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Alumni
Award of Merit Citations
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Cynthia
Warner Johnson Crowley, CW52
A
champion of womens sports, you garnered 12 varsity letters
at Penn, served as a member of the Womens Athletic Board,
and earned membership in our Athletic Hall of Fame. As an
undergraduate you excelled in golf, basketball, and softball
and were elected to ATHLON, the Womens Athletics Honor
Society. A thinker and student leader as well as an athlete,
you majored in philosophy, joined the Kappa Alpha Theta
sorority, and were elected vice president of your senior
class. With consummate fairness, you credit three relativesyour
grandfather and your Penn alumni father and your husband
ññwith encouraging you to achieve your personal best in
all things. Today, you are both an award-winning educator
and a Penn immortal, with a team room in the Palestra named
in your honor.
Clearly, you inspire others to greatness. With your champion
athlete daughter, Cynthia Wetmore Crowley, you generously
sponsor the Ivy Softball Championship Trophy and the Farquhar-Baker
Ivy Womens Basketball Championship Trophy. Recently, reflecting
on your own glory days of basketball, you decided to create
the Harshberger-Johnson-Brendel Prize, which honors more
than 60 years of womens varsity basketball at Penn.
Your service on Penns Secondary School Committee suggests
another of your passionsññ education. A high school teacher
for more than 26 years, you have taught some 3,000 students
to commit themselves to lifelong learning and the improvement
of society. But you did not stop there. You carried your
message even further as a member of the Delegation to China
for Gifted and Talented Education. Your distinction in your
field has won you a place in Whos Who in American Education.
You have said of the Penn prize you established for womens
basketball that it provides tangible evidence of that timeless,
invisible bond that holds all of us together as Pennsylvaniansññfaculty,
students, alumni, strangers, friendsññin the long Red and
Blue line. Finding no words more compelling than your own,
Penn Alumni is delighted to further strengthen that timeless
bond by presenting you with the Alumni Award of Merit on
this fifteenth day of October 2004.
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David
Patrick France, C89
Living
the kind of multi-faceted life for which Penn strives to prepare
its students, you excel as independent promoter and producer,
artist, and lawyer in New York City. As a Penn student, you
were an active resident of the W. E. B. Du Bois College House,
joined the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, and graduated with a
degree in international relations. Already a talented performer,
innovator, and entrepreneur, you were a founding member of Penns
now thriving Arts House Dance Company, where you served as both
a dancer and a choreographer. You also participated in other
arts endeavors such as Ebony Inspiration and Spring Fling. We
are delighted that you have continued to choreograph your life
to include Penn.
Very much a social activist, you strengthen the Penn community
through your work on the Secondary School Committee of Brooklyn,
and as a member of the Penn Alumni Diversity Alliance and the
James Brister Society. In order to galvanize African-American
attendance for your 10th reunion, you co-hosted Black to School
99, which was a follow-up to the famous Black to School
party you conceived and hosted at the beginning of your senior
year. Igniting the project with your abundant energy and creativity,
you helped throw a nationwide party that brought African-American
alumni together from seven cities for what you dubbed, The
Penn Blackout. Capitalizing on the momentous enthusiasm and
turnout of these events, you felt you could do more and helped
devise the idea of 250-in-5, an initiative that began with
the goal of raising $250,000 within five years to fund the W.
E. B. Du Bois College House Endowed Scholarship. Under your
leadership as co-chair, the initial goal was quickly surpassed
and you are now approaching your new million-dollar target.
You were also a key member of your 15th reunions planning and
gift committees, helping the Class of 1989 set attendance records
and win the 2004 Class Award of Merit.
An active alumnus, you attend many Penn events both in New York
City and on campus, have helped plan others such as PennFest
NYC, and, even better, you continue to create them. Drawing
on your professional skills, you founded and chaired the 2002
and 2003 Penn Media Summits in New York, day-long events exploring
the media industries and all they encompass. Each Penn Media
Summit attracted an incredibly diverse group of over 200 alumni,
who were inspired by numerous panels that entertained as well
as informed. The event also engaged select current students,
who were able to attend for free and share in unique mentoring
opportunities. You also co-created Bacchanal Redux, an innovative
event that will bring together Penn performing arts groups and
their NYC alumni to perform forand network withone another.
Dazzling us with your creative thinking, careful planning, and
expressive presentation, you have increased Penns stature on
campus, in New York, and across the nation. This fifteenth day
of October 2004, Penn Alumni now proudly adds its inaugural
Young Alumni Award to your many glowing credits.
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Ira
Harkavy, C70, Gr79
Passionate,
idealistic, and committed to change, you not only exemplified
the socially conscious student of the sixties, you went on to
help make your concerns a core part of the Universitys mission.
A leading voice on campus, you protested the war in Vietnam
and the shortcomings of American institutions, including Penn,
in advancing social justice. Unfortunately, not all of the problems
went away immediately. Fortunately, neither did you. The Penn
of today, the Penn that you helped shape, is an engaged, civic
university where students are better educated and more service-oriented
than ever before. It is one of which alumni can be particularly
proud.
After earning two degrees from Penn, you stayed right here,
serving as Vice Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, doing
the teaching that you love, and making Penns relationship with
West Philadelphia a life-long project. The parent, with your
alumna wife, of two alumnae daughters, you are also a parent
of the modern service-learning movement. The concept of academically-based
community service as practiced at Penn, with its emphasis on
research, teaching, problem solving, and structural change,
is copied around the world. Campus Compact, the national organization
that promotes service learning, gave you its highest honor,
the Thomas Ehrlich Award, named for a former Penn provost and
University Trustee. You have led us in working with public schools,
non-profits, and communities of faith in confronting critical
societal problems. In 1992, you founded Penns Center for Community
Partnerships. Serving as Associate Vice President and Director
of the CCP, you travel around the country sharing your enthusiasm
for its mission and message and attract highly committed alumni
to its board.
As a teacher of history and urban studies, you are revered for
practicing what you teach. Students flock to your service-learning
seminars, where the democratic classroom is your hallmark, and
then go forth and make award-winning contributions of their
own. At Penn you have helped create an urban education minor,
a public interest anthropology concentration, and an urban health
track in the Health and Society major; you founded the Penn
Public Service Summer Internship Program, and helped found the
West Philadelphia Improvement Corps, the Philadelphia Higher
Education Network for Neighborhood Development, and the International
Consortium on Higher Education.
As an alumnus, you are one of Penns most compelling ambassadors,
going on the road for Alumni Relations to interact with fellow
graduates. Not surprisingly, alumni love hearing from you, as
do we all. Long may you continue to build upon Franklins great
tradition of linking theory and practice to create a better
world. It is with enormous gratitude and pride that Penn Alumni
presents you with the Alumni Award of Merit on this fifteenth
day of October 2004.
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David
I. Katzman, W63
For
over 30 years, you have been the heart and soul of a group known
for its heart and soulthe Long Island Alumni Club. More than
one member asserts with pride that you were both the reason
for their joining in the first place and for their continuing
enthusiasm and involvement. Serving as a Club officer for ten
years, you had many successes, but it was during your two-year
tenure as president that the Clubs membership and its treasury
increased threefold. Those accomplishments alone would have
earned you the clubs highest accoladethe Jack White Awardwhich
you were duly given in 1982.
As a Penn undergraduate, your great Penn spirit was already
much in evidence. Not only were you a member of the Sphinx Senior
Society, but you served as Sports Editor of The Daily Pennsylvanian.
Fortunately for us all, your enthusiasm for Penn athletics
has remained undiminished. Ever a loyal Quaker, you held the
position of the Long Island Clubs athletic chair for 20 years,
making enormous contributions to our pride and prowess. Your
efforts did not go unnoticed. In 1982, Penn Soccer presented
you with its Alumni of the Year Award. Over the years, you have
worked closely with coaches to recruit vigorously for the baseball,
soccer, and basketball teams, bringing us All-American athletes,
NBA draft choices, and Penn Athletic Hall-of-Famers.
A former member of the Penn Alumni Council of Representatives,
you have served as Chair of the Long Island Secondary School
Committee since 1994. Giving of yourself generously to the cause,
you have personally hosted and funded annual functions for students
and families and organized many other Penn events, including
award dinners and college fairs. In countless ways, you have
touched the lives of fellow Club members and alumni, prospective
and matriculating students, Penn faculty, administrators, Alumni
Council on Admissions representatives, and admissions officers.
Away from the University, you continue to personify the spirit
of Penn through your selfless commitment to community service.
If this were a DP sports headline it might read: Team
Player TriumphsLeads with His Heart. With our own heartfelt
cheers, Penn Alumni gratefully presents you on this fifteenth
day of October 2004 with the Alumni Award of Merit.
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E.
Gerald Riesenbach, W60
Recognized
in Philadelphia Magazines Best Lawyers issue as
being among the top in your profession, you have dedicated
countless hours ññ none of them billableññ to your alma
mater.
It
was 34 years ago that you first got on the case as a Capital
Gifts volunteer and Class Agent. Soon, you were volunteering
for The Penn Fund, where your talent for persuasion was
put to good use as part of the telethon brigade. From there,
you went on to serve for five years as Vice President of
the Class of 1960 and then for ten as its President. With
a dazzling display of leadership, you helped your class
become the first to raise $1,000,000 for its 25th reunion.
Since then, you have made record-setting a regular occurrence
for your class and have been invited to instruct the reunion
committees of other classes. For the past several years
you have been an invaluable participant in the Penn Reunion
Leadership Conferences.
Always in the forefront of progress, you contributed to
the momentum that has brought alumni back to Penn in droves.
During your recently completed term as President of the
Organized Classes, you ushered in many significant changes
including a new name: the Alumni Class Leadership Council.
Your expertise has come into play yet again as chair of
a review of the Penn Alumni By-Laws. Simultaneously,
you are helping us engage a growing and diverse alumni community
by serving as Vice President for Governance on the Penn
Alumni Board of Directors and as a member of the Executive
Committee and the Council of Representatives. Across the
University, whether as part of a fundraising committee for
the Annenberg Center or personally advocating for the University
of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology,
you take every opportunity to advance Penn.
The proud father of two Penn alumni and a highly engaged
civic leader, you inspire us with your loyalty, energy,
and commitment. At past ceremonies recognizing Penns most
dedicated volunteers, you have been among our most enthusiastic
celebrators. Tonight, we celebrate you. On this fifteenth
day of October 2004, please accept with Penn Alumnis gratitude
and esteem, the Alumni Award of Merit.
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Matthew
Rosler, C96
A
Long Island transplant to Southern California, you live an eventful
lifeññ and lucky for us, many of the events have to do with
Penn.
First of allññyou attend events. Whatever the Penn functionññbreakfast
or dinner, film screening or summit, reception or celebration
ññ if its in LA, you are there. Secondññyou promote events.
You help design and produce websites and are always at the ready
to promote the latest in on-line tools that keep all alumni
everywhere tapped-in to Penn functions. And when it comes to
being part of an event, you are ready at the drop of a hat,
mask, or wig to take to the stage. But where you really shine
in the event department is in their creation.
As a leading member and recent president of the University of
Pennsylvania Alumni Association of Southern Californiaperhaps
better known as Penn Club LAone of your many duties included
running the annual Penn in Pictures, featuring local alumni
who work in the entertainment industry. Its overwhelming success
inspired you with another idea. Why not create a film and music
festival that would showcase emerging talent rather than already
established artists, and why not include alumni from all around
the country? And so it was that PennFest LA was born. In addition
to featuring bands of alumni musicians and film clips directed,
produced, or starring Penn alumni, the festival spotlights work
by students in Penns Digital Media Design program. Now in its
fourth year, PennFest LA was the model for its East Coast counterpart,
PennFest NYC. The audience keeps comingand your credits keep
rolling. Already having served as a member of the Penn Alumni
Council of Representatives, you recently joined the Penn Alumni
Communications Committee with an eye toward reaching out to
our worldwide alumni through new and innovative technologies.
In the not too distant past, when you were a student in the
College, you earned kudos as a member of the Alpha Epsilon Pi
fraternity, Friars Senior Society, Pipe and Stein Senior Honor
Society, and, of course, Mask & Wig. Now, in recognition
of your ongoing loyalty, leadership, and talent for putting
Penn in the spotlight, Penn Alumni is pleased to present you
with its inaugural Young Alumni Award on this fifteenth day
of October 2004.
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FEATURE
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Homecoming 2004
PLUS: Alumni Award of Merit Citations
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