Monthly Archives: August 2013

Another School Year? How about attending First September?

Author: Nicole Oddo, C’05

When you step on Penn’s campus, you can observe all the construction and the quiet before the students start to arrive.  Another school year is around the corner.

With each new academic year, students have new opportunities to meet people. Penn Alumni also have this opportunity with First September.  In 2011, I wrote the following article for this blog  about how much I enjoy this annual event.

This event happens in cities all over the world. It’s our way of welcoming the newest class of alumni, this year the class of 2013. It’s great to meet newly minted alumni, those returning to Philadelphia, and those who are just re-engaging with Penn.

If you are in Philadelphia, join us for the First September event to be hosted at Nodding Head, a Center City Brewery, on Thursday, September 19 from 6 to 8 PM. The event is free to current Penn Alumni members, and $15 for non-members. Click here to register now.

firstseptheader05

Leave a comment

Filed under Alumni Perspective, Nicole O.

Alumni Relations Retreat at the Mutter Museum

Author: Kelly Porter O’Connor

Alumni Relations spent the day at Mutter Museum bonding, meditating, and hearing from Penn’s own Michael Baime, Director of The Penn Program for Mindfulness. We learned some useful tips on how to manage stress, enhance well-being, and increase productivity at home and in the workplace.
Our day ended with optional massages, Reiki treatments, and, of course, these awesome air plants which will soon be hanging throughout Sweeten offices.
plant

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

And the Results Are…

Author: Max Gaines

What a great fiscal year we just had! Between July 1, 2012 – June 30, 2013, Fiscal Year 2013, The Penn Fund secured 26,432 donors – the highest donor number since 2008. The collective giving of Penn Alumni to The Penn Fund during fiscal year 2013 resulted in $29,797,685 to benefit student financial aid packages (helping to make Penn more affordable), residential life (undergraduate dorms, obviously), student life (things like clubs and stuff) and so much more.

Take a look at the infograph below for more details.

Image

FY14, here we come.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

Penn Alumni Travel: Discover Switzerland

Author- Professor André Dombrowski, Penn Art History Department

A few weeks have passed since my return from a spectacular stay in the Alps, the 2013 Penn Alumni Travel trip “Discover Switzerland.” Serving as faculty host, I had the privilege to get to know over twenty guests, including nine Penn alumni. And what a wonderful trip it was, surrounded as we were by stunning scenery—awe-inspiring mountains, calm glacial lakes, gushing waterfalls, pretty Alpine flowers—that kept surprising us with its endless variety, sublimity and charm.

Breathtakingly beautiful Swiss Alps.

Breathtakingly beautiful Swiss Alps.

Because of previous obligations, I could join the group only for week two of their two-week long stay, and I had to miss visits to Bern and Lucerne among other places the previous week. Once I arrived in Switzerland, and at our centrally located Alpin Sherpa Hotel in Meiringen, a small town smack in the middle of the Alps, I met the group for the first of several dinners. The guests struck me immediately as extremely friendly, relaxed, and casual. We had a wonderful time together as a group, and our Penn connections were toasted at the Penn reception the next evening. From then on many breakfasts and dinners were enjoyed together at the hotel restaurant that served delicious local cuisine and made sure we tasted many of the local specialties night after night. Our host, Anja Mortensen was superb, engaged and funny and charming, and she kept us all in line as well as entertained. Our local guide was Jessica Powers Rufibach—her name itself testimony to her interesting background (she is from California, but now lives in Meiringen)—who gave us fantastic introductions to the various towns and sites. The Penn guests came from all walks of life and had various connections to the university, which we enjoyed exchanging: some of them still lived nearby, in University City, others had arrived from Connecticut and Maryland.

Penn Alumni with Professor Dombrowski in Meiringen.

Penn Alumni with Professor Dombrowski in Meiringen.

From Meiringen, we took day-trips. My day one took us to the Alpine village of Kandersteg from where we took a cable car up to the Alpine Lake Oeschinen, then hiked to enjoy the spectacular views over this gorgeous, clear lake. The next day we visited the medieval town of Murten, beautifully preserved including parts of its medieval wall. There was a small antique market in town, which we happened upon as a surprise, before boarding a boat to go across Lake Murten to tour the winery “La Petite Chateau”. Once there, we were introduced to the local wine traditions and had a wine tasting of some ten delicious wines that were served with the local specialty, a savory home-made tarte flambée. The following day was off for everyone, and I decided to offer an ad-hoc tour of an interesting site in nearby Lucerne, the 19th-century Bourbaki Panorama, one of the last remaining such large-scale historical panoramas in the world. The next day we were off to Zermatt, at the bottom of the famous Matterhorn. The mountain that day was covered in low-hanging clouds, but we nonetheless enjoyed trying to snatch a peak when they happened to open up a bit. The final trip of the week took us to the medieval towns of Thun and Spiez, which we reached by a scenic boat ride across Lake Thun. That last evening, we had our final reception and dinner at the hotel, which made everyone wish that this amazing experience was not yet coming to an end.

The Alpine Lake Oeschinen.

The Alpine Lake Oeschinen.

Two evenings during this week I lectured to the group, which showed their enthusiasm through their many informed questions. One evening, I lectured on my current research project on Impressionism and techniques of time-keeping in the nineteenth century, which dovetailed nicely with what we were learning elsewhere about the local Swiss clock-making industry. The second evening, I lectured on modern Swiss art, stretching from the symbolist painter Arnold Böcklin to the modernist Paul Klee to the Dada movement founded in Zurich during World War I.

The trip was very memorable for me. I had not been to Switzerland in over ten years, and exploring this gorgeous country with other Penn guests made me appreciate its special beauty and charm anew. Hopefully, until another trip together.

[Professor André Dombrowski will be leading a summer 2014 tour for Penn Alumni Travel through the heart of Europe: Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and France. You can learn more about this trip, The Great Journey, here. To view more of Professor Dombrowski’s Switzerland pictures, click here.]

Leave a comment

Filed under Faculty perspective, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel

Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia Board Open House

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08

The Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia is hosting an open house on Tuesday, September 10th at Sweeten Alumni House on Penn’s campus.

sweeten_alumni_house_e _craig_sweeten

We will be meeting at beautiful Sweeten Alumni House.

We invite you to join us for wine and Insomnia Cookies to mingle, provide feedback, and share ideas! BTW did you know that Insomnia Cookies was founded by Seth Berkowitz in 2003 from his dorm room while attending Penn? Now there are more than 30 store locations nationwide. Hooray for Penn alumni baking up tasting treats!

Insomnia Cookies. Need I say more?

Insomnia Cookies. Need I say more?

 

The Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia is always looking for new alumni volunteers who are interested in planning social events and volunteer projects. The open house will be a great way to get involved with the club, meet other alumni, and have fun. Feel free to bring ideas for activities or projects to share, or just come and network.

Sign up for our open house here! How can you say no to Insomnia Cookies?

Leave a comment

Filed under Alumni Perspective, Clubs, Penn Club of Philadelphia, Penn Clubs, Stephanie Y., Sweeten Alumni House

Bus People

Author: Howard S. Freedlander, C’67

Ever drive into a fast-food restaurant or any other highway restaurant, see a tour bus, express disgust to yourself or a passenger and simply choose another place to eat quickly?

Ever visit a sightseeing spot, see a tour bus or buses and, again, shrug and express a word or two of pique and impatience and then endure the ensuing onslaught of camera-carrying, earnest and chattering masses?

My guess is that your answers to these mostly rhetorical questions are “yes” and “yes.”

Well, folks, for 10 days on a Penn-sponsored tour of the southwest national parks, my wife Liz and I, along with 22 other people, were “bus people.” Never thought I would claim that distinction. It was okay, and fitting.

On an incredibly fascinating tour of the parks, joined by alumni of Smith College, Case Western, Temple and the University of North Carolina, my wife and I became certified tourists, carrying cameras and intense desire to grasp the geological marvels facing us every day of our trip.

As we stopped for lunch and potty breaks (nearly all of us in our 60s and 70s) in places such as Mt. Carmel Junction, UT, St. George’s, UT and Richfield, UT, we crowded (sort of) fast-food emporiums and gift shops (also known as trading posts). In nearly all cases, the proprietors and their employees were very pleased, naturally, and other customers seemed mildly disinterested. I was particularly amused when we stopped at Mt. Carmel Junction on our way from Bryce National Park to Zion National Park, and three tour buses, including ours, arrived at the same time.

I recall on a visit to the Scottish Highlands in 1998 with our British friends, my friend Richard used an unfavorable expression when we saw a tour bus arrive at the same scenic location as we did. We laughed and derided these bus-borne tourists. In Utah and Arizona, my wife and I fit my friend’s description, happily so.

When we arrived at Arches National Park in southeast Utah, I must have seen three tour buses and heard voices representing France, China and perhaps others. Bus people. And so were we all as we crowded paths and walkways to see, touch and photograph the arches and then exclaim and chatter, incessantly.

Who were the otherwise faceless tourists in our group? Two were Penn grads, a medical doctor in Philadelphia and the other an attorney in Cleveland. One was a military psychiatrist. One was a public relations executive in Connecticut. One was a neurological radiologist in California. One was a longtime staffer to the late Sen. Ted Kennedy. One has run thrift shops in Philadelphia. One was a plumber in Philadelphia. One was a mentor to Penn students in the Graduate School of Education as they interned in area schools. One was a development director at a marine science lab in Maryland. One was a retired deputy treasurer in Maryland.

So, maybe, my tolerance for “bus people” has taken a turn for the better. Maybe, just maybe, they are like my wife and me. They chose a form of tourist travel that allows you to see many unbelievable and awesome sights in the comfort of a bus, allowing all decisions and logistical decisions made by others. I didn’t even have to carry my own luggage during the trip, except from my room to the front door of the room for a “bag pull”—that is, transfer of our luggage to the bus. On the morning we left Las Vegas to go to the airport to return home, I insisted, over the objections of the private car carrier’s driver, to carry my own luggage just to reenter the real world.

Ever heard of “scatter lunches?’

The phrase was new to me. Periodically, our group—smaller than most—would stop at a shopping center (yes, we had to travel between natural wonders), a man-made, utilitarian creation, for lunch. We could choose among several ubiquitous fast-food restaurants, spending an hour before reporting promptly to the bus. Remember we “bus people” had schedules—and dare you not to abide by instructions from a very competent, cheerful and well-meaning tour director. Our schedule of stops—Grand Canyon, Navajo Reservation, Glen Canyon Dam, Antelope Slot Canyon, Monument Valley, Arches National Park, Bryce National Park and Zion National Park—was full and fulfilling.

What did it feel like being a “bus person,” touring the southwest national parks in an organized, structured way?

It was an extraordinary experience. For many of us on the East Coast, we have looked to the east, to Europe, the Mediterranean and Africa for vacation and education. Perhaps we have overlooked our own natural wonders. That seemed to be the prevailing sentiment among our well-traveled group members. It was time to see our own country—by way of a bus.

We went from the awful (Las Vegas), our starting and ending point, to the awesome (Grand Canyon) in rather short order. Just like that, we transcended the glitter and gloss for geological formations that strained your imagination. We immersed ourselves in Navajo culture and history, paying due reverence to movie icon John Wayne, who starred in many John Ford-directed movies shot in the Navajo desert. We visited Monument Valley, finding it haunting and mystical; we visited Arches National Park, marveling at the geological creations formed over millions of years; we visited Bryce National Park with its beautiful, fractured cliffs, finding a different viewpoint every time you shot a digital photo; and then, finally we visited Zion National Park, serene and accessible to park visitors, who could touch wet cliffs with hanging plants and walk along the calm Virgin River.

So, we were certifiable “bus people” who ate “scatter lunches,” talked about children and grandchildren, discussed past and current jobs—and shared rather personal information. I found that people, away from familiar surroundings, shared intimate details about family matters. A close bond materialized, albeit briefly. What is said on the bus, stays on the bus, I guess.

Would my wife and I join another organized tour again, transforming ourselves into obedient “bus people,” for whom all decisions are made and rarely, if ever, do you carry your own luggage? Yes, we would do it again, gladly so, possibly in a foreign locale. We have experienced the joy of not worrying about logistical details, of not negotiating with hotels and car rental agencies, not having to figure out itineraries—and not carrying our own luggage, until we go home and return to reality.

We no longer will sneer at tour buses, as they pour lots of people into a local fast-foot restaurant. We will welcome visitors and tourists who may at time look unsure of their surroundings. We will appreciate the different voices and accents. After all, we “bus people” are brethren.

Ultimately, the view was worth the bus ride.

Ultimately, the view was worth the bus ride.

Leave a comment

Filed under Alumni Perspective, Guest blogger, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel

Connect, Rediscover, and Celebrate at Penn Spectrum 2013

by Nicole C. Maloy, W’95

In 2010, The University of Pennsylvania hosted its first-ever Penn Spectrum conference focusing on programs of interest to Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, Latino/Hispanic, LGBTQ, and Native American alumni. Alumni of all backgrounds were welcome to join the celebration. The alumni, students, faculty, and staff who attended the conference had a powerful, inspiring, wonderful time (a few of their comments are below). Some of you later attended Penn Spectrum on the Road events in 2011 and 2012, which featured networking receptions and faculty/alumni panel discussions in cities across the US.

I am very excited to invite you back to campus for the next full conference, Penn Spectrum 2013, which will take place this fall from Friday, September 20 – Sunday, September 22.

Penn Spectrum: An Alumni Conference Celebrating Diversity

A personal note: it is a big deal to see programming like this, with this audience in mind, at Penn. Just remember that it can only be successful if those who care about seeing programs like this take place (and continue) will register and attend. Support Penn Spectrum!

To make that easier for you to do, note that we worked hard to make the rates accessible – some of you may have paid more to attend weekend-long events that do not include meals. But Penn Spectrum will feed you, entertain you, and inform you from Friday to Sunday for $100 or less if you register by the early bird deadline. There are special, lower rates for young alumni, alumni aged 65+, alumni who are currently enrolled as full-time students elsewhere, and members of the class of 2013, the newest members of our alumni family. We have also reserved hotel rooms at rates that would be very tough to find at any other time. This shows how much we want to see you back on campus.

Your next chance to celebrate like this will be in 2016, so don’t miss out! Panel discussions, performing arts night, a generational luncheon, reunion events, alumni keynotes, and more await you. Early bird prices and special hotel rates apply through August 31, so learn more and register today at www.pennspectrum.com. Connect with your fellow alumni. Rediscover Penn. Celebrate a wonderful weekend. I hope to see you in September at Penn Spectrum 2013.

Photos from Penn Spectrum 2010. Don’t miss Penn Spectrum 2013!

Some comments from alumni and students who attended Penn Spectrum 2010:

“Well done – great food – great conversation – etc., etc. As one of the oldest grads I spent a lot of time answering questions about what is was like when….”

“The Penn Spectrum conference offered me a chance to interact with Penn alumni in such an intimate way that I realized Penn was also a place where I could flourish and grow.”

“Thank you for providing this unique opportunity to be a part of the new Penn.”

“Everything was high quality and enjoyable.”

“I applaud the Office of Alumni relations, the university, and the alumni volunteer committee for putting on such an outstanding event. It definitely ranks as one of my most proud moments as a Penn alumnus.”

2 Comments

Filed under Alumni Programming, Multicultural Outreach, Nicole M., Uncategorized

My Top Penn List: Faculty Travelblogs

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

During the summer, it’s nice to have some time to slow down and catch up on things between Alumni Weekend & Graduation and New Student Orientation. In addition to having some time to work on long-term projects, I get more time to enjoy some fascinating posts on our blog by our own faculty.

I was drawn to these stories due to my own wanderlust.  I hope these entries inspire your own dreams and travels.

10. Marvelous Macchu Pichu and Mythic Toga Parties: Relive Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw’s, Associate Professor of American Art, visit to mystical Peru.

Macchu Pichu

9. Italian Inspirations: Reminisce with Michael Gamer, Associate Professor of English, on his journey through magical Italy.

Venice

8. Paris to Normandy: Experience the relaxed atmosphere of a French river cruise with our Professor Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw.

Monet’s house, Giverny, France

7. Cruising the Dalmatian Coast: Explore the wonders of the Adriatic and the Dalmatian coast with David Wallace, Judith Rodin Professor of English.

Grgur Ninski statue, Split, Croatia

6. The Waterways of Holland and Belgium: Simon Richter, Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures, shares his discoveries along the impressive canals of the Netherlands and coast of Belgium.

In Bruges

5. Sketches of Spain: Find out more about Northern Spain and Basque Country from our prolific faculty blogger, Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw.

Casa Battló, Barcelona

4. The Danube River and Habsburg Empire: Enjoy André Dombrowski’s, Assistant Professor of Art History, tale of traveling down the Danube.

Dürnstein, Austria

3. Across Time and Space – Discovering Morocco: Wax nostalgic about the timelessness of Morocco with Thomas Max Safley, Professor of History.

Kasbah, by Murray Sherman, Gr’69

2. Baltic Dispatches, Part 2: Relive Art Caplan’s, the former Emmanuel and Robert Hart Director of the Center for Bioethics, trek around the Baltic States.

Riga, Latvia

1. Turkey Trot: Join Larry Silver, Professor of Art History, in his search for the quintessential Turkey.

The Blue Mosque

These are some of my favorite stories and pictures from our amazing faculty.  I’ve been on orbitz, expedia and travelocity to plan some of  my own holidays, inspired by our globetrotting professors. Better yet, I’m going to peruse the Penn Alumni Travel page and discover my future expedition there.

Leave a comment

Filed under Casey R., Faculty perspective, Penn Alumni Travel, Top Ten

Penn Picked to Repeat as Ivy League Football Champions

Media Contact:  Mike Mahoney | mahoneyw@upenn.edu | 215-898-9232 | August 7, 2013

Looking to accomplish the unprecedented, the University of Pennsylvania football team was picked as the preseason favorite to win the Ivy League title on Tuesday at the annual Ivy League Football Media Day teleconference.

Penn has won three of the last four Ancient Eight titles. All outright. No school has ever won four outright titles in a five-year span.

The Ivy League Football Preseason Media Poll has 17 total voters consisting of two media members from each school and one national media representative. Eleven members of the poll picked Penn to repeat as Ivy champions.

The Quakers have now been selected among top four of the preseason poll for 21 consecutive seasons. The last time the Quakers were not predicted to finish in the top half of the Ivy League was in 1992, one month prior to the program’s first game under the direction of head coach Al Bagnooli.

Penn earned the top spot  in the preseason media poll for the second time in the last three years and garnered 129 points. That was just eight points ahead of Harvard, who received five first-place votes. Brown earned the other first-place vote and finished a distant third in the voting with 88 points. Dartmouth rounded out the top four with 76 points and was followed by Princeton (73 points), Cornell (57), Yale (46) and Columbia (22).

For the fifth straight year, Penn and Harvard claimed the top two spots. In each of the last six seasons, either Penn or Harvard has claimed at least a share of the Ivy title.

The Red and Blue will be looking to buck a trend, however. The team slated to finish second in the Ivy preseason poll has gone on to win the league title in each of the last four seasons, including the the Quakers in 2009, 2010 and 2012.

Picked to finish as the runner-up last season, the Quakers (6-4, 6-1 Ivy) won their last four games – all in dramatic fashion – to earn the program’s 13th outright title. Penn returns 40 letterwinners and 20 starters from that championship team, including eight All-Ivy players (four offense, three defense and one specialist).

The Quakers report to preseason camp on Monday, Aug. 19 and will officially open their 137th season under the lights at historic Franklin Field when they host Lafayette for a 6 p.m. kickoff on Sept. 21. That matchup will serve as the only night game at the nation’s oldest collegiate football stadium this year will also mark the first game on Franklin Field’s new SprinTurf.

Season tickets are available by calling the ticket office at 215-898-6151. Individual game tickets go on sale August 15.

Leave a comment

Filed under Athletics, Philadelphia

Our Little Lentil

Author: Lillian Gardiner, GEd’11

Lentil is something of an Internet sensation. Born with a cleft palate and cleft lips, Lentil received help from oral surgeons at Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine and John Lewis and Alexander Reiter of Penn Vet’s Dentistry and Oral Surgery Service.

I drove an hour to meet this little guy at the Hope Veterinary Clinic in Malvern where he hosted a kissing booth. It was worth it!

lillian

Read more about Lentil in the Penn Current here or you can find him on Facebook to see what the fuss is about.

Leave a comment

Filed under Lillian G.