Category Archives: Locust Walk Talk

Locust Walk Talk: Mr. Cohen Goes to Washington

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

Earlier in March, I had the privilege of hosting David L. Cohen, L’81, Chair, Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania & Executive Vice President, Comcast Corporation, for an informal reception with Washington area Penn alumni. In collaboration with the Penn Club of Washington and the Mid-Atlantic Regional Advisory Board, we entertained about 50 alumni interested learning more about the chair of Penn’s Trustees.

Brandon Paroly, President of the Penn Club of Washington, and Susan Wegner, Chair of MARAB, welcome the crowd and introduced David.  As a part of their introductory remarks, Brandon and Susan shared the mission of their respective alumni groups with the crowd, and between the two of them, they shared a brief summary of David’s career with the audience.

David graduated from Swarthmore College in 1977 and summa cum laude from Penn Law in 1981. In 1982, Mr. Cohen joined Ballard Spahr Andrews & Ingersoll, LLP. Ten years later, Mr. Cohen resigned his partnership to become Chief of Staff to the Honorable Edward G. Rendell, C’65, Mayor of the City of Philadelphia. In that capacity, he played an important coordinating role in significant budgetary and financial issues and a wide variety of policy and operational issues. Mr. Cohen remained in city government until 1997, when he returned to Ballard Spahr as Chairman before leaving to join Comcast in 2002. At Comcast, Mr. Cohen is responsible for all external affairs of the company and serves as senior counselor to the Chairman and CEO.

David recounted that he became engaged actively as a volunteer at Penn, first as a Trustee of multiple Health System and Medical School boards. In 2002, he was named founding chairman of the Board and Executive Committee of Penn Medicine, the umbrella governance structure created by the University to oversee both the Health System and the University’s School of Medicine. This was during a time when UPHS needed to be taken in a new direction and in his eight years as chair he oversaw the critical decision-making that led to the remarkable financial turnaround of the Health System. Ultimately his work for Penn took him from being a University Trustee and then as chair of Penn Medicine and chair of the Trustees in 2010.

His volunteer experience at the University was built on his commitment and passion for Penn and for the impact that it could have, not only locally and regionally, but nationally and globally. This theme of not only locally and regionally, but nationally and globally is clearly one of David’s mantra, especially since he parallels the University scope and range to Comcast’s, which started out as a small cable company in Tupelo, Missisippi. David’s eye for world-view in everything he does catapults everything he works on moving forward.

He talked about his work at Comcast – in expanding its scope – and about the acquisition of NBC Universal and shared some unconventional knowledge about the two companies. From the time of the acquisition and to this day, Comcast is the larger company with most of its revenue coming from the cable channels like Oxygen, E! and CurrentTV. David also was able to share with us some bragging rights – for the week of ending March 3, 2012, NBC Universal had both the number one movie (The Lorax) and the number one TV show (The Voice). Rarely does any media company in the US hold both number one spots during a week.

What made the evening special was the access to one of Penn’s great leaders. Audience members asked about career advice – how do you get to do what you’re passionate about; the future of Penn; and the means to stay involved with the University.  Alumni stayed well past the reception to mingle with David before he left as well as to catch up with friends and network with new contacts.

 

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Alumni Profile, Alumni Programming, Campus Life, Casey R., Locust Walk Talk, Philadelphia

Continuing Education for Alumni: Tiesto…?

Author: Leigh Ann P.

On most days when I arrive at Sweeten Alumni House in the early morning hours, it is serenely quiet and peaceful on campus.  I can spend some time appreciating the fact that I work on this beautiful college campus in the middle of a major urban city.  The merry squirrels dart dangerously close around my feet, having grown accustomed to a life of hand-feeding by kind, unsuspecting humans.  Sometimes all I can hear at that hour are my own footsteps on Locust Walk.  That is, when I wear my super-loud boots. 

But most mornings are not Spring Fling ticket-distribution day.

My colleagues and I have seen signs, banners and sidewalk chalk for a few weeks advertising “Tiesto,” and by our powers combined, we deduced that he/she/they/it was/were for Spring Fling.  I like to think that working at a college keeps me young and hip, but this is a dirty lie.  (Do the kids still say “spaz?”)  I have no clue who or what Tiesto is.  It makes me feel even older knowning that a couple of years ago when Snoop Dogg was the Spring Fling headliner, it was the students who didn’t know who he was.  After all, the incoming students of the Class of 2016 were born after “What’s My Name?” was released. 

So thanks to the sleuthing of one N. Elizabeth Pinnie, we have learned that Tiesto is a Dutch trance DJ, and Penn students are willing to camp out on a weeknight for the chance to see him perform live, even sleep on the steps of Sweeten as my fellow Sweeteners are forced to step on their blankets and bags of Doritos just to make it through the front door.

Unfortunately for the students, they’ll have to wait until April 13th for their Tiesto dreams to become reality. You, on the other hand, can enjoy his jams right now!

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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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Locust Walk Talk: A Night in Boston

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

I had the opportunity to host an Alumni Relations gathering in Boston this October featuring Eric J. Furda, Dean of Admissions.  In conjunction with the Admissions Office’s “Introduction to Penn” program the night prior, Alumni Relations partnered with the dean for a general reception.  Our event was open to all alumni in the Boston area and we were thrilled by the great response.

The Pru Building as seen from Back Bay

In my last Top Penn List post, I alluded to going into more detail about this great evening in Boston. Our room in the Marriott was set up in Penn navy to contract the reds in the carpet.  With a few simple touches, the reception was the subtly Penn themed-background for the evening.

Excited alumni started showing up 15 minutes early and were enthusiastic to engage in conversation with older friends and new acquaintances.  I was delighted to feel the enthusiasm of our Boston alumni and I was happy that two of my colleagues, Cat from Admissions and Brett from Wharton, were present to mingle and join in the exchange.

Event Set Up

As soon as the Dean showed up, he entered the lively conversations, learning what was of interest to our alumni that evening.  I followed him into the room where he was greeted by groups of alumni huddled around in chat.  Energy in the room of the great, engaging discussions that folks were having was so impressive.

Almost apologetically, Eric asked for everyone’s attention to give an update on the Admissions process as well as the state of the student body.  The rapt crowd appreciated the insider’s view of life at Penn and eagerly awaited the right time to ask their questions.  Folks were inquisitive and ask direct questions.  The Dean answered the queries with aplomb and encouraged the interaction.  The allotted time for remarks was doubled and almost tripled as alumni wanted to know more.

The energy of the room

After Eric spoke, I was able to slip into the event.  I had the rare opportunity to be an alumnus at an event that I just happened to be running.  In working behind the scene, I don’t get to experience the impact of these events.  However I was able to find two classmates: Clé, a fellow reunion volunteer, and Ari, one of my Class’s Vice Presidents.  We had a wonderful time catching up.

Both we’re candid about the event.  They told me how impressed they were at the Dean’s message and earnest his work is.  Also, they were very interested in staying updated on the Dean’s mission.  I was encouraged that they will be at later events.  It was great to see them and we made plans for one of the next times I’m up in Boston.

The Dean chatting with alumni

I know why our alumni events are so important – to inform us about Penn, to provide access to our thought leaders and to reconnect with our Penn friends.  Now, I have a greater appreciation for our work since having the quick occasion to see an event like this from the alumni side and enjoying its great energy.

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Locust Walk Talk: A Small World & Craic

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

While I was on vacation, I got the following tweet:

Earlier that day, I had a difficult choice to make upon returning to Dublin from our driving tour of the Irish countryside. Do I continue with my parents to see the literary treasures at Trinity College (which I had seen before) or go to the Guinness Storehouse (which is missed seeing 12 years ago) without them? We had spent most of the vacation together and I wanted to see their reaction to the Book of Kells, the illuminated manuscript of the four Gospels in Latin and one of Ireland’s national treasures. Yet, I had made this thorny decision before and missed out on the Storehouse because of it.

So, beer won out this time for me over books.  Sounds like the stereotypical decision of a college student, no?

While I was at the Guinness Storehouse on the tour, getting my serendipitous second Guinness (a random fellow and former rugger seeing me in my Dubai rugby t-shirt handed me his ticket for his free Guinness at the end of the tour,) my parents saw my brother’s good friends and my follow Penn alumnus two kilometers away from me at Trinity.  I knew that Matt was going to be in Ireland; he told me that he and his wife had made rather last-minute plans to visit the country and I shared some tips before we all embarked.  However, there weren’t too many days that we were going to be in the same place at the same time.

It was a lark that my parents ran into Matt and his wife, Emily.  My folks had finished their tour of Trinity and the Book of Kells and Matt and Emily had missed the last tour.  Heading in opposite directions, all four of them quite literally bumped into each other.  Or so Emily explained later to me.

Looking toward Trinity College from the Gravity Bar of the Guinness Storehouse

During my trip, I had gone out of my way to make sure that I chatted with strangers at the bars.  However it was rather funny that I didn’t meet many locals. There were Germans and Australians, Irish tourists from the more rural counties and even some Philadelphians.  Only once in Killarney did I meet a local – born and raised in the town, he was traveling in a group with a Filipino and a German.

On my last night in Dublin City Centre, I meet Matt and Emily at the Porterhouse Central, one of the five restaurant and bar fronts of Ireland’s largest genuine Irish brewery.  This place was packed with locals and only a few tourists.  As we shared our stories of Ireland and our lack of meeting locals, we were swept into one table’s hens night, a.k.a. bachelorette party, who chatted us up since they heard our accents.  Another table was celebrating their fifth wedding anniversary and their first “date night” out since the birth of their son.  Yet others that we met were out for a night on the town. Throughout it all, Matt and I continually were asked how we knew each other (since Matt and Emily were obviously married) and we told everyone that we knew each other through Penn.

Matt, GEN’08, and I, C’95, having enjoyed a few pints in Dublin

Many of the Dubliners that we chatted with were impressed with Penn and they knew that it wasn’t Penn State.  They asked us if we had visited Trinity and wanted to know more about our experiences in college compared to theirs.  All in all, the craic was grand!

I’m always amazed how our tight connections as alumni and the reputation of Penn are well received all around the world.  Fortunately, it took me a night in Dublin to remind me how great being an alumnus of Penn is.

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Locust Walk Talk: Penn Traditions Family Picnic on College Green

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

I can’t believe that it’s been over two months since I wrote about things to do when the students aren’t at Penn. Over the last week, campus’s energy has increased as student volunteers, like the Phins come back for training before move-in. The buzz culminated for us this past Thursday as Alumni Relations welcomed the class of 2015 and their parents.

Welcome

Penn Traditions Family Picnic serves as brief respite for parents and incoming first years from the move in process.  Alumni Relations and Penn Traditions welcome all to grab a bite to eat and relax on College Green.  Everything now seems so unfamiliar and imposing.  Yet, the view from the grass on a red or blue blanket is of new beginning and opportunities.

Families and the incoming Class of 2015, getting a bite to eat

There’s College Hall, Wednesday’s site of an introductory class.  There’s Van Pelt library, the future site of an all-nighter to write a research paper.  There’s Split Button, a midnight study break where students play Whac-A-Mole with friends. (Seriously, I did this a few times to blow off some finals steam.)

The Penn Band entertaining the crowd

Now, it’s fodder for memories – the grown-up versions of the first day of School.  A young student takes her first steps to independence.  Parents acknowledge the son has grown-up well.  A brother is inspired by his sister and looks forward to his college search.  Grandmothers and grandfathers are in awe of their granddaughter’s achievements. These are all moments for everyone to be proud.

Signing the Class of 2015 banner – this banner follows the class throughout their four years at Penn and beyond

This all subtext, though.  For now, parents, freshman and transfer students are on the green, sharing a soda, eating some fun and enjoying the break.  It doesn’t seem too important right now, but this picnic will be the first of all lifelong Penn traditions that each student will experience.

Taking a very deserved break on hillside of College Green

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Locust Walk Talk: Penn MBA Panel Partnerships

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

Last month, I traveled to DC to attend a club-hosted event, sponsored by Kaplan Test Prep: the MBA Admissions Panels.  Through the work of an alumnus serving on our Alumni Programming Committee of the Penn Alumni Board of Directors, he made the connection with the test preparation company to give our Clubs the opportunity to partner together to offer this informative discussion to our alumni.  This event started as a single discussion in Boston and has evolved into a multi-city panel event.

Hosts and sponsors of the MBA Panel

Our young alumni who are contemplating going back to graduate or professional school are looking for advice on how to apply.  We are able to offer this chance those thinking about business school.  Working with Kaplan, we invite admissions officers from Harvard Business School, Kellogg School of Management, MIT Sloan Management, Stanford Graduate School of Business, and Penn’s own Wharton to explain the application process, as well as talk about the aspects of admissions process.

Kaplan and Club Members working registration

Moderated by a new member of the Penn Alumni Club of Washington, DC, the admissions officers elaborated about many of the facets on the process, including test scores, essays, work experience, volunteer work, MBA interviews and more.  After the conversation, our moderator asked questions submitted to the panel by attendees prior.  These questions went into more depth about specifics and the panel noted how very thoughtful the crowd was.  At the conclusion of the panel, the speakers are available for our attendees to get more information about specific programs and talk one-on-one.

Congressional Room of the Washington Hilton fills up

Currently, the Penn Alumni Clubs in Washington, Philadelphia and New York work with Kaplan to present this event. In DC, the event was a success with 300 alumni and friends in attendance.  Club members and Kaplan employees were busy checking in all those who signed in on-line as well as taking care of the walk-on registrants.

The advice that I gleaned from the panel was that most people who apply to these selective MBA programs have the skills and the rigor to do the work.  The fact remains that more people apply than there are spots in an incoming class, so one needs to differentiate oneself from the applicant pool.  Honest, thoughtful and well-written essays are the key to telling the story about how one would both stand out and fit in at the Business School of choice.

Attendees listening and taking notes

I think this advice can be relevant to all us, regardless future aspirations, as long as we aim to be honest, thoughtful and clear in our objectives, we will stand out and be able to work together to get the goals for which we’re striving.

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Locust Walk Talk: The Penn Museum

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

I love the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.  One of my favorite reasons is its temporary exhibits.  I profoundly remember one exhibit, the “Track of the Rainbow Serpent: Australian Aboriginal Paintings of the Wolfe Creek Crater.”

In 2005, I was planning to travel to Australia and I was consuming anything I could about the country to be more informed.  I watched Rabbit Proof Fence and re-watched Muriel’s Wedding.  I read Neville Shute’s On the Beach and A Town Like Alice (a.k.a. The Legacy), Bill Bryson’s In a Sunburnt Country, Tim Winton’s Cloudstreet and even Colleen McCullough’s classic, The Thornbirds.  There was even an Animal Planet show that I stumbled upon and watched about a marsupial surrogacy program, which paired human volunteers with orphaned marsupial to recreate a pouch-like environment using book bags to help in there development and growth.  (What a tear jerker. If you don’t cry at folks trying to treat a sick wombat with an infection, you have no heart)! If it was Australia-related, I was there.

In the middle of my building excitement, I learned there was an exhibit of Aboriginal work at the Penn Museum. I was thrilled.  I searched on line for some articles to learn more about Aboriginal Art, and soon visited the Museum.

“Red Rock (Ngaimangaima)” by Daisy Kungah from Billiluna, 2002. Image courtesy of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

The culture of Aboriginal peoples is one of the world’s oldest continuous cultures, art traditions and belief system.  Though interpreted differently group by group, the creation story centers around the Rainbow Serpent, one of the important creative forces in the cosmology, and his travels to create existence during a mystical state called Dreamtiming that transcends time.

Image courtesy of Shreyans Bhansali, C’05, ENG’05

In particular, this exhibit is comprised of works from the Djaru Aboriginal people living by the Wolfe Creek Crater in Western Australia.  The story of a meteorite landing was interpreted as a star falling to Earth.  Wrapped around the light of the falling star is the Rainbow Serpent. The Serpent makes the hole in the new crater upon impact, then he continues to burrow and move underground and through the area to create waterways, landscape features. The Serpent’s movements and creation opened the land up for the Aboriginals’ First Ancestors to come and live.

The Djaru are stewards of this land and due to sacredness of the area custom prohibits them from directly discussing the story. Yet, through painting, using traditional techniques and colors, they can share the stories through art. The art is bold, using bright colors and traditional symbols for water, watering holes, stars and people.  Without speaking, these paintings tell the stories of the traditional way of life for the Djaru.

“Kandimalal (Wolfe Creek Crater) and the Rainbow Serpent” by Boxer Milner from Billiluna, 2000. Image courtesy of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Thanks to the efforts of the Penn Museum, I had an Australian cultural experience that I wouldn’t have had anywhere in the world as I prepared for my trip.  I gained an appreciation for Aboriginal culture and I didn’t have to leave my figurative backyard to get it.

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Locust Walk Talk: Locust Walk Renovation

Author: Casey Ryan, C’95

As students, I’m sure that you have strolled along this major pedestrian thoroughfare at one point on another.  Now, the walkway is under construction starting with the 3600 block this summer and will continue to the 3800 and 3900 blocks this fall.

Locust Walk is the place to go to bump into other students and peers.  It is more than a walkway; it serves as a social and interactive path between college houses (a.k.a. dorms) and classrooms.  Each and every time during my senior spring semester I would run from my house on Sansom and hop on the Walk to get to my either my Linguistics or Business Italian class in Williams Hall, I would see several of my classmates and friends.  We would catch up on last week’s cast party or make plans for that weekend, and I would be inevitably late for class.  Yet, my Penn classmates and I weren’t the only things traveling along the walk.  The renovation includes the replacement of underground utilities and the paved surface.  In addition to the thousands of students, faculty and staff that traverse the 20 and ½ foot wide Walk, electricity, gas, water, telecommunications, and sewage all passed under our feet. This infrastructure will be improved during the renovations as well.

For now, though, the intensity of the work in a confined space requires that students, faculty and staff to be re-routed from the work area.  The temporary walkways provided by the contractor for safety, will have to serve as the major social conduit through campus.

For more articles about the Locust Walk Renovation, visit:

The Daily Pennsylvanian: Construction tears up Locust Walk

Under the Button: Locust Walk Is Getting All Torn Up This Summer

Facilities: Locust Walk Renovation

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Locust Walk Talk: Fall Forward

For our newly minted alumni, yesterday marks the high point of Alumni Weekend and Commencement at Penn, and the ceremony on Franklin Field is the crown jewel. In their last footfalls as students, they process from Hamilton Village (aka Superblock), over the 38th Street Bridge and onto Locust Walk. Penn Staff and West Philadelphia neighbors await the procession and congratulate the marchers along their way.

Graduates Processing down Locust Walk for Commencement as Alumni representatives greet them

Starting at 36th Street, Penn Alumni, ranging from our most venerable to most recent, line Locust Walk to represent the over 270,000 living graduates of the University in welcoming the class of 2011 into this great network with “all the rights, privileges and responsibilities which pertain to [their] degrees.” The class continues to the stadium cheered on by their professors who laud them for their years of diligent work that brought them to this day. Finally, they enter Franklin Field and are greeted by the warm loving roar of applause from their parents, spouses, partners, family and friends. Each one is a rock star, walking on the stage for the thrill of their lives.

Steeped with history and tradition, the ceremony starts solemnly with convocation and the singing of the National Anthem. Dr. Gutmann delivers her Commencement Address, giving a top ten list of lessons learned from the movies (don’t be surprised if I make this an upcoming Top Penn list post), and the Provost announces the recipients of various teaching awards and student honors. Between the conferral of degrees honoris causa and the degrees from the 12 schools of the University, Denzel Washington, HON’11, PAR’13, delivers a very poignant Commencement speech full of charm, modesty, humor, sincerity and sage advice.

Denzel Washington listens to his introduction at Penn's 255th Commencement ceremony

Mr. Washington admits that he is nervous to be in front of a crowd of thousands of people. He is used to knowing that millions of people watch him all the time – in movies – but when thousands of people can watch him as he can see them as well; he admits that he’s afraid of making a fool of himself. This launches him into lesson of his address is: Fall Forward. In order to succeed, each of us needs to embrace our failures. Since if we don’t fail, we’re not trying. Therefore, if you are going to fall, fall forward to see where you are going and find a way to continue in that direction after you fall.

Denzel Washington delivering Penn's Commencement address

Mr. Washington shares with the crowd his personal experience with failure before his success with an amusing and charismatic story of his first audition for a Broadway musical. Not being a singer and unable to navigate the larger-than-life styling of musical acting, he is not called back. Yet, Mr. Washington muses, “if you hang around a barber shop long enough, sooner or later, you’re going to get a haircut.” This practical pearl of wisdom emphasized both the secret to his success as well as the advice for our alumni: failure is inevitable, but success is not. Even Edison failed a thousand times before his 1001st experiment gave the world the light bulb.

From MSNBC / Getty Images

As with all things Penn, the ceremony ends with the singing of the Red and Blue, and true to the etymology of the word, commencement, it becomes the first Proud Penn activity that the graduates start as the new class of amazing Penn Alumni.

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