Monthly Archives: September 2012

My First Five Months

Author: Emilie Kretschmar

Typically, my blog posts are about the latest Penn Alumni Travel trip or our fantastic newly-released 2013 travel schedule. But this month, we’re between travel trips, and so I’ve decided instead to write about my first five months at the Sweeten Alumni House (not to worry travel fans. Look for an upcoming post about Italy and the Danube)!

I began this position in Penn Alumni Relations in April, and each month has brought about new and interesting alumni events and traditions. We are lucky to work in a building that’s centrally located–just across from College Hall and next to the Van Pelt-Dietrich Library. Here, alumni relations staff can really stay connected to the University and all of the great things that happen on campus. With my trusty camera phone, I’ve captured a few highlights from my first five months at Penn.

APRIL
My first month at Penn and the hungry squirrels are already waiting to take my lunch. I captured this one as he was eyeing me from above on the patio behind Sweeten.

Hungry Squirrel

MAY
Alumni Weekend! I was quickly pulled into the festivities surrounding Alumni Weekend and Commencement. The campus was alive with graduating students and thousands of Penn alumni. If you’ve never attended a reunion weekend at Penn, you should consider coming next year (May 10-13, 2013). It’s a great time to see the campus, visit old friends, and learn about the many programs and opportunities that the university extends to alumni.

An alumnus plays the Sweeten Alumni House piano.

Time for food! A chef works hard to get hundreds of hamburgers ready for the class picnics.

JUNE
With most students and alumni away this summer, several staff members had time to attend the Ivy+ Alumni Relations Conference at Dartmouth. Each year, the eight Ivy League Universities plus MIT and Stanford gather for this conference to share expertise, tips, and resources (for more on Ivy+, visit Casey Ryan’s blog post here). The conference rotates locations each year, and Penn will be next year’s host. I spent my time at the conference meeting other alumni travel directors and getting insider’s tips on how to run an exceptional alumni travel program.

Dartmouth’s beautiful Rauner Special Collections Library. Do you see the Cat in the Hat peaking from inside the closed stacks?

JULY
In July, I hosted my first alumni tour. I spent 10 days with 16 wonderful alumni and friends in Tanzania. We visited four national parks and saw countless African animals. Look for another African safari in 2013 to Tanzania and Kenya.

Serengeti Giraffe

Ngorongoro Crater lion

AUGUST
In my fifth month at Penn, I began a new workout routine: a 3 mile run from Sweeten to my South Philadelphia home. Along the way, I ran across (literally and figuratively) some of the beautiful Philadelphia landmarks that surround Penn’s campus.

The South Street Bridge at dusk. Did you know that the bridge lights up at night?

So there you have it! My first five months as a Penn employee. I look forward to the new things these next five months will bring. When you finish reading this, take a minute and share with us those things that caught your attention when you first visited Penn—as a student, employee, faculty member, or native Philadelphian. There’s plenty of space in the comment section below!

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Filed under Campus Life, Emilie, Penn Alumni Travel, Penn in the Summer, Travel, Uncategorized

Penn Love at a Penn Wedding

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08

Penn weddings are my favorite because they are mini Penn reunions. The guest list is full of Penn alumni (just like at Alumni Weekend), the guests reminisce about their greatest memories from Penn (just like at class reunion parties), and there is always a little red and blue to represent where the couple met and fell in love. Here are photos of the wedding cake from a recent Penn wedding.

Front view of a Penn couple’s wedding cake

And now, for a Penn surprise…

Red and blue Penn “P” hiding on the back of the cake.

Congratulations to my friends, who met on the first day of NSO (New Student Orientation) freshman year. You can’t get more Penn than that!

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Events, Stephanie Y.

Baltic Dispatches Part 2

By: Emilie Kretschmar on behalf of Art Caplan, Emmanuel and Robert Hart Director of the Center for Bioethics

It is always exciting when a Penn Alumni travel trip returns to the States- at least for those of us back in the office. Looking at pictures, talking to the faculty host, hearing from happy alumni… these are all things I look forward to when a Penn Alumni Travel trip returns.

If you are a frequent visitor to the Frankly Penn blog, you may remember a recent post by Art Caplan, Emmanuel and Robert Hart Director of the Center for Bioethics. Art was our faculty host on the June alumni cruise through the Baltic Sea. His post, direct from the cruise boat itself, gave us a taste of the fantastic journey our Penn Alumni travelers were enjoying. Now, back in the States, Art recaps his journey for us:

 The voyage to the Baltics proved to be a charmed one.  Almost no rain for ten days in a region not known for sunshine.  A ship captain and crew who were entertaining, informed and very responsive to the passengers.  A group of alumni from Penn and nearly a dozen other American and Canadian universities who were friendly, enthusiastic, inquisitive and apparently lacking in a need for very much sleep.

The Hermitage in St. Petersburg

I thought that the highlights of the trip were the Hermitage in St. Petersburg–a world class museum on a par with the Louvre but still staggering to see; Riga, Latvia a small city of architectural wonders whose architects had a real sense of playfulness, the fjords of Norway and the chance to hear international figures like Lech Walesa and Mikhail Gorbachev.  I don’t think of myself as a cruise person but this trip took my wife and I and our Penn alumni friends to a series of places that we would not otherwise have been likely to visit in a very comfortable mode of travel.  There was as much or as little socializing as you cared to engage in and as much or as little walking and touring as you chose to do.   If you get the chance, I would urge a visit to this part of the world by boat.  Seafaring built the cities of the Baltic, and an alumni cruise is surely the best way to visit them.

The charming city of Riga, Latvia

If Art’s recount of the Baltic Sea cruise has inspired you to take your own trip, check out our newly released 2013 Penn Alumni Travel calendar. We hope to see you on a future Penn Alumni Travel trip!

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Filed under Emilie, Faculty perspective, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel