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Tuesday, April 28, 2026
The Daily Pennsylvanian

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Experts: Technology affecting languages across globe

Text-messaging may have taken impersonality to the next level in America, but it is literally changing language in China, according to one scholar. Victor Mair, a professor in Penn's East Asian Languages and Civilizations program, along with his colleagues Brian Spooner and Aslam Syed, spoke yesterday afternoon to an audience of about 20 at the Penn Museum on the evolution of language, in both written and spoken forms.


LEWISBURG, Pa. It was only the first quarter, but the Quakers already knew that a win was on the way. That's when sophomore quarterback Robert Irvin connected with wide receiver Braden Lepisto on a play-action pass for a 72-yard touchdown on the fourth drive of the game.

The Latest
By Brandon Moyse · Oct. 9, 2006

The Lock Haven Lady Eagles came into Sunday soaring on a nine-game winning streak, but left Franklin Field with clipped wings. Their vaunted offense was held to just one goal on four attempts as the Penn field hockey team downed the Eagles, 2-1. Before their game against Penn (4-7, 1-2 Ivy), they had outscored their last nine opponents by a ludicrous 45-5 margin.

Voters "have to drain the swamp that is Washington, D.C.," Nancy Pelosi told a crowd in Logan Hall's Terrace Room. The Republican Congress has made a mess of everything from Iraq to education, but the Democrats can clean it up, Pelosi (D-Calif.), the U.S. House of Representatives Minority Leader, announced to students Friday morning at a rally on Penn's campus.

A price too high To the Editor: I have been attending Penn Hillel High Holiday Services for 30 years. They have been my Jewish place of worship, my linkage to organized Jewish life, through school at Penn, family religious events and many a soulful search.


The Daily Pennsylvanian

A price too high To the Editor: I have been attending Penn Hillel High Holiday Services for 30 years. They have been my Jewish place of worship, my linkage to organized Jewish life, through school at Penn, family religious events and many a soulful search.



This one was never going to be close

LEWISBURG, Pa. It was only the first quarter, but the Quakers already knew that a win was on the way. That's when sophomore quarterback Robert Irvin connected with wide receiver Braden Lepisto on a play-action pass for a 72-yard touchdown on the fourth drive of the game.




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It may not have access to the precognitive psychics featured in the 2002 Tom Cruise movie Minority Report, but a new city parole force working with Penn's criminology center is trying to prevent potential murderers from killing. Penn's Jerry Lee Center of Criminology, in partnership with the First Judicial District of Philadelphia, is in the process of launching a homicide prevention unit that will try to determine which paroled felons are most likely to commit murder and assign them special parole officers.


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Weaving humor through the serious themes of politics and coming of age, poet Daisy Fried charmed an audience that smiled, laughed and applauded as if on queue. Yesterday evening, Fried, who taught writing at Penn three years ago, read selections of her poetry at the Kelly Writers House.


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When the Quakers walk off the bus in Cambridge, Mass., they will be focused one thing: defense. The Penn volleyball team's first Ivy League victory hinges on its ability to defend a much-improved Harvard team. Much of this defensive responsibility rests with senior libero Liz Hurst, who has the team focused in the right direction.


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Yale University will make videos of class lectures available to the public on the Internet next fall, the university has announced. The initiative, financed by a private grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, will put class lectures, transcripts, syllabi and other materials from select courses on the Internet for free.


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The duo of Yulia Rivelis and Julia Koulbitskaya are held to high expectations this weekend at the National Tennis Invitational in New York. Both players are first-team All-Ivy honorees who last year led the women's tennis team to a second-place finish in the ECAC Championships in addition to qualifying for the NCAA Tournament.


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Real violations To the Editor: On behalf of Penn Faculty and Staff Against War on Iraq, I must challenge the accuracy and fairness of your coverage of our Teach-In ("An antiwar evening in Huntsman," DP, 9/21/06). The opening line "Penn faculty revived a protest technique" carelessly omitted the staff who played a critical role in organizing this event.


Heated league rivalry to open new chapter

As far as Mike Klein is concerned, tomorrow's game against Columbia could be a soap opera in the making. When asked about the Quakers' intense rivalry with the Lions, the sophomore forward seemed concerned about the possibility that Columbia may have some insider information on the Red and Blue.


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When it comes to leveling the educational playing field, wealth is more important than race, says sociology professor Dalton Conley. Dalton Conley, professor of sociology and public policy at New York University, spoke yesterday in Logan Hall about the relationship between wealth and education to a group of faculty and Graduate School of Education students as part of the "Race in the Academy" series.



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What field hockey coach Val Cloud doesn't know could definitely hurt her. In Penn's first home game since beating Harvard 2-0 back on Sept. 9, the Quakers will play host to a relative unknown in Lock Haven on Sunday at 1 p.m. In between those two games, the Quakers have taken some steps forward (with wins over Lafayette and Rutgers) and one big step back (a 2-1 defeat at Dartmouth that severely damaged the team's Ivy League title aspirations).


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Amy Gutmann made $675,000 in her first year as Penn's president, but she's got a long way to go to catch up with her predecessor, who was still on the payroll even though she was not president in that year. Gutmann's total compensation for the fiscal year 2005 - which ended on June 30 of that year - was $675,000 with $92,000 total benefits, tax reports show.


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Philadelphia's artists, including Penn's vice provost for University life, will open their doors to the public this weekend. Philadelphia Open Studio Tours is an annual event that allows over 200 of the city's visual artists to open their studios or homes for the display and sale of their artwork.