Yearly Archives: 2013

Los Angeles Alumni – Already Excited for Alumni Weekend 2014

By Kiera Reilly, C’93  @KieraReilly

Alumni Weekend 2014 seems so far off. With fall colors decorating campus and cool temperatures descending for Homecoming, it is hard to imagine the campus will be full of full green trees and thousands of alumni in only six months.

This week, spearheaded by the Class of 1989, Los Angeles-area alumni from the classes of 1979, 1984, 1989, 1994, and 1999 gathered at the home of Penn Alumni President Julie Beren Platt, C’79, PAR’05, PAR’08, PAR’12 and her husband Marc, also C’79, PAR’05, PAR’08, PAR’12, for a pre-reunion party.

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This same reunion cycle partied five years ago in anticipation of their reunion, also at Julie and Marc’s home, so 1989 Reunion Chair Lolita Jackson, ENG’89, decided that everyone should gather again, and they did! The Class of 1989 had the largest showing at the gathering, no surprise since they’ll be celebrating their 25th reunion in May. The other classes enjoyed gathering early in the reunion year, and mingling with other local alumni.

The Class of 1989 had a strong showing!

The Class of 1989 had a strong showing!

Julie welcomed and thanked everyone for attending – and said that she is looking forward to her 35th reunion. Lolita Jackson and Beth Kean then took over a Penn trivia contest – there was a friendly competitive spirit in the audience and a few hecklers – but it was all in good fun.

Julie Platt welcomes everyone while Lolita Jackson, ENG'89, and Beth Kean, ENG'89, look on.

Julie Platt welcomes everyone while Lolita Jackson, ENG’89, and Beth Kean, ENG’89, look on.

Penn trivia contest - hotly contested!

Penn trivia contest – hotly contested!

At 8:00, the Class of 1989 headed out to an after-party (it seems that after graduating, the “after” parties become earlier…) and the rest of the group left for home soon after.

If the enthusiasm and energy of these Los Angeles alumni is any indication, Alumni Weekend 2014 will be a smashing success – and one you won’t want to miss!

Hurrah 1994!

Hurrah 1994!

Looking good 1999!

Looking good 1999!

Connect with your class on Facebook to be informed about other pre-reunion gatherings and Alumni Weekend details:

Class of 1979

Class of 1989

Class of 1994

Class of 1993 (yes, we’re already thinking about our 25th in 2018!)

See all the photos from the event here.

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Filed under Alumni Weekend, Class of 1993, Kiera R., Photos, Reunions, West Coast Regional Office

Theater Scene

Author: Noelle McManus, C’17

As most of you may know, I am highly involved in the theater community at Penn. However, what you may not know is that I recently was given an opportunity to continue with iNtuitons, who just finished Midsummer Night’s Dream, on their general board for next semester. This means that I will be able to shadow older board members in order to find out what each position is like, take part in the choosing of the show we will put on next semester, and work on the show. I am so excited to get started because I am very interested in continuing with the theater scene at Penn.

The other group that I am currently working with is Stimulus Children’s Theater, which has just celebrated Stim Day! Stim Day was November 17th, and it is a day that the entire production team (cast, crew, and board) comes together in the PAC shop and finishes the last little things that need to get done before the show! It was really fun and I got to do 3 of my favorite things: paint, eat pizza, and eat cake!

This upcoming weekend and week are bound to be exciting as well. My first birthday as a college student is this weekend! Also, my college house is hosting a Thanksgiving Food Drive Gala on Sunday! Tuesday night marks the beginning of my first Thanksgiving Break and I’m so excited to see my family again.

Wishing you all a Happy Thanksgiving!

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Filed under Campus Life, Fine Art, Student Perspective, The Arts, The Arts at Penn

Penn Alumni Travel Photo Contest

Author:  Janell Wiseley

The Penn Alumni Travel Photo Contest is open to all Penn alumni, family, and friends that participated in a Penn Alumni Travel trip. The contest showcases some of the memorable moments on a Penn Alumni Travel program.

ENTER YOUR PHOTOS NOW!

Guidelines

  • Participants may enter one photo, taken during a Penn Alumni Travel trip, in each of the following categories: People, Places, Culture, Nature
  • Submit up to one entry per person in each category. Each photo will be judged on its creativity and quality, as well as its relevance to the specific category in which it is entered.
  • Include a two to five word description/caption for each photo submitted.
  • Deadline for entries is February 28, 2014
  • Submit photos via email, jwiseley@upenn.edu or mail digital files on a CD to:
    Penn Alumni Travel E. Craig Sweeten Alumni House
    3533 Locust Walk
    Philadelphia, PA 19104.
  •  Photos will be judged by Penn Alumni Relations Staff and announced in the spring of 2014.

Prizes

  • Grand Prize: $300 trip credit
  • 1st place: Kindle (one for each category)

Visit the Penn Alumni Travel website for more information.

Past Grand Prize Winners

2013 Grand Prize Winner Reed House-Uros Islands Photographer: Amy Converse

2013 Grand Prize Winner
Reed House-Uros Islands
Photographer: Amy Converse

2012 Grand Prize Winner Hippos in the Serengeti Photographer: Robert Chewning, WG'76

2012 Grand Prize Winner
Hippos in the Serengeti
Photographer: Robert Chewning, WG’76

2011 Grand Prize Winner Quito, Ecuador, Hillside Photographer: Christine Turk

2011 Grand Prize Winner
Quito, Ecuador, Hillside
Photographer: Christine Turk

 

 

 

 

 

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Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08One thing I have learned this year is Penn alumni LOVE art! The Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia hosted two events at The Barnes Foundation in early 2013, and both events sold out in minutes! We recently hosted an event at the Philadelphia Museum of Art to see the Léger: Modern Art and the Metropolis special exhibit. Alumni met at the PMA at 9AM on a Saturday. We were split into two smaller groups for our private tours. Our tour was given by the mother of Leah Popowich, C00 G06, from Office of the President at University of Pennsylvania. There is a Penn connection everywhere!

Penn alumni on a private tour of the Léger: Modern Art and the Metropolis special exhibit

Penn alumni on a private tour of the Léger: Modern Art and the Metropolis special exhibit

Beautiful fall day in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Beautiful fall day in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Following our tour, we met for brunch at Rembrandt’s, a restaurant within walking distance of the museum. Our brunch featured guest speaker and Penn Art History Professor André Dombrowski. We are big fans of Dr. Dombrowski at the Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia. He is a phenomenal speaker and always excited to participate in Penn Alumni events. If you haven’t heard him speak, you need to ASAP! Dr. Dombrowski discussed the Léger and his contemporaries and how the Léger exhibit has been covered in the media. The Penn alumni in attendance were very knowledgeable about art and had great questions for Dr. Dombrowski.

Penn alumni enjoying a wonderful talk by Penn Art History Professor André Dombrowski

Penn alumni enjoying a wonderful talk by Penn Art History Professor André Dombrowski

The event was so successful that we plan to host another event at the PMA in Spring 2014. We are excited for the upcoming special exhibits, and we hope you will join us for the event. Check our website for more details!

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Alumni Programming, Alumnni Education, Philadelphia, Stephanie Y., The Arts

Alumni You Should Know About

Author: Marvin Rocha, C’05

Rocha 11-18

You probably know that John Legend, Candice Bergen, and Elizabeth Banks went to Penn, but did you know that there is currently a flock of Penn alumni making their way through Hollywood? Penn alumnus Matt Rosler (C’96), the creator of the Dueling Tampons, recently launched Penntertainment, a blog that chronicles the successes and appearances of Quaker actors, authors, directors, and musicians. Here, you can see 2006 College alumna Stephanie Lynn appear in a Funny or Die skit; you’ll hear Sean Hayes refer to Robert Gant (C’90) as “the handsome one”; you can event spot Penn alumnus Marcus McGee (C’01) on Scandal. All of these alumni are showcased in the website’s Penn Alumni You Should Know About, which is currently in its 9th Volume. These alumni give us a reason to stay tuned in.

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Author: Carlos Dos Santos, C’17

Welcome to Penn: the land of infinite studying! So much studying, in fact, that no matter how much one studies, there’s never enough time in the day (or night), and never a high enough cerebral capacity to get through those exams. Long nights pouring into my books, caffeinated highs followed by crashes and waking up the next day having slept through my morning class–is it just me, or does any of this ring a bell?

I’m mentioning all of this because I recently experienced a most trying challenge: the dreaded second Organic Chemistry I midterm. Notoriously difficult and impossibly challenging, I quite frankly never stood a chance against this behemoth as a freshman. In fact, I did so badly that I had to withdraw from Orgo. What better way to end my first semester at Penn than with a nice, big “W” on my transcript? The sore spot comes when you consider how much studying was invested into the class. But don’t get me wrong: I’m not trying to be cynical about the whole ordeal. Sure, I didn’t do so hot on a difficult exam. I’m starting to learn that that’s a common occurrence at Penn. This certainly isn’t high school anymore, it’s a tough Ivy League. And we’re being trained to live up to the Ivy League name, even if it means Penn will break each of us down before it can build us up.

In the end, I know I’ll have come out of this experience a bit more knowledgeable than before–if not in Orgo, then at least in a good lesson on defeat. For one, you gotta know when you’ve been beaten, and, secondly, that there’s always tomorrow to pick yourself up and try again. So, after catching up on the sleep hours of which I was in serious debt to myself, I went out and realized that things weren’t so bad after all. For one, I’m now free of Orgo (even though I’m now auditing the class for the rest of the semester)! And now that I’ve been exposed to it once I can get an even better grade next time around, instead of the mediocre one I was expecting throughout this semester.

Most important of all, it’s a life lesson in the end. A “W” on the paper can hardly be called a dilemma. Talk about first-world problems! Grades are important, but I’m not alone when I say that life at Penn has taught me to be more light-hearted about grades, because there are bigger and better things out there in the real world– where there is no such thing as grades– to consider.

study

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Two Months In…

Author: Rachel Stewart, C’16

“Why did you transfer?” is the common refrain when I mention that I’m a first-year sophomore. Two and a half months in, five classes down, a move from Hill to Harnwell, countless acquaintances made and too many dining dollars spent on coffee– and I still have no coherent answer as to why I transferred. Usually I rattle off some awkward jumble about the lack of social life or the complicated Columbia/Barnard relationship or my desire to get a little further away from home. But I know that Barnard is an amazing school that would have provided me with a great education and opportunities, its location is unbeatable, and the “small-school feel” within a big research university is ideal for me.

Beyond the rhetoric of admissions, however, I was not having the type of experience at Barnard that I had hoped for. Penn is comparable to Barnard in many, many ways, but what I love most about this school is the unquantifiable: making cookies with my roommate at 12am, running into my old friend from high school on Locust, the breakfast sandwich in Bridge cafe, the “Puck Frinceton” t-shirts that populated campus last week. I left Barnard knowing that I would miss a lot about the school and unsure of whether or not making such a big change would be worthwhile.

In my first year of college the most important lessons I learned helped me grow as a woman and understand the importance of community, support, and friendship– all of which I have found in abundance since my move from Philadelphia. I could have stayed at Barnard and succeeded academically but I wanted a college experience that was more than books and papers.

Lately when people ask me why I transfer, I smile and simply say, “For Penn.”

RachelS

 

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I’m Coming Home

Author: Carolyn Grace, C’16

The class flags have been stowed away, the tents have been taken down, and the red and blue balloons have been deflated.  But that isn’t stopping me from blogging about the fantastic weekend that was Homecoming!  Here are some pictures of what I did to celebrate the Red and the Blue:

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Counterparts literally kicked off Homecoming weekend with a kickball game against the Penny Loafers, a fellow a cappella group.  We met at High Rise Field and played for about an hour, ending the game in a tie 3-3.  It was so much fun! Who knew we could be artsy AND athletic??

SATURDAY

I began the day yet again with Counterparts!  We performed a few songs from our Fall show on College Green as a part of QuakerFest.  Because we were the last a cappella group to sing, we got to lead the crowd in “The Red and the Blue.”  Several CP alumni were there to cheer us on!

After our performance, I ran into several Sigma Kappa girls including Nikki Moorer, a member of the Class of 2016 Class Board.  A bunch of us SK’s and CP’s then decided to watch the Penn-Princeton football game together.  Donning my “Puck Frinceton” t-shirt, I made my way to Franklin Field with the others.  Despite the tough loss, we still had really good time watching our fellow sisters in Penn Cheer, throwing toast, and cheering on our Fighting Quakers!

Later that evening, a bunch of my friends went to the joint Fall show for Glee Club and Penn Dance: “Esspressionage – A Latte of Trouble.”  It was fabulous!  After going through my show a couple weeks ago, I can now appreciate fully the amount of effort that goes into making a production, be it singing, dancing, or theatre.

 

SUNDAY

Sigma Kappa welcomed back our alumni with a brunch at our chapter house!  It was great to see a lot of the girls who graduated last year come out for our special alumni breakfast bagels.  I may or may not have nabbed one with cream cheese and lox!  After such a hectic day before, Sunday morning brunch was certainly a nice, relaxing end to the weekend.  Homecoming is a blast as an undergrad.  While I have no intention of rushing the remainder of my time at Penn, and I can’t wait to experience this special weekend as an alum.  Hurrah Hurrah!

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Filed under Athletics, Campus Life, Carolyn G., Events, Homecoming Weekend featuring arts and culture, Photos, Student Perspective, The Arts, The Arts at Penn

Penn Alumni Travel: Apulia

 Author: Anita L. Allen, Vice Provost for Faculty and Henry R. Silverman Professor of Law

The first thing you learn when you arrive in Apulia, is that the region occupying the heel of the boot of Italy is called “Puglia” by the Italians.  Until recently, it was difficult to get to Puglia from major cities outside of Italy. Today the “undiscovered” region is well-served by two modern airports. The Penn Alumni Travel group for which I served as a faculty host, September 17-26, 2013, arrived at one of them, Bari Airport. Along with an affable alumni group from Brown University who would be our travel companions for the week, we boarded a comfortable motor coach.  The 45 minute trip to our hotel in Polignano a Mare was narrated by AHI Travel’s campus host Mick and a local guide, Daniella.  Mick, a British expatriate, was in charge of logistics.  Daniella, a vivacious licensed guide and native of Pulgia, won us over with her detailed knowledge of history  and culture, peppered with the wit and wisdom of her  nona, her grandmother.

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Hotel Covi dei Saraceni in Polignano a Mare was dramatically situated atop a bluff overlooking the turquoise and cobalt sea. From the private balcony off my antique-filled room I had a clear view the statue of Polignano a Mare’s native son Dominico Mugdana, famous for the upbeat ballard Americans my age know as “Volare.” Every so often someone would arrive at the statue, snap a few photos and then and break out in song.

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To enjoy Polignano a Mare in September, one mostly strolls the streets of the medieval heart of the town for the unique scenery—elaborate flower boxes, stunning views of the sea, weathered doorways and modest churches.  Several ristorante occupy caves built into the bluffs.  But there is amore  traditionally sited osteria, trattoria, gelato stand and cafe on virtually every block.   The streets were not crowded and neither were the town’s several gift shops.   Many of us shopped and ate only, but some of the hardy Penn alums descended to the beach and swam in the chilly ocean every day.

Our first big outing was to central Bari.   Bari is a gorgeous city with an  air of affluence.  An impressive castle, a city gate, and winding streets impress. A personal highlight for me  was  watching ordinary people sitting in their doorways  making pasta by hand and drying it in the open air on large mesh trays.  The women of Bari are known for their version of the Puglian speciality, pasta orriechete, “little ears”. I tested out my dusty Italian on the pasta makers.

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My basic skills served me very well in Bari and throughout Puglia, where fewer people speak fluent English than in Milan or Rome.   The linguistic diversity of Puglia contributes to its authenticity and reflects its history as a meeting point of Middle Eastern, African and western civilizations.  Many dialects and languages are spoken in Puglia.  Some communities even speak a form of Greek.  The pasta makers were warm and welcoming, as were the fruit vendors, who invited our Penn Alumni group to sample freely from their stands in a universal language of big smiles and even bigger gestures.

We visited The Basilica di San Niccola in Bari at an opportune time. Dozens of Russian pilgrims, women  in brightly colored modesty attire, packed into the crypt where which the relics of Saint Nicholas are interred. Lovely chanting and song celebrated the Saint.   Daniella sat us down in the main nave to tell us about the design of the church and the  complex story of Saint Nick,  a generous cleric whose bones were brought to Italy for safe-keeping.

Southern Italy produces delicious table wines.  One of our best days began with a tour of Castel del    Monte and ended with a trip to a family winery.  From the famous, centuries-old castle we enjoyed panoramic views of a hilly national park planted with evergreen trees.

It was in the octagonal courtyard of this castle that the Penn Alums paused for a group photograph.

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We left the castle grounds for a nearby vineyard and a wine tasting.  Then, at the vineyard, the proprietor first took us on a tour of his thoroughly modern wine production room  and fields where we  tasted  delicious cabernet sauvignon  grapes straight from the vine.  They were dark, small, seeded and warmed by the sun.  On a shaded porch we were treated to a lunch and wine.

On a trip to Puglia, Daniella insisted, the dish that combines mussels, potato and rice is a must taste and the town of  Lecce is a must see.  Lecce is sometimes called the Florence of southern Italy.    The comparison is not especially apt.  Lecce centro is sunny, uncongested and unpretentious. Its ornately carved stone religious and secular architecture is the handiwork of locals without world reputations.

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And there is nothing akin to the Uffizi in Lecce.  Daniella urged us to appreciate Lecce on its own terms:  consider that artisans cut off from cosmopolitan northern Italy without marble or  money, hand-carved Baroque, Gothic and Byzantine style  ornamentation from local materials to  create their own masterpieces for their own  communities of fisherman, farmers and merchants.

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After soaking up Lecce’s architecture and its Roman ruins I took a few minutes to shop for souvenirs.  I was delighted to discover that tarantism, the subject of one of the two special lectures I had prepared for the trip to Puglia, was manifest in Lecce in the form of spiders on tee-shirts and spider-embellished  tambourines.  Tarantism began as a tradition of poor men and women farm workers claiming to have been bitten by  spiders developing  psychological and neurological-like illnesses treated by pizzica music,  manic dance and the intercession St. Paul.  Of course, I was relieved to find no souvenirs registering the reality of the topic of my other lecture: the pollution, cancer  and labor problems plaguing  the town of Taranta attributed to the Ilva steel plant.

The unique towns of Alberobello and Ostuni were both on the agenda for our penultimate day of group travel.  Both towns are UNESCO World Heritage sites, and deservedly so.  Alberobello is famous for its Trulli houses .

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The Truli neighborhoods of whitewashed rounded houses with tall domed grey slate roofs, look like  something from a fairy tale. Cruder, haphazard versions of Trulli dot the landscape of Puglia north to south in large numbers. But it is only in Alberobello that one finds the well-kept Trulli as the dominate style of domestic architecture.  We took some time before leaving Alberobello to visit the lace makers for which the town is also famous

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Ostuni is an ancient town with roots in the stone ages built inside and atop sandstones caves, some natural, some carved by hand. For centuries families and their farm animals—goats, mules and chickens– lived inside these cave homes.  After the Christian era, dozens of churches were also built into the rock.    In the 1950s the Italian government found it necessary for public health reasons to relocated the families of Ostuni to  new  housing  on the outskirts of town.  Today, the cave dwellings can be leased from the government for homes and commercial purposes under strict conditions that require a balance of modernization (such as toilets and running water) and historic preservation.  Numerous bed and breakfasts have popped up in the town, and tourism is on the rise. We visited a typical larger Ostuni  family home, now a small  museum of an earlier era.  It consisted of two sleeping areas, a kitchen and two cellars for storing  tools and food.   We also visited four churches that that been converted into wine presses,  vestiges of Byznantine era religious frescos  faintly visible on a few walls.

Our final day of group travel began with a visit to the town of Trani. Once, a wealthy shipping portal to the Adriatic,  today the town  can be enjoyed for its manicured, tree-lined  seaside park;  for views of  a commanding castle repurposed as prison and now a fine arts center;  and  for an active Roman Catholic Cathedral where pilgrims and  Crusaders once rested.  Law alumni in our group took special note of Trani’s role in the development of European maritime law and of the contemporary Italian Court of Appeals which shares a piazza with the main Cathedral.  An historic Jewish Quarter of beautiful winding streets and a vacated synagogue led us to pause for serious reflection.   Control over cultural properties from the Quarter are still a subject of active debate between Trani authorities and Jews now living in the nearby  town of  Barletta.

As we walked along a pier we stopped to chat with fisherman  selling unusual  fishes and  octopuses   to homemakers. We were startled to see how a baby octopus is prepared for market. The live creature was  flung repeatedly  against the bottom on the boat to kill and tenderize it,  then spun in a plastic tub of cold water to curl the tentacles into the shape preferred by local cooks.

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Back on the motor coach we traveled only fifteen minutes from Trani to the small town of Bisceglie. There we were treated to a cold-pressed extra virgin oil tasting and a four-course al fresco lunch of regional specialities and rose wine.  Our host was the upscale oil mill “Galantino.” founded in 1926.  After a short video on the history of the Galantino mill in a cheerful subterranean cellar, our guide Massimo escorted us around to see how the mill’s completely natural prize-winning olive oils are produced.  We saw the weigh stations where each October to December truckloads of olives, black and green, shaken from ten thousand trees, are brought in from designated local groves for processing using age-old granite stone grinding techniques with a few high-tech flourishes to ensure hygiene and environmental integrity.  The gorgeous shaded patio under which we dined on dishes that included a fava bean and chicory paste and orriechete pasta, was surrounded by peach trees, grape vines and figs trees. The fruits of these plantings became our dessert along with fresh black cherry tarts, made from olive oil pastry (no butter!) and local cherries.

We were tired and sated when we returned to our hotel. But I headed out to attend an evening  mass celebrating  what happened to be the Feast Day of Padre  Pio, a sainted Capuchin friar associated with the Puglian town of Foggia.  Sickly all his life, Pio serves as the patron saint of people with seasonal depression and stress.  Pio is believed by the faithful to have received heavenly visions and the stigmata.  I enjoyed a moving worship service and was swept into a crowd as I emerged from the  chiesa.  About two hundred were there to process through the streets of Polignano , in the company of a  life-size statue of San Pio ornamented with sun flowers and electric lights. A brass band, a group of strong men bearing an enormous wooden  cross, and priests and young women carrying crucifixes on narrow poles were also part of the sacred parade. On the way back from the procession I ran into others from my  group and we wound up in a trattoria lingering over pizza con melanzana , branzio and insalta verde.

The last day of our journey to undiscovered Italy was totally free after a morning lecture on modern Italy. That evening we joined together for a final group dinner in the hotel to say our good byes and thank our most excellent hosts and guides.

[Interested in joining a Penn Alumni Travel trip? Check out our entire 2014 schedule here. Perhaps we’ll see you in Tuscany next October!]

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Filed under Faculty perspective, Penn Alumni Travel, Travel

A Homecoming in Transition

Author: Jonathan Cousins, ENG’14, GEN’14

            It was a fantastic sports weekend.  There were huge crowds at both Franklin Field and the Palestra, and even though both our football and basketball teams were defeated, both games were somewhat competitive and the energy was incredible.  Penn pride was all over campus, as students and Alums came together to bond over festivities and football.

I lost my voice on Saturday (I’m on the right in the picture), exemplified by the dramatic finish to the basketball game against Temple, as Penn pulled ahead with a minute and a half left, only to let the game slip away.  But in that moment where there was little time left and the game on the line, I heard the Palestra as loud as I can remember during my 3+ years here.  And that is something I will never forget.

As I reflect back on it, I had a great time.  There was a barbeque between football and basketball that was a success, we handed out hundreds of “Quaker Nation” shirts, and the basketball team even wore them during warm-ups.  After the game Bill Cosby spoke about family and putting a child through college, and provided a great end to a fun day.

This was my last homecoming as a Penn student.  Among other things this semester (last NSO, last “The Line”) I have been having trouble dealing with the idea that my time at Penn is coming to a close.  But homecoming is different.  This homecoming is a transition year for me, and while it may be my last as a student, I will be a Penn Alum for the rest of my life, and I hope that I will get to make the trip to Philadelphia many more times on November weekends.  This year I was already here, but next year will be my first real chance to come home to Penn.

I am on the right side of the yelling students in the #15 jersey

I am on the right side of the yelling students in the #15 jersey

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Filed under Alumni Programming, Athletics, Campus Life, Homecoming Weekend featuring arts and culture, Jonathan C.