Category Archives: Clubs

My Top Penn List: Favorite Pictures from Visits to My Penn Club Cities

I fancy myself to be a very amateur photographer. My tool is the iPhone. So, armed only with a willingness to contort and a gigs of memory, I go out and snap a few photos while I have a free moment in my Penn Club cities.  Here are my 10 favorite pictures that I have taking along my travels in the last year (since the start of this blog.)

10. Washington, DC

Something about the black marble of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in the foreground and the line of sight being drawn up through the Washington Monument under the dusky sky made me pause and wanted this picture. For club information, visit the Penn Club of Washington, DC’s webpage.

9. Austin.

Here is a vista of the neighborhood of East Austin. For more information about alumni activities in the area, please contact our alumni representative for Austin.

8. Hampton Roads

The unusual juxtaposition of a church from New England, deep in the Tidewater city of Norfolk, VA was a curiosity. For more information about alumni activities in the area, please contact our alumni representative for Hampton Roads.

7. Boston

This is view of Beantown from Cambridge is so quintessentially Boston. For club information, visit the Penn Club of Boston’s webpage.

6. Denver

On the steps leading to the entrance of the State Capitol, one is marked as a mile above sea level. While I don’t think that the iPhone is best for night pictures, I found this to be a fun image to take.For club information, visit the Penn Club of Denver’s webpage.

5. Dallas

While for most Americans Dealey Plaza is known as the backdrop to JFK’s assassination, I found it to be a charming tribute to the pioneer spirit that forged Dallas.For more information about alumni activities in the area, please contact our alumni representative for Dallas and Fort Worth.

4. Baltimore

Usually, I think of Camden Yards or the Bromo Seltzer Tower as typical Baltimore building. So the drama of lines of the building drawing you up to the American flag at the top was a favorite of mine to photograph. For club information, visit the Penn Club of Baltimore’s webpage.

3. Richmond

The beauty in the massive brickwork in this theatre couldn’t go unnoticed and it caught my attention. For more information about alumni activities in the area, please contact our alumni representative for Richmond.

2. San Antonio

I’m sure I’m not alone in thinking about James Bowie, Davey Crockett, William Travis, and the like as well as remembering the Alamo when someone mentions San Antonio. However, did you know that San Antone has stunning Japanese Tea Garden? This charming foot bridge looks inspired by other gardens’ moon bridges and immediately provides me with a sense of calm. For club information, visit the Penn Club of San Antonio’s webpage.

1. Houston

Twenty miles outside the traffic of Space City stands this monument commemorating Texas’ Independence from Mexico in 1836.  Almost 12 feet taller than the Washington Monument, the San Jacinto Monument is this world’s tallest monumental column. It stands at the site of the Battle of San Jacinto and today, commends a grand command over the state park. For club information, visit the Penn Club of Houston’s webpage.

For alumni club activities and more information for our other 110 clubs, please visit the Global Alumni Network main page.

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Penn and Wharton Club of Arizona Celebrate Ben’s Birthday

Author: Laura Solie, W’08

In January, forty Penn Alumni from the Wharton Club of Arizona gathered to celebrate the birth of Ben Franklin. The event, an annual tradition within Penn and the Wharton Club of Arizona, brought together alumni both young and old to cheer the birth of Penn’s founder.

After mingling around the catered food and sparkling conversation with friends, our Penn President reined us in for official introductions. As we went around the room introducing ourselves by name, school, graduation yard, and quick life updates, several things became apparent.

First, our experiences after graduation were incredibly diverse.  From creating a thirty-year career as a surgeon after studying art history to flitting around the country trying to make it in the hotel industry, our Penn education led us to success in many different directions.

Second, each and every one of us had an unique Penn story to share. Our older alumni recalled the days of Locust Walk when it was a road, while the younger folk dwelt on somewhat hazy memories of Spring Fling.

Third, and what stood out to me the most, was that someone named Candice Bergen had attended Penn and many people recalled knowing her as a student. Once her name was mentioned, the stories flowed. “She was, in fact, my roommate freshman year,” one alumna fondly remembered.

“Oh, of course! Candice Bergen! I have watched all of her movies,” shared another excitedly.

I found myself wondering who the heck this person was, and why I wasn’t more up-to-date on our Penn celebrities. After references to movies that were released way before my time (The Hunting Party??), I quickly searched for her name on my iPhone. “Oh!” I exclaimed after a moment. “The crazy mom in Sweet Home Alabama and on TV as Murphy Brown! She went to Penn? Awesome!”

And with that, I left another Penn event with pride for our accomplishments and the great feeling of being part of a special group–a group, as I now know, that includes a very famous celebrity.

Penn alumni enjoying conversation and recounting tales of a famous alumna.

For more information about other Penn & Wharton Club of AZ activities, visit the club website here.

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Locust Walk Talk: Penn Alumni Volunteer Leadership Retreat

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

If you are reading this blog, mostly likely you are one of the 290,000 plus alumni from one of Penn’s undergraduate, graduate, or professional schools.  This outstanding group comprises the association called Penn Alumni. You are a member of Penn Alumni.

In your day-to-day life, you probably don’t always think about your alumni association and what they can do for you.  In Alumni Relations, we do.  In addition to supporting our alumni for their post-college academic needs, we work to organize and train our volunteer leaders to keep them best informed about the University as well as to provide networking opportunities among our Penn volunteers to find synergies to take advantage of and to share lessons to learn and grow from.

To do this, Alumni Relations hosted its annual Penn Alumni Volunteer Leadership Retreat this February for the Board of Directors (Penn Alumni’s governing board of 60 members including our Alumni Trustees), the Council of Representatives (a cadre of 300 members consisting of the presidents of the undergraduate class, regional alumni clubs and Penn Alumni’s constituent groups), and regional alumni clubs leaders (all regional club board members in addition to club presidents). These volunteers were invited to return to campus to be updated on the University, to network with their fellow volunteers, to come together for training, and to have access to their Penn senior administrators and their Penn Alumni liaisons. The retreat, now in its fifth year, came about to supplement the winter Penn Alumni Board and Council Meetings to take advantage of our volunteers’ time together in Philadelphia and provide the programming that they have asked for.

Alumni at dinner watching a demonstration

In planning the retreat, we adopted Penn’s Academic Theme, the Year of Games, to identify many of our retreat speakers to provide an insider’s experience of the impact of the academic theme on our students. This academic theme covers a great number of topics including athletic competition, negotiations, applying gameplay functionality in non-game contexts, and the impact of play on health and political strategies to start. Penn’s Provost Office started this initiative in 2007 to sponsor a series of events around an academic theme chosen by faculty, staff and students. Events featuring the theme that defines the academic year start with the Penn Reading Project and continue all year long with interdisciplinary conferences, symposia, exhibits, performances, and more, all produced on Penn’s campus by our schools, departments, resource centers, and partners.  In keeping with this theme, our volunteers had access to programming to learn about robotics, group dynamic strategies, politics and Penn’s student athletes.

I wanted to share with you what our volunteers learned while back on campus.

Robotics:

Dr. Daniel D. Lee, Evan C Thompson Term Associate Professor and Raymon S. Markowitz Faculty Fellow, and his lab study and research the topic of Robotics and Machine Learning.  His research analyzes on topics ranging from applying knowledge about biological information processing systems to building better artificial sensorimotor systems that can adapt and learn from experience. To illustrate this particular process, Dr. Lee and his students demonstrated this research and its more fun application with the robotic soccer team.  Dr. Lee and his students programmed the robots to analysis all outside stimuli from the location of the red “soccer” ball and then reacting appropriately to the object.  This entertaining exhibition highlighted the lab’s ultimate goal of making machines that better understand what we want them to do. Follow the links to learn more about Professor Lee, the robotics program at the School of Engineering and Applied Science, and the GRASP (General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception) Laboratory.

Ashleigh Thomas, Eng’13, with a “soccer” playing robot

Group Dynamic Strategies:

Santo D. Marabella, GRS’91, MBA, DSW, addressed the attendees with real-life working tactics for the group dynamics of volunteering.  He discussed the complex relationships among the volunteer, his or her peers, and the University staff, and how interactions among all groups should make the participants feel their time and contributions are valued and respected.  Each group was then asked to develop ways of operating on their individual committee level as well as on the overall Penn Alumni level. Before breaking everyone into their respective working groups, Santo gave guidelines for establishing strategic themes for the Board, and for developing activities for the many committees, affinity groups, and alumni societies over the next year.

Santo D. Marabella, GRS’91, MBA, DSW, addressing the group

Politics:

Dick Polman, the full-time Maury Povich Writer in Residence, Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing, serves as a part-time national political columnist at the Philadelphia Inquirer.  Over lunch, Polman gave a fascinating talk about the current political climate, touching upon the seemingly unstructured prevalence of the Occupy Wall Street Movement. He shared his insight to the evolving GOP race to suggest who he thought would be the Republican presidential candidate while also focusing on Mitt Romney and addressing what he called the “Santorum Surge.”  Bringing into play his work covering the 1992, 1996, 2000, and 2004 Presidential campaigns, he fielded questions from the group, citing the economy and its recovery as well as rising gas prices as the variables that will influence Americans at the poll.  You can read more by Polman on his blog, American Debate.

Volunteers taking a moment to ask Dick Polman follow up questions

 Student Athletes:

Four of our outstanding student athletes, Kai Peng, W’12 (varsity sprint football), Douglas J. Miller, Jr., C’12 (club lacrosse), Adrienne Lerner, C’12 (varsity soccer), and Matthew Gould, W’14 (intramural basketball), discussed their commitment and desire to play sports at Penn.  Matt, who is also one of Penn Alumni’s work study students, also introduced the Red and Blue crew, the dedicated group of student fans.  The athletes then talked about the differences between varsity, club, and intramural sports, as well as highlighting the NCAA guidelines and how they affect Ivy versus non-Ivy varsity sports teams.  Their commitment to their respective sports and to their studies was obvious; all the athletes reported doing very well in their classes.  Each student also spoke about the fantastic impact of Penn Park on Penn’s athletics programs as a whole and how it has increased the resources for a Penn athlete. For example, Doug, the club lacrosse co-captain, shared that his team’s practice time has significantly improved from happening from 11 PM until 1 AM before Penn Park to a more reasonable 9:30 to 11:30 PM now that Penn Park is open and operational.

Our student athlete, sitting in the order mentioned above

Our volunteer leaders let us know through several anecdotes that the weekend was worth their time. Networking with their peers to share best practices gave them ideas for future endeavors with their Penn group.  Hearing the reports on the University to share with their members when they return was beneficial.  And, having access to some of the University’s best minds was, as they say in the MasterCard commercials, priceless.

 

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Alumni Programming, Casey R., Clubs, Locust Walk Talk, Volunteering

Wanted: Newletter Editor

Author: Nicole Oddo, C’05

Have you ever wanted to reach over 2,500 alumni with the click of a button? I’ve had the chance to work on the Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia newsletter and want to pass on this unique opportunity. It’s a blast to craft the title, first few sentences, and the included events.  I’m looking for a volunteer to help with sending the newsletter – the time commitment is just a few hours a month. Email president@pennclubphilly.org to volunteer.

One of the perks of writing the newsletter is the chance to highlight upcoming events. I thought I’d share this week’s two great events – a Highball Happy Hour tonight (Wednesday, 2/22) and a Family Night at the Palestra this Friday, 2/24. The first is a highly successful event that draws a real crowd of alumni to mix and mingle with happy hour specials at a cool venue. The second is with the Association of Alumnae and a new, family-oriented event that is sure to be a lot of fun! We hope to have a great group of Penn families attend and start a new tradition. See you at an upcoming event!

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Connecting Penn Alumni to Each Other

Author: Nicole Oddo, C’05

January brings a new Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia Board and another year of volunteer leaders planning events connecting local alumni to Penn, Philadelphia, and each other.  As the President of the Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia, I was determined to start the year energized and worked with one of the board members to plan a kick off retreat.  We did a short survey to learn what was most important to our mission and for the future of the club.  While the responses covered a breadth of interests (a wonderful quality for a board), one thing was common. Everyone wanted the club to help them meet other Penn Alumni.  The motivations varied from looking for professional clients, to making new friends, to networking and career exploration, but the end goal was the same, to meet new people.

Penn people love meeting each other and the Penn Alumni Club of Philadelphia provides that opportunity. I love how alumni events and volunteering have introduced me to so many of “classmates” whether we were at Penn together or not! Whether you are interested in community service projects, speed networking, the Phillies, or grabbing drinks at a cool venue in the city, we have something for you. Like our next event this Thursday, Ben Franklin’s Birthday at the old Philadelphia establishment, McGillins. Check it out.  I hope to see you there!

P.S. If you are not in Philadelphia, there is a whole Global Alumni Network out there – see where your club is!

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Clubs, Events, GAN, Nicole O., Penn Clubs, Philadelphia, Uncategorized

Penn Men’s Basketball Faces UCLA in Anaheim, CA

Author: Kiera Reilly, C’93

On December 10, the Penn Men’s Basketball team made their first trip to Southern California since 2003. The last time the Quakers came to town, they played the USC Trojans at the Forum in Inglewood (and beat them quite soundly). This year, Penn was scheduled to play the UCLA Bruins. As the famous Pauley Pavilion on UCLA’s campus is undergoing renovations, the game was set for the Honda Center in Anaheim, CA (home of the Anaheim Ducks Ice Hockey).

The Honda Center in Anaheim, CA - location for Penn vs UCLA on Dec. 10th

Colleagues in Alumni Relations, Athletics and Development coordinated to plan a pre-game reception before the game and invited all alumni and current parents in the Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego areas to attend. We hoped for an enthusiastic crowd but weren’t entirely sure how many Penn fans would attend. In fact, we had an informal bet, with all of us guessing the number of attendees. Everyone thought I was a bit crazy for making the high guess of 380, but I knew that our Southern California alumni would want to come cheer for our Quakers! I underestimated the turn-out by a bit – over 400 people attended our reception before the game.

Jerome Allen, W’95, the Jordan R. Rockwell Head Coach of Men’s Basketball, stopped by early in the reception to say a few words. PennClubLA President Melissa Wu, C’98, thanked him for coming and presented him with a local treat – an In-n-Out t-shirt and gift certificate.

PennClubLA president Melissa Wu, C'98, and Coach Jerome Allen, W'95

Below are some photos from the reception. We must thank PennClubLA (www.pennclubla.com; Twitter: @PennClubLA) , Penn Club of Orange County (twitter: @PennClubOC), Penn Club of San Diego (twitter: @PennClubSD) and the Wharton Club of Southern California (www.whartonsocal.com) for their help in spreading the word about the reception and game. If you are in Southern California, I encourage you to connect with any of these Penn alumni groups!

A good time was had by all, but unfortunately the Quakers came up short on the court, falling to UCLA 77 – 73. Senior Tyler Bernardini, from nearby Carlsbad, CA, had a career high 29 points in the game, so we congratulate him on a great performance in front of a home crowd.

We hope the team comes back to visit us soon! Go Quakers!

For a re-cap of the game see: http://www.pennathletics.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=1700&ATCLID=205345011

Follow the team as they are set to play Duke on Jan. 1. Updates via twitter @PennBasketball

(As we post this, the Lady Quakers are in San Diego for the Surf N Slam classic – after defeating UNC-Greensboro yesterday, they will play host the SDSU Aztecs in the championship game at 2 pm PST. For more information see: http://www.pennathletics.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=1700&ATCLID=205353175 and follow the team @PennWomensbball)

Ed Balsamo C'96, W'96, brought his son to meet Coach Allen.

Dedicated Quaker fans Allan, C'81, and Dale, MT'81, Bell traveled from NJ for the game and caught up with Don Rosen, C'78

Penn Club of Orange County's Jeannie Quan Hogue, C'88, and her daughter were excited to see so many alumni in Anaheim.

I caught up with classmate, Mitchell Kraus, C'93, and we reminisced about when Jerome Allen and his teammates won the Ivy League Championship our senior year.Ed Balsamo, C'96, W'96, brought his son to meet Coach Allen

Me and Penn Club LA members, Gloria Lee, C'97, GCP'98, WG'07, Melissa Wu, C'98, Terry Baris, C'84, and Andy Firchau--all of us sporting our Red & Blue.

It was a beautiful California day, perfect for socializing outside.

The basketball team strategizing during a time-out.

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Athletics, Clubs, GAN, Kiera R., Penn Clubs, West Coast Regional Office

Locust Walk Talk: Penn Nursing at the annual Penn–Cornell Luncheon in Rochester

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

Penn Nursing has a proud 125-year legacy.  Since 1886, nursing education at Penn has transformed the preparation of nurses and the profession of nursing. Many of the early nurses educated at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and other programs truly changed the world. They managed hospitals and brought clean uniforms, order, and dignity to healthcare, changing the way society viewed nurses and, in the process, turning nursing into a respected and sought-after profession. Today’s nursing students build on that robust foundation as they work with world-renowned faculty to generate new knowledge in research and forward advances in clinical care.  These students join approximately 14,000 alumni from the HUP School of Nursing, Penn’s nursing education programs, and the current Penn School of Nursing. Each one of these students and alumni is caring to change the world through their efforts as practitioners, educators, researchers, community leaders, administrators, and policy advocates.

This year for the annual Penn–Cornell Luncheon, the Penn Club of Rochester hosted Dr. Mary Ersek, Associate Director, Center for Integrative Science in Aging and the John A. Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing Excellence, and Associate Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing. Her presence at the traditional event highlighted our outstanding Nursing School’s Quasquicentennial.  This annual luncheon between the two school’s alumni clubs in Rochester has been going on for over 70 years.  Originally the gathering served as an affair for the two clubs to get together before the Penn-Cornell football game, which was originally played on Thanksgiving. The luncheon, now held the Monday before Thanksgiving, serves as regional institution with the heart of the event being the keynote speaker who hails from hosting alumni club’s school.  Today, the hosting responsibilities alternate between the University alumni clubs, based on whether Penn or Cornell is the home team that year.

A surviving ticket from the 1938 Luncheon.

Dr. Ersek’s address was titled “It is Your Life, Anyway: Healthcare Decision-Making in the context of Serious Illness,” which she delivered as an engaging and encouraging approach to palliative care.  The talk introduced the specialized area of healthcare that is both family-centered and focused on relieving and preventing the suffering of patients to the attendees. Unlike hospice care, palliative medicine is appropriate for patients in all disease stages, including those undergoing treatment for curable illnesses and those living with chronic diseases, as well as patients who are nearing the end of life. This type of care involves addressing physical, intellectual, emotional, social and spiritual needs and to facilitate patient autonomy, access to information and choices.

An illustration from The New Yorker that Dr. Ersek used to show her point

Though a heavy topic, Dr. Ersek delivered a genuine talk about the importance of having choices in one’s treatment, gaining the adequate information about those choices as well as learning that information from an appropriate health care provider, having conversations with both health care provider and family in light of the options, and finally making the decisions and communicating them successfully to all involved. She focused heavily on having the conversation, since this is the most difficult part in the process.  Insightfully, she relayed anecdotes from her nursing students to demonstrate how to broach the subject.  In class, Dr. Ersek would show a clip from 2007’s The Savages featuring Laura Linney, Philip Seymour Hoffman, and Philip Bosco having the difficult discussion as two children discovering their father’s ideas for care.  The scene is humorously awkward, but in the end provided her students with the means to be open to having this discussion with future patients as well as with their parents and future health care proxies.

Pennsylvanians and Cornellians alike left the luncheon appreciating the field of palliative care. They noted in passing that they need to be open to talk about end of life care before it should be of any concern.  While not talking about it, any insured person will be given all life-sustaining therapies. However, this may not be in the individual’s own needs.  The best time to discuss this topic is while one is still able to establish her or her own definition of quality of life.

The corresponding football program for the surviving luncheon ticket

Dr. Mary Ersek directs the palliative care minor in the School of Nursing and teaches in courses in this program. She also mentors pre- and post-doctoral fellows and students and is the lead author of the End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium (ELNEC) Geriatric curriculum. Dr. Ersek’s research centers on pain and palliative care in older adults, with an emphasis on residents of nursing homes, including the investigation of the efficacy of a pain self management group for residents and the examination of the effectiveness of a pain management coupled with intensive support and consultation.

Dr. Ersek referenced the New Yorker article, “Letting Go: What should medicine do when it can’t save your life?by Atul Gawande.  It is a very powerful read, accentuating many of Dr Ersek’s themes and points.

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Penn Club of LA is the Place to Be

Author: Lisa Ellen Niver, CAS’89

Join us in Los Angeles for awesome Penn Club events. Our Quaker spirit needs you!! There are over 9,000 Penn alumni in our vast city alone and we’re looking for you go join us.

President Melissa Wu, pictured here at our annual summer dinner on the beach at the Jonathan Club with TJ, Kevin, Lisa, George and Kiera.

The club is run by President Melissa Wu and a group of alumni leaders who are active, engaged, and fiercely loyal to Penn. Together, we support Penn’s interests and goals, acting as the primary alumni connection with the University, and engaging as many alumni as possible through social, networking, and educational activities.

You don’t even have to take my word for it. Recently, the club learned that it would receive the prestigious Alumni Award of Merit for its outstanding merits. To quote from the citation:  “For creative events, unstoppable energy, uncorked enthusiasm for all things Penn and, most of all, for not letting a 2,400-mile distance diminish its passion for the University, Penn Alumni is proud to present PennClubLA with the Alumni Club Award of Merit for 2011.”

In addition, the club regularly hosts fun and thought-provoking events for our members.  Recently, our club was part of the National Event, Meet Plan Go! to inspire career break travel. A sell-out crowd of over 100 participants gathered at India’s Oven to hear from a panel including Richard Bangs (PBS Adventure with a Purpose), Jennifer Leo (LA Times), and Lisa Napoli (KCRW).

Standing Room Only

Local leaders have noticed our efforts. I am proud to say that City Council member, Bill Rosendahl, recently honored me and my partner, George Rajna, along with our group, We Said Go Travel, for our leadership and community building with group and events alongside the Penn Club of LA.

The Certificate

Participating in Meet Plan Go for the first year, the Los Angeles meet-up was one of the biggest events of all seventeen cities. The October 18 event was the fourth event planned by my husband and me this year. I hope you will join us for our next club-affiliated event on November 29 at Century City’s X-Bar with the theme: Travel With Technology: “My Favorite Travel App.” App designers from Ship Mate and Studio Mini will be in attendance. For more information on all our events, visit www.wesaidgotravel.com or contact me directly.

You can also see what’s happening at the Penn Club of LA by going to www.pennclubla.com.

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Clubs, GAN, Lisa Ellen Niver, Penn Clubs, West Coast Regional Office

Time for First September

Author: Nicole Oddo, C’05

There is a sense of beginning with the start of every school year, even when you are not a student (after a few years of grad school, I am happy to not have to think about textbooks, finding my classrooms, writing papers or a required selection of reading).

It’s a chance to start again and continue working on those goals on your to do list. It is also a chance to meet new people. Of course, one of the best things about September as a Penn alumna is First September.  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 2011. I particularly like this event because I have participated and planned First Septembers in Phoenix, Chicago, and Philadelphia. When I returned to Philadelphia in 2008, I volunteered to help for that First September.  I worked the registration table and quickly had the chance to meet so many alumni in the area. In Chicago, we did Quizzo, a bar trivia event that we adored in college (and many of us still play!). I also remember setting up the first event in Arizona, at the Ritz Carlton bar. While we didn’t have many young alumni there, we had a great turnout of people new to the club and new to Phoenix.

So, regardless of whether you are the class of 2011, new to the area, or just want to meet new people at the start of another school year, join us at First September!

If you are in Philadelphia, we’ll be touring Yards Brewery and will have a chance to meet over a pint!

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Of Storms and Books

Author: Lisa Ellen Niver, CAS’89

With Hurricane Irene this weekend, I have been reminiscing about my freshman year in the Quad and my first hurricane, Hurricane Gloria. Raised on the West Coast, I only knew earthquakes with no warning; the 48 hours of waiting to end up playing in the rain in our flip-flops was a new experience. While at Penn, I learned so much in and out of the classroom, but never imagined learning how to handle a hurricane would be one of my adventures!

Now back on the West Coast, it has been my honor to participate with other alumni in the Penn Club of Los Angeles.  I am so excited that fellow alumnae, Rachel Friedman, will be joining our club for a reading of her book about travel and personal transformation. It’s called The Good Girl’s Guide to Getting Lost: A Memoir of Three Continents, Two Friends, and One Unexpected Adventure and I highly recommend it.

So, if you happen to be in the LA area on September 6, please join us at Traveler’s Bookcase at 7 PM to hear from Rachel, to meet other travelers, and to hear more about past trips and future travel dreams. This will be our third event since March and at each event, the group continues to grow. Read the details at www.wesaidgotravel.com or you can email me directly at for more information. I would love to hear your travel stories too if you would like to share them with me.

Want more?  You can read my most recent article here and also view the Penn Club LA event listing here.

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