corrigan’s Play Memorial Day to Be Performed Across Philadelphia in May
An original play by undergraduate English major Cecilia Corrigan will be
performed five times at five different locations in Philadelphia during the
month of May. Her production of Memorial Day. mixes live
performance with video “news reports.” “I was interested in getting as many
different types of audiences and types of performance experiences as possible,”
she says.
Robert W. Preucel Named Sally and Alvin V. Shoemaker Professor of Anthropology
Robert W. Preucel, the Gregory Annenberg Weingarten curator-in-charge of the
American Section at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and
Anthropology, has been named the Sally and Alvin V. Shoemaker Professor of
Anthropology. This chair is designated for a School of Arts and Sciences faculty
member who is also a curator at the Penn Museum.
Jeffrey Kallberg Appointed Associate Dean for Arts and Letters
Jeffrey Kallberg, Professor and Chair of Music, has been appointed Associate Dean for Arts and Letters, effective July 1, 2010. In this role, he will oversee the School's academic programs in the humanities, including 13 departments: Classical Studies, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, English, German, History, History of Art, Music, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Philosophy, Religious Studies, Romance Languages, Slavic Languages, and South Asia Studies.
Peter Decherney Is First Assistant Professor to Be Named Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Film Scholar
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has named Assistant Professor Peter Decherney a 2009 Academy Film Scholar. He is the first assistant professor to win this prestigious award, which the Academy normally reserves for senior scholars whose work examines the cultural, educational, historical, theoretical or scientific aspects of theatrical motion pictures.
College Senior Receives Woodrow Wilson-Rockefeller Brothers Fund Fellowship for Aspiring Teachers of Color
College of Arts and Sciences Senior Makeda Farley has received one of 25 Woodrow Wilson-Rockefeller Brothers Fund Fellowships for Aspiring Teachers of Color from the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. She will receive a $30,000 stipend to complete a master's degree in education, as well as preparation to teach in a high-need public school, support and mentoring throughout a three-year teaching commitment and guidance toward teaching certification.
College Announces 2010 Graduation Speakers
George Smith, a 1955 College alumnus and co-recipient of 2009 Nobel Prize in Physics, will be the guest speaker at this year's graduation ceremony for the University of Pennsylvania College of Arts and Sciences on Sunday, May 16, at 6:30 p.m. at Franklin Field. Joshua Bennett, C'10, will be the student speaker.
Death of William R. LaFleur of the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations
It is with great regret that we note the passing of Dr. William R. LaFleur of the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations. The cause was a massive heart attack on Friday, February 26, 2010. He was 73 years old and is survived by his wife Mariko, his son David, and daughters Jeanmarie and Kiyomi.
Peter Decherney Named Inaugural Stephen M. Gorn Family Assistant Professor of English
Peter Decherney, of the Department of English and the Cinema Studies Program in the School of Arts and Sciences, has been named the inaugural Stephen M. Gorn Family Assistant Professor of English.
Thomas J. Sugrue Named David Boies Professor of History and Sociology
Thomas J. Sugrue, a member of the history department faculty in the School of Arts and Sciences, has been named David Boies Professor of History and Sociology.
Three SAS Faculty Awarded Sloan Fellowships
Three young scientists from the School of Arts and Sciences are among the five Penn scholars who have been named Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellows for 2010.
Penn’s Center for the Advanced Study of India’s $2 Million Grant from the Government of India
The University of Pennsylvania announced a $2 million grant from the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs of the Government of India (MOIA) to support Penn’s Center for the Advanced Study of India (CASI), which will conduct research on international migration from India.This is the first time that MOIA has ever awarded an empirical research grant of this magnitude to an academic institution outside India.
Organizational Dynamics' Steven F. Freeman Awarded Louis O. Kelso Fellowship
Steven F. Freeman, Resident Scholar and Affiliated Faculty in the Organizational Dynamics Program in SAS, has received a Louis O. Kelso Fellowship. Freeman is a prominent teacher of organizational resilience, entrepreneurship and innovation. He has studied resilience and innovation in the U.S. auto industry, and he conducted a widely acclaimed study on the comeback of one of the firms hardest hit by the September 11 terrorist attacks.
Eiichiro Azuma Named the Alan Charles Kors Term Associate Professor of History
Eiichiro Azuma has been named the Alan Charles Kors Term Associate Professor of History in the School of Arts and Sciences.
Alan Charles Kors Named the Henry Charles Lea Professor of History
Alan Charles Kors has been named the Henry Charles Lea Professor of History in the School of Arts and Sciences.
SAS Students and Alumna Named Gates Cambridge Scholars
Two seniors and one alumna have been selected to receive a 2010 Gates Cambridge Scholarship. Donielle Johnson, C’10, of Virginia, is majoring in psychology and is in the biological basis of behavior program. She has volunteered and worked at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Center for Autism Research. At Cambridge, she will continue studying autism in the Autism Research Centre earning an MPhil in medical sciences.
College Senior and Alum Win 2010 Thouron Awards
A College of Arts and Sciences senior and a recent College graduate have received Thouron Awards to pursue graduate studies in the United Kingdom.Senior Stefan Sabo, a math major who sub-matriculated into the Master's in Math program, is also a University Scholar, Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowship Undergraduate Advisory Board member and Dean's Scholar. He will attend the University of Cambridge.
Francis X. Diebold Appointed Paul F. and Warren S. Miller Professor of Economics
Diebold, who received his doctorate in economics from Penn, is a leader in economic modeling, forecasting, and risk management. He has received widespread recognition for his research, including election as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association and the Econometric Society. He has won the Department of Economics Kravis Award for Outstanding Teaching, the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, the Alfred P.
National Academy of Sciences Honors Penn Psychologist Michael Kahana With Troland Research Award
PHILADELPHIA –- The National Academy of Sciences has honored Michael J. Kahana of the University of Pennsylvania and 16 other researchers with awards in recognition of extraordinary scientific achievements in the areas of biology, chemistry, geology, astronomy, and psychology.
Sociology's Randall Collins Elected President of American Sociological Association
Randall Collins, the Dorothy Swaine Thomas Professor in Sociology, has been elected to serve as the 102nd President of the American Sociological Association (ASA) for 2010-2011. Collins will assume office in August of 2010, following a year of service as president-elect.
Roger Allen Named Sascha Jane Patterson Harvie Professor of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics
Roger Allen, professor of Arabic and chair of the department of Near Eastern languages and civilizations, has been named the Sascha Jane Patterson Harvie Professor of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics. Dr. Allen is the author of numerous articles and translations, in addition to a major study on the Arabic novel and an anthology of critical writings.
Charles Epstein Named Thomas A. Scott Professor of Mathematics
Charles L. Epstein, a member of the mathematics department faculty, has been named the Thomas A. Scott Professor of Mathematics. Dr. Epstein’s research interests include partial differential equations, boundary value problems, medical imaging, population genetics and other fields of mathematical analysis and its applications.
Jonathan Baron Named to Society of Experimental Psychologists
Jonathan Baron, Professor of Psychology, has been named a Fellow by the Society of Experimental Psychologists. This prestigious society was formed in 1904 and admits a limited number of members annually from among the leading experimentalists in North America.
2009
Serena Stein Garners Undergraduate Anthropology Prizes
Serena Stein, an anthropology and comparative literature double major who is graduating in December 2009, recently received two prestigious undergraduate anthropology prizes.
College Senior Joshua Bennett Wins United Kingdom's Marshall Scholarship
College of Arts and Sciences senior Joshua Bennett of Yonkers, New York has won a prestigious United Kingdom Government Marshall Scholarship for graduate studies in the U.K. He is among 35 winners of the prestigious scholarship, and he is Penn's 10th Marshall Scholar.
College Graduate Sarah-Jane Littleford Named Rhodes Scholar
Sarah-Jane Littleford, C'09, has been awarded a Rhodes Scholarship for study at Oxford University in England. Littleford graduated magna cum laude with an individualized double major in sustainable development and environmental studies and was last year's student speaker for the College of Arts and Sciences graduation ceremony.
Penn Awarded Funding for Critical Zone Observatory Project
The Department of Earth and Environmental Science has been awarded a $4.35 million, five-year grant from the National Science Foundation to establish a Critical Zone Observatory in Puerto Rico. The Luquillo Critical Zone Observatory (LCZO) is one of six observatories established by the NSF. Each of these observatories brings together diverse groups of researchers, educators, and students who study the Critical Zone to provide the scientific basis for its long-term management.
Historian Eric Schneider Recognized with Urban History Book Prize
Eric Schneider, Adjunct Professor of History and Assistant Dean and Associate Director for Academic Affairs in the College of Arts and Sciences, has been selected to receive the Kenneth Jackson Award from the Urban History Association for his most recent book, Smack: Heroin and the American City.
Eugene Beier to Receive Panofsky Prize in Experimental Physics
The American Physical Society has announced that Eugene Beier, a Fay R. and Eugene L. Langberg Professor of Physics, will be the recipient of the 2010 W.K.H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Physics. The prize is the highest honor in experimental particle physics awarded by the Society. It is being presented to Beier in recognition of his contributions to the study of neutrino interactions.
Penn Biologist Joshua Plotkin Awarded Packard Fellowship
PHILADELPHIA -- Joshua Plotkin, a biologist in the School of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania, has been awarded an $875,000 Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering.
Eugene Beier to Receive Panofsky Prize in Experimental Physics
The American Physical Society has announced that Eugene Beier, a Fay R. and Eugene L. Langberg Professor of Physics, will be the recipient of the 2010 W.K.H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Physics. The prize is the highest honor in experimental particle physics awarded by the Society. It is being presented to Beier in recognition of his contributions to the study of neutrino interactions.
Dennis DeTurck Named Robert A. Fox Leadership Professor
Dr. Dennis DeTurck, G ’80, dean of the College, and professor of mathematics, has been named the Robert A. Fox Leadership Professor, SAS Dean Rebecca W. Bushnell has announced.
Chemistry Professor Amos Smith Awarded Honorary Doctorate from Queen’s University Belfast
Amos B. Smith III, the William Warren Rhodes-Robert J. Thompson Professor of Chemistry, was recently awarded an honorary doctorate of science from Queen’s University Belfast in recognition of his distinguished contributions to the field of organic chemistry.
Avery Goldstein: Inaugural David M. Knott Professor of Global Politics and International Business
Professor of Political Science Avery Goldstein has been named the inaugural David M. Knott Professor of Global Politics and International Relations. Associate director of the Christopher H. Browne Center for International Politics and a recipient of the Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching, he specializes in international relations, security studies and Chinese politics.
Samuel Freeman: Avalon Professor in the Humanities
Dr. Samuel R. Freeman, a member of the philosophy department faculty, has been named the Avalon Professor in the Humanities. Dr. Freeman’s research interests include political and social philosophy, moral philosophy, philosophy of law, and history of ethics.
George E. Smith, 1955 Penn Alum, Receives the 2009 Nobel Prize in Physics
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2009 to Charles Kao, Willard S. Boyle and 1955 Penn alumnus George E. Smith. Smith, together with Boyle, invented the charge-coupled device, an integrated circuit that converts light into an electronic charge. The technology improved medical diagnostics, allowed humankind to see the surface of Mars and provided teenagers with digital cameras in their cell phones.
Peter Conn: Vartan Gregorian Professor of English
Peter Conn has been appointed the Vartan Gregorian Professor of English. A specialist in American literature, his publications include The Divided Mind: Ideology and Imagination in America, 1898-1917, Literature in America, and Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography. His latest book, The American 1930s: A Literary History, was recently published by Cambridge University Press
SAS Welcomes 17 New Faculty Members
The School of Arts and Sciences has appointed 17 new members to its standing faculty for the 2009-10 academic year. This year’s new appointments are:Daud Ali, Associate Professor of South Asia Studies: Pre-Sultanate India, with special interests in Sanskrit studies, early medieval courtly culture, and the history of secular ethics. Comes to Penn from the University of London. Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.
Associate Professor of Classical Studies Peter Struck to Serve as Co-Director of the National Forum on the Future of Liberal Education
The Teagle Foundation has awarded a grant of $392,500 to fund the National Forum on the Future of Liberal Education, a three-year program designed to identify and prepare emerging academic leaders. The grant will be administered through Penn, and the program will be co-directed by Associate Professor of Classical Studies Peter Struck and Sarah Igo, an associate professor of history, sociology and political science at Vanderbilt University.
Death of Dr. Aditya Behl, Associate Professor of South Asia Studies
Dr. Aditya ‘Adi’ Behl, associate professor of South Asia Studies, died in his sleep on August 22, as a result of a chronic medical condition, at the age of 43.He earned a BA in 1988 at Bowdoin College. He then attended the University of Chicago, where he was awarded both his master’s in religious studies in 1989 and his PhD in 1995.
Madeleine Joullié Honored Twice by American Chemical Society
Professor of Chemistry Madeleine M. Joullié, G'50, Gr'53, has received two prestigious awards from the American Chemical Society (ACS), the world's largest scientific association.
Martin Seligman Awarded Inaugural Wiley Prize in Psychology
Robert A. Fox Leadership Professor of Psychology Martin Seligman has been named the first recipient of the Wiley Prize in Psychology. Bestowed by the British Academy in partnership with publisher Wiley-Blackwell, this new prize awards £5,000 annually in recognition of excellence in research—alternately honoring lifetime achievement by an outstanding international scholar and promising early work by a U.K.-based psychologist.
Tukufu Zuberi Awarded ASA's Oliver Cromwell Cox Prize
Tukufu Zuberi, the Lasry Family Professor of Race Relations and Chair of the Department of Sociology, has been awarded the 2009 Oliver Cromwell Cox Award from the American Sociological Association for his book White Logic, White Methods: Racism and Methodology. Zuberi shares the honor with his co-editor, Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, a professor of sociology at Duke University.
2009 Roy and Diana Vagelos Science Challenge Awards Honor Distinguished Undergraduate Students
Given annually to outstanding undergraduate students in the
submatriculation program in chemistry or physics, the 2009 Roy and
Diana Vagelos Science Challenge Awards were conferred in June by a
committee of standing faculty. This year’s recipients are biochemistry
and physics major Kevin Axelrod, C’11, biochemistry and chemistry major
Phillip Benedetti, C’10, biochemistry and physics major Matthew Berck,
C’10, biochemistry major Edward Kreider, C’11, and physics major Aaron
Levy, C’11.
Death of Renowned Penn Chemist Ralph F. Hirschmann, 1922-2009
Ralph F. Hirschmann, the Rao Makineni Professor of Bioorganic Chemistry at Penn and former head of research at Merck, passed away peacefully on June 20. A 2002 winner of the National Medal of Science, he made seminal contributions to organic, medicinal and bioorganic chemistry for more than 50 years.
2009 Roy and Diana Vagelos Science Challenge Awards Honor Distinguished Undergraduate Students
Given annually to outstanding undergraduate students in the submatriculation program in chemistry or physics, the 2009 Roy and Diana Vagelos Science Challenge Awards were conferred in June by a committee of standing faculty. This year’s recipients are biochemistry and physics major Kevin Axelrod, C’11, biochemistry and chemistry major Phillip Benedetti, C’10, biochemistry and physics major Matthew Berck, C’10, biochemistry major Edward Kreider, C’11, and physics major Aaron Levy, C’11.
Samuel Preston Wins Olivia Schieffelin Nordberg Award
Frederick J. Warren Professor of Demography Samuel H. Preston has been named winner of the 2009 Olivia Schieffelin Nordberg Award for excellence in writing and editing in the population sciences. The award is given every two years by the Population Council—an international, nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the well-being and reproductive health of current and future generations through biomedical, public health, and social science research on population issues.
Death of Renowned Penn Chemist Ralph F. Hirschmann, 1922-2009
Ralph F. Hirschmann, the Rao Makineni Professor of Bioorganic Chemistry at Penn and former head of research at Merck, passed away peacefully on June 20. A 2002 winner of the National Medal of Science, he made seminal contributions to organic, medicinal and bioorganic chemistry for more than 50 years.