Yearly Archives: 2013

Goodbye to All This

Author: Aimee LaBrie, LPS’13*

(*That’s if I finish my capstone project in December)

Today is my last day at Penn after being here for four years and eight months.  It’s hard to believe that so much time as passed; it’s like I had my interview in February 2009, blinked, and now it’s almost five years later. I’m going to work at another university in another state, and I’m happy about my new job, but am also very sad about leaving here. So many things to love about Penn (the library, Tyson Bee’s food truck, the beautiful campus, the lectures, the Penn bookstore), but since I spent five days a week with my colleagues people in Alumni Relations, I want to focus this last post as a staff member. Since I also like lists, here are my top 3 things I will miss most about my job, each with a caveat about something I will not miss, to avoid too much sentimentality.

3. So many perks of the job, such as how most of the staff bakes cookies and cakes, or have candy by their desks, and how we get free lunches about twice a week, either related to an event or a panel or just because. Ditto the number of Penn T-shirts, scarves, hats, gloves, notebooks, clocks, luggage tags, and other swag that comes with the territory.

Elise showing three examples--a mini-megaphone, a Homecoming Weekend scarf, and a squirrel puppet we used for a holiday card video.

Elise showing three examples–a mini-megaphone, a Homecoming Weekend scarf, and a squirrel puppet we used for a holiday card video.

Will not miss: Stepping on the scale and realizing I’ve gained three pounds from the numerous candy bars I’ve taken from Nicole’s office or Janell’s candy jar or Kelly’s stash–mostly taken when they’re not around…

2. Collaborating with the smartest, most creative people I’ve ever met to come up with a theme for Alumni Weekend, or to find innovative ways to market a new blog, or story-boarding a video for Alumni Weekend, or brainstorming panels for a conference. I’ve done some of my best creative work here and it wasn’t done alone. The example below is to get you inspired to register for Homecoming Weekend 2013. This was the video our team made last year.

Will not miss: Thinking I’ve come up with a brilliant new tagline for Alumni Weekend, only to realize that we used it two years ago.  That’s happened twice now.

1.  All of the people. These are people who daily laugh at my dumb jokes, let me skip through the hallways unchecked, and don’t mind if I say, “Hi, Julie Andrews!” when their names are Kristina or Jason. I knew this was the right place for me in my final interview with Hoopes and Elise when they posed potential scenario and didn’t balk at my response. The question was something like, What would you do if someone didn’t make an important deadline? And I said, Burst into tears. And, instead of exchanging worried glances, they understood that I was joking (mostly). Because of their own good humor and acceptance, I understood that I was in the place where I belonged. This is a place where people buy me cat clocks and bring their dogs to work because they know it will make me happy and listen to my nonsense without judgement. That is a rare, rare thing, and hard to give up.

Casey did this. If you put a battery in, the hours chime with different cat meows.

Casey bought this for our white elephant holiday party. He hoped I would get it, and I did.  If you put a battery in, the hours chime with different cat meows.

Junebug is the blob of pug you can kind of see on the floor. She made gargoyle noises all through our staff meeting yesterday.

Junebug is the blob of pug you can kind of see on the floor with the X-ray eyes. She made gargoyle noises all through our staff meeting yesterday.

Will not miss: Saying good bye to all of this. I am tired of it, because there is no right way to do it without feeling sad and missing people already, like Liz Pinnie and her good book recommendations, and Colleen who, even when she’s feeling low, always asks how I’m doing, or Lisbeth who it seems can only say nice things. Every single time I walk into her office, she gives me a compliment. I could stroll in with brambles in my hair after three sleepless nights and she’s say, You look so pretty when you’re tired! And Elise for lugging in her Sunday NY Times every Monday morning and leaving it in my mailbox  (and arranging that my going away gift would be a subscription to the weekend edition of the newspaper moving forward), and Patrick for letting me pirouette into his office, blurting non-sequiturs and demanding he read my stories. And Casey, and Nicole M., and Kiera who write blog posts without being reminded, and Molly, who writes them for me because I’ve asked, and Kristina who knows all my stories, and Marla, who tells it like it is and who always finds me funny and Trina and Emilie too , and I could say something about everyone, but I don’t want to be too self-indulgent or Sally Fields-like here, so just finally, Jason who has always made me laugh and who surprises me constantly with his creativity and writing ability and his kindness, which you might miss if you aren’t lucky enough to spend time with him.

Okay, enough, enough. I have things I want to finish before I go, and I’ve asked Janell to keep me on the blog schedule as an alumna now, so this is not really goodbye at all (maybe I’ll even come back for Homecoming and cause a ruckus at registration). It’s more like “so long,” in this capacity, goodbye for now. Much love.

Love_3

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Locust Walk Talk: DC and the Affordable Care Act

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

“Health care exchanges are a pivotal part of the Affordable Health Care Act.” – Ezekiel Emanuel

Attendees gather for the discussion

I think that it’s timely, just days after the Health Insurance Exchanges were enacted through the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, that I revisit a trip to Washington, DC for The Road Ahead for Health Care Reform. Sponsored by the Penn Wharton Public Policy Initiative (PPI) and Wharton Lifelong Learning, the event was held on September 9, 2013 at the W Hotel in Washington, D.C.

This evening featured a bipartisan conversation relying on the expertise of Daniel Polsky, Executive Director, Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, and Robert D. Eilers Professor in Health Care Management and Economics and Ezekiel Emanuel, Vice Provost for Global Initiatives and Diane v.S. Levy and Robert M. Levy University Professor.  The engaging discussion was moderated by Mark Duggan, Rowan Family Foundation Professor and Faculty Director, Penn Wharton PPI.

Duggan, Polsky and Emanuel sit at the panel (photo credit Shira Yudkoff)

The topic of the panel discussion zeroed in on the implementation of the new health insurance exchanges which lead to a lively debate on other aspects of health care reform, including how the Affordable Care Act will affect the labor force, what health care will look like in the U.S. in the next decade and what still needs to be done.

Though out the debate, Professor Emanuel was very optimistic about the changes to the American health care system. He firmly believed that the Congressional Budget Office’s estimate of 7 million Americans signing up for new health insurance through the exchanges will be exceeded when the initial open enrollment period ends. His only fear was that the exchanges would be so popular that the system wouldn’t be able to handle the demand.

Fleshing out the conversation, Professor Polsky addressed that greater access to health care will affect the labor force positively. He sees a workforce becoming more flexible, since this new access to health care will remove job lock, the inability to freely leave a job since doing so will result in the loss of health benefits. An additional insight that Professor Polsky shared was that future workers might realistically expect higher wages since the cost of health insurance will come down through competition and employers will want to maintain the current level of total compensation that they offer their more flexible employees.

The crowd listening in

The conversation assuaged the fears that employers will end their benefit plans and send their workers to the exchanges to find coverage or employ fewer workers altogether. Polsky rebutted this fear, cautioning that employers will still need to offer insurance as part of a compensation package to attract and retain talent.  This will eventually provide employees with more choice in their jobs and therefore more power.  Emanuel sites evidence in Massachusetts, which opened its health care reform to its citizens in 2008, that shows most employers did not send their workers into its exchange and they instead offered more insurance to employees.

The event was a great success, as the panel was followed by an engaging Question and Answer session. For more information, this panel was covered in Penn Wharton Public Policy Blog by Matt Stengel, W’10, in the Wharton Magazine Online by Matthew Brodsky, Editor, Wharton Magazine and with a video of the panel on Wharton’s Lifelong Learning Site.

Gathering afterward, discussing the evening’s talk

Are you interested in more health care topics presented by Penn this fall in DC?

Come join us for Healthy Cities: Healthy Women Washington, DC on October 30 at the JW Marriott Hotel at 8:30am featuring DC experts such as Susan J. Blumenthal, MD, MPA; First Deputy Assistant Secretary for Women’s Health; Former U.S. Assistant Surgeon General; Rear Admiral, USPHS (ret.); Clinical Professor, Tufts and Georgetown School of Medicine; Senior Fellow in Health Policy, New America Foundation, Harriet Tregoning, Director, DC Office of Planning, and Nancy Lee, MD, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Health – Women’s Health, and Director, Office on Women’s Health, Office of the Secretary, US Department of Health and Human Services.

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You, Me, and CP

Author: Carolyn Grace, C’16

Music is my passion.  I can’t think of any other way to describe the one thing that gets me going each and every day.  I have been singing since I was 8 years old.  Choirs, a cappella groups, musicals, high school cabaret shows, you name it.  Within my first few days as a freshman at Penn, I knew that what I wanted more than anything was to be able to keep singing.  I left the Annenberg Center after Freshman Performing Arts Night with one goal on my mind: I had to be in an a cappella group.

A cappella at Penn is awesome!  The groups here are incredibly talented and their styles so unique.  In addition to singing pop, each group performs a specific genre, be it indie, rock, jazz, anything.  With so much breadth in the music community, it was overwhelming as a freshman to decide which groups I wanted to try out for.  After a week- long audition process, I received a knock on my door late one night.  I opened my door and was greeted by 15 people singing and cheering for me.  From that moment on, I have been a member of Counterparts!

My first official night as a member of Counterparts!

My first official night as a member of Counterparts

Founded in 1981, Counterparts specializes in both jazz and pop music.  We sing anything from traditional jazz standards to songs you hear on the radio right now.  Fun fact: R&B singer-songwriter John Legend was President and Music Director of Counterparts while he was a student at Penn!  Therefore, we are famous by association 🙂

Each semester, CP (our nickname for Counterparts) performs a concert of 13 to 15 songs that we arrange ourselves.  Sometimes we perform around campus or in downtown Philadelphia as well.  In addition, we record a CD every other year, the most recent of which will be out within the next month.  Having such a wide range of repertoire is so beneficial because it really allows our group to expand in different directions.  Plus, I love jazz!

Our newbs Andrew, Emily, Michael, and David.  Welcome to CP!

Our newbs (left to right) Andrew, Emily, Michael, and David. Welcome to CP!

I have to admit, however, that I love the people in CP even more.  They are all-around talented musicians.  But they are also a hilarious, quirky, and welcoming bunch of individuals, all of whom I can honestly call friends.  Our rehearsals on Wednesday nights and Sunday afternoons are the highlight of my week, and already we have a great semester planned since arriving back at Penn.  We accepted 4 AMAZING new members, we’re putting the finishing touches on our newest CD (which I’m featured on as a soloist!), and we’re currently preparing for our Fall semester show on November 1st and 2nd.

CP performs its first Fall 2013 gig at the Penn Reunion Leadership Conference

CP performs its first Fall 2013 gig at the Penn Reunion Leadership Conference

Call me crazy, but that Geico camel and I are on the same page.  I love Wednesdays, and for good reason.  Once 8:00 PM rolls around, I’m going to make my way over to Williams Hall and head straight for the U-Lounge.  For the next 2 to 3 hours, I’ll be singing ridiculous words like “din-doh” and “jen-joh,” and I’ll be loving every minute of it!

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Filed under Campus Life, Carolyn G., Clubs, Student Perspective, The Arts, The Arts at Penn

Penn Alumni Insurance Program

Author: Kristina Clark

Did you know that Penn Alumni sponsors an Alumni Insurance Program as a service to our graduates?  The program offers a variety of attractively priced insurance products, most of which are available to alumni, students, faculty and staff, as well as their spouses, domestic partners, parents, children, and siblings:

  • Auto, Home & Renters Insurance  Special rates are available to alumni and family members living in the same household. 
  • Health Insurance  For those with a temporary or permanent need for coverage, such as the unemployed and recent graduates, and for special situations, including travelers and students.
  • Life Insurance  Long-term protection with great rates and fantastic features. Coverage is available from $50,000 to $50 million.
  • Long Term Care Insurance  Protect your assets from serious erosion while allowing access to quality care in the most appropriate and desirable setting.
  • Travel Insurance  Travel Medical and Trip Protection coverage is available for individuals or groups, for personal or business travel.
  • Pet InsuranceSimple, customizable dog and cat insurance plans are available.
  • Identity Theft Protection Protect yourself and your family against identity theft with a comprehensive solution you can count on.
  • Advisory ServicesA licensed insurance professional is available, at no charge, to answer questions and provide customized guidance.

For more information visit http://meyerandassoc.com/pennalumni or contact the program administrator at 800-635-7801.

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Penn Spectrum 2013 Review in Photos

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08

Penn Spectrum 2013 was incredible. Amazing panels, delicious food, and a killer dance party. Here are some photos from the weekend.

Reliving one of my favorite days of undergrad at Performing Arts Night. Penn Lions pictured here. Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

Reliving one of my favorite days of undergrad at Performing Arts Night. Penn Lions pictured here. Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

Welcome Remarks by Penn President Amy Gutmann, Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

Welcome Remarks by Penn President Amy Gutmann, Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

eer Paths: Embracing the Unexpected, Steinberg Hall-Dietrich Hall. Panelists included Kristin Haskins-Simms, C'93, Principal Designer at Krysi (formerly Strangefruit), Contestant on Season 8 of Project Runway; Franklin Shen, ENG’03, Co-Owner of Sugar Philly Dessert Truck and Catering and Derek Murphy, WG'89 Executive Vice President and General Manager USA TODAY Moderator: Pat Rose, G'75, Director of Penn Career Services.

eer Paths: Embracing the Unexpected, Steinberg Hall-Dietrich Hall. Panelists included Kristin Haskins-Simms, C’93, Principal Designer at Krysi (formerly Strangefruit), Contestant on Season 8 of Project Runway; Franklin Shen, ENG’03, Co-Owner of Sugar Philly Dessert Truck and Catering and Derek Murphy, WG’89 Executive Vice President and General Manager USA TODAY Moderator: Pat Rose, G’75, Director of Penn Career Services.

outside_ps

Reliving one of my favorite days of undergrad at Performing Arts Night. Penn Lions pictured here. Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

Reliving one of my favorite days of undergrad at Performing Arts Night. Penn Lions pictured here. Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Harold Prince Theatre.

Penn P cupcakes at the Dance Party.

Penn P cupcakes at the Dance Party.

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Campus Life, Events, Multicultural Outreach, Penn Spectrum, Stephanie Y.

Favorite Dining Options on Campus

Author: Lillian Gardiner, GEd’11

 

It’s taken me well over 2 years on campus to get a grip on all the yummy food offerings. So why don’t I save you the trouble and offer some of my tried-and-true favorites:

1. Joe’s Café, Steinberg-Dietrich. You may not find this on your own, but it’s a beautiful, well-lit space to have lunch inside. They offer sandwiches, soups, & salads, and a lot of healthy snacks like yogurt, hummus, and protein bars.

2. 1920 Common’s: Just past the bridge coming from Locust Walk. Featuring a recently renovated Starbucks, a gourmet grocery store, and a LOT of hot food options. If you have a sweet tooth, I’d poke around here.

commons

3. Farmer’s market! Wednesdays during the spring and summer in front of the bookstore. It’s hard to miss, but you should make a point of getting some fruit, fresh baked bread, and a Popsicle from the Lil’Pop Shop stand.

Farmers

4. Finally, food trucks. I’ll just list my favorites and you can look them up. Try Twitter for their locations and FB/websites for details: Delicias, Kim’s Oriental, Tyson Bees, Cucina Zapata, Lil’Dan’s, Pitruco.

Happy dining!

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Campus Life, Food Fiends, Lillian G.

Penn Cares with the Penn Club of Northern California – Habitat for Humanity

By Betty Huang, ENG’12, GEN’12, and Jenny Zhan, C’10, W’10

Donning hard hats at 8:30AM on a chilly and grey Saturday morning, volunteers from the Penn Club of Northern California joined in on ground-breaking work with Habitat for Humanity of Greater San Francisco. The work was more physically challenging than usual because we were doing foundation work, that is, a lot of shoveling, waterproofing, wheelbarrowing, and moving dirt around. Despite the difficulties, it was very gratifying getting in on a project from the very beginning: Habitat had just received permits for a 28-unit single family development named Habitat Terrace, an ambitious project in the Oceanview neighborhood and the organization’s largest development yet in San Francisco.

NoCal Penn Cares 2 - 1

We are proud to contribute to Habitat’s mission to provide a helping hand to families in need of improved living conditions. The homes that we helped lay the foundations for will be sold to families at no profit and financed with 0% interest mortgages. In addition, new owners will put 500 hours of work into their own homes. It will take over 100,000 volunteer hours to finish this Habitat Terrace development in the next 2 years, and the Penn Club of Northern California is looking forward to seeing the project through. Thank you to all our volunteers on August 17th, and if you live in the area, please join us in serving our community!

NorCal Penn Cares 2 - 2

NorCal Penn Cares 2 - 3

NorCal Penn Cares 2 - 4

Read about our experience helping at the San Francisco Food Bank here.

Read about Penn Serves LA helping at Habitat for Humanity here.

The Penn Softball team volunteered at Habitat for Humanity in New Jersey last year – here’s the link to a story and video about their experience.

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Alumni Programming, Clubs, Events, GAN, Guest blogger, Penn Clubs, Photos, Volunteering, West Coast Regional Office

What I’ve learned from Ohlin – One of the Penn Vet Working Dogs

Author: Jean Findlay

It has been just about a year since Ohlin has arrived at Penn and into my life. I am the Foster for the chocolate labrador named Ohlin, the 8th puppy to join the Penn Vet Working Dog Center. He arrived on Halloween Day 2012. He is now a constant companion and rides to work with me every day and attends school at one of the finest working dog programs in the country located at Penn on the Gray’s Ferry Campus.

Ohlin1

Ohlin2

If Ohlin could speak these are the things that I think he would be reminding all of us to do:

  1. Stretch when you wake up
  2. Wag more – bark less
  3. Be loyal
  4. Live simply
  5. Take naps
  6. Don’t feel guilty about eating a treat
  7. Make new friends
  8. When loved ones come home run to the door to greet them
  9. Long walks are good for you
  10. When someone is having a bad day just sit next them – no words necessary

There are 16 puppies that are in training to be detection dogs. This week you may have seen in the news that the center celebrated its one-year anniversary with a special program and graduated the first puppy, K9-Socks, who will join Penn’s Division of Public Safety as their first explosive and tracking dog. These puppies are all named after 9/11 rescue dogs. There were more than 300 search and rescue dogs that helped in the rescue effort at the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. This video tells their story. Ohlin’s namesake was deployed to the World Trade Center.  Here is a photo of the original Ohlin at work.

firedog

In the past year, Ohlin has grown from a little ball of fur into 58 pound sleek, athletic, energetic, and let me repeat energetic dog. He is a handsome boy who is always happy – his tail wags all of the time. He would never be able to work with explosives!

outsidesleepingpup

In Ohlin’s first weeks with me he went into the election polls to vote on November 6, rode in a shopping cart, visited the Penn Student Calling Center, attended the Penn-Harvard football game and helped me to meet neighbors who wanted to say hello to the cute little chocolate lab at the end of the leash!

cart

Ohlin is currently part of the cancer team of three dogs, which also includes, McBaine (sponsored by St. Germain Catering) and Tsunami. This collaborative project, launched by Penn and the Monell Chemical Senses Center, with an $80,000 grant from the Kaleidoscope of Hope Ovarian Cancer Foundation, involves experts in such disparate fields as veterinary science, oncology, physics, organic chemistry, and nanotechnology. Follow this link to the article that appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

thankyou

If you are interested in learning more about the Penn Vet Working Dog Program please reach out to them or me. There are many ways to get involved as a volunteer and spend time with these little super-heroes in training. I plan on trying to get a superman costume on Ohlin for Halloween this year. We’ll see how that goes.

grownup

Visit http://pennvetwdc.org/ and sign-up to receive their eNewsletter.

Other links of note are:
https://www.facebook.com/PVWorkingDogCenter
https://twitter.com/@PennVetWDC

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Filed under Jean F., Penn Vet, Penn Working Dog Center, The Penn Fund

Spectral Analysis

Author: Patrick Bredehoft

“The essence of the beautiful is unity in variety.” —W. Somerset Maugham

This past weekend highlighted some great examples of the astonishing variety of communities and opportunities to be found on Penn’s campus. With the second Penn Spectrum conference to be held in Philadelphia, we welcomed multiple generations of diverse alumni back to campus for a weekend of impassioned discussions and warm reunions.  Whether the alumni were sharing academic research, personal anecdotes, or salsa moves, the spirit of collaboration was palpable.

Penn Weekend 1 (2)

On Saturday afternoon, College Green was also abuzz with students celebrating Skimmerfest, a campus-wide party that includes great musical acts, food trucks, a 40-foot climbing wall, and a giant inflatable football player (perhaps an omen for the game to come?).  Students flooded the center of campus, enjoying the perfect weather and time spent with one another.

Just a few blocks away, a makeshift city was being assembled on Hill Field, with the following invitation to the campus community:

 What is the best way to teach students about what it’s like to live in informal settlements – which will be home to over half of the world’s population within the next two decades? Create an opportunity for them to build and inhabit a makeshift ‘city’ using cardboard and other simple materials right in the University of Pennsylvania’s backyard.  On Friday, Sept. 20th  and Saturday, Sept. 21st, students from the School of Design will re-create the best conditions possible of a hypothetical informal settlement – the fastest growing type of habitation in the world.

Penn Weekend 2 (2)

Alumni reuniting, students celebrating, and global realities made into local experience: just your typical weekend, Penn!

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Filed under Campus Life, Multicultural Outreach, Patrick B., Penn Spectrum

100 years with the Sphinx

Author: Janell Wiseley

Have you ever been to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology?  Have you ever wondered about the Sphinx – a 15-ton single piece of red granite, the largest such stone sculpture in the Western Hemisphere and the sixth largest in the world?  How did it get there, and why is it at Penn?Sphinx-story1[1]

Wonder no more.  Check out the Penn Current for the full story of how the Sphinx arrived in Philadelphia in 1913.

1913 sphinx

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Filed under Historical, Janell W., Penn Museum, Philadelphia