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Architects Selected for Town Center West

By Jeffrey Lott

The College has selected Cope Linder Architects to design Town Center West (TCW)—including an inn, restaurant, and expanded campus bookstore—planned for the southeast corner of campus and across from the existing town center of Swarthmore Borough.
This summer, Cope Linder will begin design and will work with the College to shepherd the proposed project through the [...]

Baseball Sweeps Hopkins at Home, Wins 20 Games,
and Finishes at .500 in Centennial Play

By Mark Anskis and Victor Brady ’13

Baseball (20-14, 9-9 CC)
The baseball team secured 20 wins for the second-consecutive year.
A home sweep of nationally ranked Johns Hopkins marked the first time the Garnet had beaten the perennial powerhouse since 2000, the first time the Blue Jays had been swept by a Centennial Conference (CC) opponent since 2007, and Swarthmore baseball’s first-ever victory [...]

From the President

By President Rebecca Chopp

Menander, the Greek dramatist, once said, “The character of a man is known from his conversations.”
It is also the case, I think, that the character of a college is often reflected in its conversations. So, let me describe, briefly, the conversations we are having in our strategic planning process and then share with you my [...]

Board Gives Green Light to Inn Project

By Nancy Nowicki Nicely

Picture a group of visiting scholars on campus attending a conference on the future of the liberal arts. Or alumni gathering in a comfortable inn and restaurant space on campus, meeting with faculty and students to discuss the College’s vision and commitment to sustainability issues. Imagine faculty, students, and staff mingling with Borough residents at [...]

A Thoughtful Giver

By Jennifer Baldino Bonett

At Swarthmore, Eugene Lang ’38 is legendary. His gifts have created three buildings—the Lang Music Building, the Eugene and Theresa Lang Performing Arts Center, and the Lang Center for Civic and Social Responsibility—as well as the Theresa Lang Garden of Fragrance, student financial aid funds, endowed professorships and staff support, and the 30-year-old Lang Opportunity [...]

Misunderstanding History

By Carol Brévart-Demm

When Sudharshan Seneviratne, a professor of archaeology at the University of Peradineya, Sri Lanka, (listen: Seneviratne’s lecture) first visited Swarthmore in 1990 to give a talk, he found the area around Parrish Hall thronging with students, faculty, and staff members protesting against the Gulf War. Although his talk had to be postponed until later that [...]

Love Those Plantains and Oh, Those Yucca Fries!

By Susan Clarey

“My favorite bar is Caribbean bar,” says Ashley Oudenne ’11. “Before coming to Swarthmore, I had never had plantains or yucca fries, so trying them for the first time freshman year was exciting. Now, I always make time to go to Sharples for Caribbean bar.”
Oudenne has company. In a not-so-scientific study of food “bars” at [...]

150 Years Ago: The Dream of a College

By Christopher Densmore

The idea to create what we know today as Swarthmore College was first raised at a meeting in Baltimore in October 1860, and, by spring 1861—coinciding with the beginning of Civil War hostilities at Fort Sumter—committees of Friends from Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York had been organized to solicit subscriptions (on forms such as the [...]

College Presidents are in the "Pink Zone" for Breast Cancer Awareness

It was quite a night for Phineas the Phoenix when he got to pal around with two college presidents at the same time: While Swarthmore’s Rebecca Chopp (right) and her longtime friend Bryn Mawr’s Jane McAuliffe served as honorary coaches at the Garnet’s annual WBCA Pink Zone game to promote breast cancer awareness, ace cheerleader [...]

Rich in Tone and Jazz History

By Carol Brévart-Demm

Practice Room 426 in the Lang Music Building is the new home to a beautiful old Steinway grand piano, a gift to the College from Anthony Marks ’81. According to Bernadette Dunning, the administrative coordinator in the Music Department, student pianists vie to play the lovely old instrument and enjoy its rich tone. No less [...]