Student Perspective on Hey Day, 2012

Author: Kayleigh Smoot, C’13

It’s hard to believe after all the study sessions, club meetings,  rehearsals, midterms, papers, parties, dinners out in Center City, and everything in between that I’ve become a SENIOR here at Penn. This past Wednesday, I  donned my red shirt and hat, grabbed my cane, and headed to Hey Day with the rest of the class of 2013 to celebrate becoming seniors. It  felt incredibly special to partake in a Penn Tradition that has been around since 1916. As I frolicked around with my friends at the  picnic, taking pictures and eating delicious food (and each other’s  hats!), I couldn’t help but start to feel nostalgic. It finally hit me that three of my Penn undergraduate years had  passed me by. This bittersweet feeling continued throughout the day as  my classmates and I boisterously walked down Locust to head to College  Green. There, our class board and Penn’s wonderful, beloved President,  Dr. Amy Gutmann greeted us. After a brief “test” from Dr. Gutmann, she  pronounced us seniors, and we all joined in singing a rousing chorus of  “The Red & Blue.”

Me and my friends--I'm the one of the far right.

The school spirit was at an all time high and I’ve  never felt prouder to be a part of this University. After the  celebration died down, I started to reflect on how I only have one more year left at Penn and I fully intend on making it the best
yet. There are so many Penn Traditions I can’t wait to take part in  next year: Feb Club, Final Toast, Commencement. But at the same time,  I’m hoping the days go by slowly and I enjoy every moment.

You can view more photos of Hey Day here.

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Filed under Kayleigh, Student Perspective, Traditions

International Pay it Forward Day

Author: C. Hennessy, The Penn Fund

Hey, Penn community, did you know that today, April 26, is International Pay it Forward Day? In celebration of this philanthropic holiday, we would like to take this opportunity to thank the more than 20,000 alumni donors who have already given back to The Penn Fund this fiscal year. Your gifts help to fund the core priorities of a Penn undergraduate experience and make this campus one of the most vibrant and beloved in the Ivy League. Thank You!

Did you know that even the current senior class, the great Class of 2012, is paying it forward? With over 1,600 seniors giving back to date, the Class of 2012 is well positioned to be the first class in history to hit 1740 senior class donors. So today, on International Pay it Forward Day; join with us in supporting Penn. Your gift will directly fuel the fires of creativity, imagination, and innovation that make our students the best and brightest in the land.

Watch this quick video to learn more about what motivates the Class of 2012 to give back.

Make today – International Pay it Forward Day – the day you help to make a difference in the lives of undergraduates all across our Red and Blue campus.

On Pennsylvania!

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Filed under Colin H., The Penn Fund, Video, Videos

Final Toast

Author: Aimee LaBrie

We’re gearing up here for a day-long celebration, the fourth annual Final Toast for the Class of 2012 (you can read about last year’s celebration here). This event, sponsored by the Penn Traditions program, brings together the senior class to welcome juniors into the alumni community with  great food, live music, and a toast as the class of 2013 “moves up” into their senior year on Hey Day.

Here are a few behind-the-scenes photos:

Sign the pledge!

Very soon, this space will be filled with seniors.

Every participant gets a Final Toast mug as a memento.

The lovely Leigh Ann models one of the "Hey Safe" t-shirts.

Stay tuned for an update on the event very soon!

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Filed under Aimee L., Alumni Programming

Happy Philly Tech Week

Author: Lisa Marie Patzer

Ben Digitized

Ben Digitized

April 23 – 28 is Philly Tech Week.  According to the Philly Tech Week website, it is “a week-long celebration of technology and innovation in Philadelphia. The annual week of events is intended to grow the impact of this innovative region through programming focused on technology, collaboration and improving Philadelphia.”  Kicking off the week were several events throughout the region, including the Women in Tech Summit, April 21, at The Wharton School, University of Pennsylania.  The Women In Tech Summit brought women together to support, challenge, and empower other women at all stages of their careers. Their discussions included topics such as, “Get Better at Breaking Things: Test-Driven Development for Skill Building and Fun” and “Hacking the Gender Gap: A Hands-On Workshop for Boosting Gender Diversity in Tech.”  They also screened the film “Women in Technology is an OLD idea.”

As a new media artist and web designer, the topic of women and technology hits close to home.  This weekend, I will be presenting my interactive installation project VIDEO DIG at Hacking Big Art for Fun and Games, one of the panel discussions at the Grassroots Game Conference, happening concurrently with Philly Tech Week.  Here are a few images from VIDEO DIG, in case you are curious.

Arduino microcontroller

Arduino microcontroller

Interactive Video Projection and Light Display

Interactive Video Projection and Light Display

Video Still

Video Still

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Filed under Events, Lisa Marie Patzer, Philadelphia, The Arts, Uncategorized

MAYA 2012: Lords of Time at the Penn Museum

Author: Alex F., C’14

Finals aren’t the only end of the world this semester. Nestled between a French literature paper and a linguistics exam, MAYA 2012: Lords of Time will open at the Penn Museum on May 5th.

The new exhibition delves into the predictions of a 2012 apocalypse and their origins in Maya civilization. With over 150 objects, the exhibition combines the predicted end of the world we’ve read about in the media with what archaeologists and anthropologists truly know of this remarkable ancient civilization.

Many of the objects will be artifacts from Copan only recently excavated by Penn Museum archaeologists. As a high school student, I visited the Copan ruins in Honduras on a spring break trip, without any idea that excavations might be going on. Now, as a Penn student reading about archaeologists finding vessels and jewelry deep under the Copan pyramids, it’s impossible not to imagine some of my anthropology professors in Indiana Jones-like scenarios, trapped in ancient tombs and narrowly escaping dangerous predicaments.

And while I can’t say I’m looking forward to finals, I am excited about the opening weekend’s celebrations. What’s a better study break than an exciting new exhibition, music, arts, and a ribbon-cutting with the president of Honduras?

There’s more information on the Penn Museum’s MAYA 2012 site here:

(Photos courtesy of Kenneth Garrett).

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Filed under Alex F., Penn Museum, Student Perspective, The Arts, The Arts at Penn

I Remember: Halter Top Day

Author: Elizabeth Kimmelman Schwartz, C’04

Halter Top Day to me means springtime at Penn and the end of a long, awful winter.  I know some of you might be confused that I’m not referencing Hey Day or Spring Fling.  I bet some of you are wondering, “What on earth is Halter Top Day? They didn’t have that when I went to Penn!”  Ah, but you are wrong.  Halter Top Day has always existed,  even if you weren’t aware of its existence.

Halter Top Day is something one of my favorite sports writers, Bill Simmons coined in one of his weekly columns a few years ago.  Here is Urban Dictionary’s definition of it:

A term coined by Bill Simmons of ESPN in reference to the day when the weather finally becomes warm enough in a notoriously cold part of the country (i.e. the Northeast) that convertible tops can go down and girls can wear miniskirts and halter tops outdoors. Usually occurs in April.

I know, you’ve heard me reference my inner feminist on this blog, and now I’m writing about a term that possibly has sexist undertones.  I don’t care.  To a winter-hater like me, Halter Top Day is the best day of the year, sexist name and all.  Every year, from November through April, I basically curse myself for ever having left Los Angeles. I stare longingly at my flip flops and I angrily throw on my massive outerwear, including Uggs which are quite possibly the ugliest things I’ve ever put on my feet but I have yet to find anything as comfortably warm.  As a shoe lover, Uggs kill me.  As a cold weather hater, Uggs are my salvation.

Anyway, I digress.  After a long winter during which I am mainly miserable and randomly shout things out like, “THERE ARE BETTER WAYS TO LIVE!”  (my husband loves when I do that), Halter Top Day arrives and it is truly magical.

Halter Top Day is really at it’s best on college campuses, and Penn really knows how to do it up.  Girls wander out in jeans and tank tops (I don’t think halter tops are really in style anymore).  Guys throw on shorts and grab Frisbees.  Lines at the food trucks grow.  People walk around with iced Starbucks drinks instead of hot ones.  The green gets crowded with people hanging out on the lawn, tossing previously mentioned Frisbees, eating previously mentioned food truck lunches, and drinking previously mentioned iced Starbucks drinks.  You can’t find a seat at any of the tables on the patios, and while you are mildly annoyed, you also don’t care because the sun is out, you aren’t freezing and you know that anything is possible!  Friends literally greet each other as if they haven’t seen each other since November.  It’s both relaxing and exhilarating all at once.

Without even realizing what it was, since Bill Simmons didn’t coin the term until after I had graduated, I lived for Halter Top day in college.  I live for it now as an adult.  Simply put, it’s the best.

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Filed under Alumni Perspective, Elizabeth K., Memories of Penn

The Making of the Class of 1962 50th Reunion Yearbook

Author: Mari L. Meyer, GSE ’12

If you are one of the lucky members of the Class of 1962, you probably already have something to say about the 50th Reunion Yearbook* creation project that began back in early 2012.

Though the end result will be nothing short of a masterpiece of grand proportion, the journey to get here has been no piece of cake! The amount of work that has gone into this project from day one could not have been accomplished without the direction and perseverance of our visionaries, Class of ’62 Yearbook Co-Editors, Burt Follman and Sheila Gunther, our fearless, in-office Leader Lisbeth Willis, our graphic design guru Kelly Porter, and our “I don’t sleep, eat, or breathe until this book gets made”-work study student, Deirdre Bullard.

It’s been weeks since Deirdre slept last…We’ve begun to worry about her sanity!

Some of you may already know that I, Mari, was the frontline, down-in-the-trenches gal for this extraordinary undertaking for the Class of ’62er’s upcoming 50th reunion. That is to say, I was responsible for “technical assistance.” While I am by no means a technical wiz, I certainly was computer-savvy enough to help some folks create yearbook pages…Or was I? Each classmate was asked to work on a ½ page submission for their yearbook using an online site. The hope was that the final product for each page would look something like this:

Wishful thinking, Mari!


If I could have recorded my phone conversations with the amazing classmates of 1962, you would hear a beautiful symphony of groans, grunts, moans and chuckles—a sonata of sighs, or an opus of “Oy Vey, Mari!”—so to speak.  Fortunately, those ’62ers have got the stubborn perseverance, good humor, and incredible intellect to stick it out in these moments of despair—saving this grad-school damsel from technological burnout through their moving life stories, photos of their beautiful families, and wonderful wishes for my own success as a soon-to-be Penn alumna.

The 1962 Yearbook project proved to be an unpaved and unexpected adventure, but at least we were in it together!  I can say confidently that this book will find a permanent place on my own coffee table immediately upon its release this May!

In the meantime, I wish the Class of 1962 nothing but the very best, and will be celebrating their 50th reunion during my own graduation weekend. It is an honor to become a part of the Penn family, and this class was certainly the most colorful and memorable part of my induction!

 *To order a Class of 1962 50th Reunion Class Yearbook, please call Mari Meyer or Dee Dee Bullard at 215-898-8209. You will also be able to purchase them at the reunion during Alumni Weekend, May 11 – 14, 2012.

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Filed under Alumni Programming, Alumni Weekend, Mari M., Reunions, Student Perspective

A Fun Night with Penn Baseball at “The Bank”

Author: Jonathan Cousins, SEAS’14

Last night, I hopped on SEPTA, and took the Broad Street Line down to AT&T station, and the Philadelphia sports complex. Upon my arrival, I saw many people walking towards the Wells Fargo Center, en route to the Sixers game. Farther along, Lincoln Financial Field and Citizens Bank Park sat, seemingly empty, as the Eagles are in the off-season and the Phillies were in San Francisco. But, at least for one night, there was baseball to be played, as Penn and St. Joes squared off in the final of the Liberty Bell Classic.

The Liberty Bell classic is a 20 year old tournament designed to allow the Philadelphia area schools to play each other in baseball. The tournament features eight teams, and the final two meet at Citizens Bank Park. Neither Penn nor St. Joes had ever won the tournament, so no matter who would win the game, it would be a new team engraved on the trophy.

As I walked up to the stadium, it was strange to see the third base gate closed off. Even when I got to the first base side, there were only two ticket windows open, and only one entrance gate.  The Phillies and their 42,000 faithful create a buzz at the park that simply can’t be replicated. So, walking into the ballpark, many of the concessions stands were closed, and everyone was being funneled into the seven sections right behind home plate. It was almost like I could hear the ghosts of baseball whispering. I knew what sounds I expected to hear, but they weren’t there.  There was no buzz of the crowd and no hot dog or beer vendors yelling. But it was still baseball, and there was something magical about seeing Penn’s entire roster being announced, and lining up in front of the dugout normally inhabited by major leaguers.

There were a lot of things missing from the park that night, but also many new things. It was strange looking out into the sea of empty blue seats, echoing the sounds of baseball across the stadium. But it was definitely the only time when $5 would allow me to sit directly behind home plate at a major league park. The Quaker also made an appearance, and quickly gained an entourage of five kids who followed him anywhere he went.

Once the game began, Penn fell behind on a home run early on, and failed to get the clutch hitting they needed to come back. Unfortunately, they lost 6-3. The night was something that I have never experienced before, getting to watch baseball in Citizens Bank Park with only 300 other people, and it was a lot of fun.  Hopefully, next year. Penn will take home the title!

 

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Filed under Athletics, Jonathan C., Philadelphia, Student Perspective

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

It’s a Beautiful Day for Tennis at Penn Park

Author: Stephanie Yee, C’08

I played tennis at the Hamlin Tennis Courts at Penn Park for the first time this past Saturday. The courts are beautiful! I look forward to playing there more often. On Sunday, I returned to Hamlin as a spectator to cheer on the Penn Women’s Tennis  team. It was my first Penn Women’s tennis match, and I was so impressed with the talent, skill, and determination of the Quakers on the court.

Walking to the Hamlin Tennis Courts from Walnut Street

Penn students playing football at Penn Park

End of the Penn Women’s Tennis doubles match

Five reasons you should go to Hamlin Tennis Courts:

  1. Penn Women’s Tennis players Jules Rodin and Sol Eskenazi are ranked in national doubles.
  2. Penn students can reserve the outdoor courts for free.
  3. Penn Parking Services’ new Occasional Parking Program offers discounted parking at Penn Park.
  4. Tennis is fun to watch and fun to play.
  5. The weather forecast for the rest of the week is sunny and gorgeous.

 

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Filed under Athletics, Penn Park, Philadelphia, Stephanie Y.