Swarthmore College is a
private,
independent,
liberal arts
college in the United States with an enrollment of about 1,500
students.
The college is located in the borough of
Swarthmore
, Pennsylvania, 11 miles (17.7 km) southwest of
Philadelphia
.
The school was founded in 1864 by a committee of
Quakers who were members of Philadelphia Yearly
Meeting, Baltimore Yearly Meeting and New York Yearly Meeting of
the Religious Society of Friends. Swarthmore dropped its religious
affiliation and became officially non-sectarian in the early 20th
century. The college has been
coeducational since its founding.
Today, the college is known for a rigorous intellectual character,
shaped by a commitment to social responsibility and the legacy of
Swarthmore's Quaker heritage. Bucking a recent trend amongst peer
institutions, Swarthmore has also resisted
grade inflation.
Swarthmore
is a member of the Tri-College Consortium, a cooperative
arrangement among Swarthmore College, Bryn Mawr College
, and Haverford College
. The consortium shares an integrated library
system of more than three million volumes, and students are able to
cross-register in courses at all three institutions.
A common Quaker
heritage amongst the consortium schools and the University of
Pennsylvania
also extends this cross-registration agreement to
classes at Penn's College of Arts and Sciences.
Swarthmore's campus is coextensive with the
Scott Arboretum.
History
The name "Swarthmore" has its roots in early Quaker history.
In
England
, Swarthmoor
Hall
in Cumbria
was the home
of Thomas and Margaret Fell in 1652 when George Fox, fresh from his epiphany atop Pendle Hill
in 1651, came to visit. The visitation
turned into a long association as Fox persuaded Thomas and Margaret
Fell and the inhabitants of the nearby village of Fenmore of
Friendly, and Swarthmoor was used for the first Friends'
meetings.
The school was founded in 1864 by a committee of Quakers who were
members of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting, New York Yearly Meeting and
Baltimore Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends.
Edward Parrish was its first president.
Lucretia Mott was among those who insisted
that Swarthmore be coeducational.
Solomon Asch and
Wolfgang Köhler were two noted
psychologists who were professors at Swarthmore. Asch joined the
faculty in 1947 and served until 1966, while Köhler came to
Swarthmore in 1935 and served until his retirement in 1958. The
Asch conformity
experiments took place at Swarthmore.
Academics
Reputation
Parrish Hall contains the admissions, housing, and financial aid
offices, along with dormitories on the upper floors.
In its 2009
college
ranking,
U.S. News & World Report
ranked Swarthmore as the number-three liberal arts college, with an
overall score of 97/100, behind Williams and Amherst
,
respectively. Since the inception of the U.S. News rankings,
Amherst, Williams, and Swarthmore are the only colleges to have
been ranked #1 on the liberal arts rankings list, with the three
colleges often switching places with each other every year.
Swarthmore has been ranked the number one liberal arts college in
the country a total of six times so far (the most recent being in
2002).
Some sources, including Greene's Guides, have called Swarthmore one
of the "
Little Ivies".
In the March/April 2007 edition of
Foreign Policy magazine, a ranking
of the top twenty institutions for the study of international
relations placed Swarthmore as the highest-ranked
undergraduate-only institution, coming in at 15. The only other
undergraduate-focused programs to make the list were Dartmouth and
Williams, although neither school is exclusively
undergraduate.
Swarthmore ranks 10th in a 2004 Wall Street Journal survey of
feeder schools to elite business, medical, and law schools.
The Higher Education Data Sharing Consortium published a
comprehensive study on the Ph.D. productivity of all undergraduate
programs in October 2006. The study found that Swarthmore ranked
third among all institutions of higher education in the United
States as measured by the percentage of graduates who go on to earn
Ph.D.'s. Only Caltech, at number one, and Harvey Mudd, in second,
outranked Swarthmore, with Reed, MIT, Carleton, Oberlin, Bryn Mawr,
University of Chicago, and Grinnell rounding out the top ten,
respectively.
PC World ranked Swarthmore as the 4th most wired college in the
nation in a 2006 report.
In 2008, The Princeton Review gave Swarthmore a 99 (the highest
possible score) on their Admissions Selectivity Rating.
In a 2008 ranking of undergraduate programs by Forbes Magazine,
Swarthmore was ranked fourth after Princeton, CalTech, and Harvard,
respectively.
In the November 2003 selectivity ranking for undergraduate
programs,
The Atlantic magazine ranked
Swarthmore as the only liberal arts college to make the top ten
institutions, placing Swarthmore in tenth place. (Williams and
Amherst were among the top 20 institutions, it should be
noted.)
In 2009, Swarthmore was named the #1 "Best Value" private college
by The Princeton Review. Overall selection criteria included more
than 30 factors in three areas: academics, costs and financial aid.
Swarthmore
was also placed on The Princeton Review's Financial Aid Honor Roll
along with twelve other institutions, including Caltech
, Harvard,
and Williams, for receiving the highest possible rating in its
ranking methodology.
Academic program
Swarthmore's Oxford
tutorial-inspired Honors
Program allows students to take double-credit seminars from their
junior year and often write honors theses. Seminars are usually composed of four
to eight students. Students in seminars will usually write at least
three ten-page papers per seminar, and often one of these papers is
expanded into a 20-30 page paper by the end of the seminar. At the
end of their senior year, Honors students take oral and written
examinations conducted by outside experts in their field. Around
one student in each discipline is awarded "Highest Honors"; others
are either awarded "High Honors" or "Honors"; rarely, a student is
denied any Honors altogether by the outside examiner. Each
department usually has a grade threshold for admittance to the
Honors program.
Unusual for a liberal arts college, Swarthmore has an
engineering program; at the end of four years,
students are granted a B.S. in Engineering. Other notable programs
include minors in
peace and
conflict studies,
cognitive
science, and
interpretation
theory.
Swarthmore has a total undergraduate student enrollment of 1,491
(for the 2007-2008 year) and 165 faculty members (99% with a
terminal degree), for a student-faculty ratio of 8:1. Despite the
small size of the college, the college offers more than 600 courses
a year in over 50 courses of study. Swarthmore has a reputation as
a very academically-oriented college, with 90% of graduates
eventually attending graduate or professional school.
With the highest
frequency, alumni earn graduate degrees at UC Berkeley
, University of Chicago
, Harvard
, MIT
, New York
University
, University of Pennsylvania
, Princeton
, Stanford
, and Yale
.
Swarthmore
is a member of the Tri-College
Consortium (or TriCo) with nearby Bryn Mawr College
and Haverford College
, which allows students from any of the three to
cross-register for courses at any of the others.
The
consortium as a whole is additionally affiliated with the University of
Pennsylvania
and students are able to cross-register for courses
there as well.
While many in higher education recognize Swarthmore College's
relative lack of
grade inflation,
there is some controversy over how accurate that claim is. One
study done by a Swarthmore professor in 1993 found "significant
grade inflation." However, other professors and students
strenuously dispute the findings based on their own
experience—students go so far as to even make "Anywhere else it
would've been an A" t-shirts. Other statistics that show grade
inflation over the past decades may be exaggerated by reporting
practices and the fact that grades were not given in the Honors
program until 1996.
Since the 1970s, Swarthmore students have won 30
Rhodes Scholarships, 8
Marshall Scholarships, 151
Fulbright Scholarships, 22
Truman Scholarships, 13
Luce Scholarships, 67
Watson Fellowships, 3 Soros Fellowships,
18 Goldwater Scholarships, 84 Mellon Mays Undergraduate
Fellowships, 13 National Endowment for the Humanities Grants for
Younger Scholars, 234 National Science Foundation Graduate
Fellowships, 35 Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, and 1
Mitchell Scholarship.
Admissions
In 2008, 15% of applicants were admitted to Swarthmore for the
Class of 2012. 30% of the admitted students were valedictorians or
salutatorians, 51% were in the top 2% of their high school class,
and 89% in the top decile. For the Class of 2011, the middle 50%
SAT range for mathematics, critical reading, and writing were
680-760, 680-780, and 680-760, respectively. The Middle 50% ACT
range is 27 - 33.
Tuition and finances
The total cost of tuition, student activity fees, room, and board
for the 2008-2009 academic year was $47,804 (tuition alone was
$36,154).
100% of admitted students' demonstrated need is offered by the
college. In total, about half of the student body receives
financial aid, and the average financial aid award was $32,913
during the 2007-2008 year. As a "need-blind" school, Swarthmore
makes admission decisions and financial aid decisions
independently.
Swarthmore's endowment at the end of FY2008 was $1,412,609,000.
Endowment per student was $966,631 for 2007-2008, one of the
highest in the country.
Operating revenue for the 2007-2008 school year was $130,536,000,
over 40% of which was provided by the endowment. As is the case
with most elite institutions of higher education, actual costs as
measured on a per-student basis far exceed revenue from tuition and
fees, and so Swarthmore's endowment serves to offset ever-rising
costs of education, subsidizing every student's education at
Swarthmore—even those paying full tuition. For the 2008-2009 year,
tuition, fees, and room & board charges ($47,804) fell well
short of the actual cost of education per student, which was
approximately $81,073 in 2007-2008.
Swarthmore ended a $230 million capital campaign on October 6,
2006, when President Bloom declared the project completed, three
months ahead of schedule. The campaign, christened the "Meaning of
Swarthmore," had been underway officially since the fall of 2001.
87% of the college's alumni participated in the effort.
Loan-free movement
At the end of 2007, the Swarthmore Board of Managers approved the
decision for the college to eliminate student loans from all
financial aid packages. Instead, additional aid scholarships will
be granted.
Campus

Parrish Hall.
Swarthmore is located 11 miles southwest of the city of
Philadelphia. The campus consists of , based on a north-south axis
anchored by Parrish Hall, which houses numerous administrative
offices and student lounges, as well as two floors of student
housing. The
campus radio station
WSRN-FM broadcasts from the top.
From the
SEPTA
Swarthmore
commuter train station
and the ville of Swarthmore to the south, the
oak-lined Magill Walk leads north up a hill to Parrish. The
campus is also coterminous with the Scott Arboretum, cited by some
as a main staple of the campus's renowned beauty.
The majority of the buildings housing classrooms and department
offices are located to the north of Parrish, as is Woolman
dormitory. McCabe Library is to the east of Parrish, as are the
dorms of Willets, Mertz, Worth, Alice Paul, and David Kemp Hall. To
the west are the dorms of Wharton, Dana, and Hallowell, along with
the Scott Amphitheater. The Crum Woods generally extend westward
from the campus, toward the Crum Creek. South of Parrish are
Sharples dining hall, the two non-residential fraternities (Phi Psi
and Delta Upsilon), and various other buildings. Palmer, Pittenger,
and Roberts dormitories are south of the railroad station, as are
the athletic facilities, while Mary Lyon dorm is off-campus to the
southwest.
The College has three main libraries (McCabe Library, the Cornell
Library of Science and Engineering, and the Underhill Music and
Dance Library) and seven other specialized collections. In total,
the libraries hold over 800,000 print volumes as well as an
expanding digital library of over 10,000 online journal
subscriptions, reference materials, e-books, and other scholarly
databases.
Recently, Swarthmore has added wireless access in all of the campus
residence halls. The wireless network is also available in all
administrative and academic buildings, and in many of the campus's
outdoor spaces.
Clubs and organizations
There are more than 100 chartered clubs and organizations at
Swarthmore, in addition to many other unchartered groups. Clubs and
organizations are a fundamental part of the College, and the center
of many students' energies and social life. This extracurricular
involvement contributes to the frequent characterization of
Swarthmore students as both motivated and overworked.
Academic clubs
The
Amos J. Peaslee Debate Society, named after a former
United States
Ambassador to Australia, is one of the only independently
endowed organizations on campus. Members of the Society generally
debate on the
American Parliamentary
Debate Association circuit. Swarthmore's
College Bowl team was considered one of the
best in the country during the late 1990s and early 2000s - it won
the 1998 Division I Undergraduate
NAQT tournament.
Student Political Groups
Swarthmore College Democrats
The Swarthmore College Democrats are a student-run political
organization on campus. In 2008, they brought Rep. Joe Sestak
(D-PA) and former Alaska senator and then-presidential candidate
Mike Gravel to campus. The Democrats also operate the blog
Garnet Donkey.
Swarthmore College Republicans
While Swarthmore has historically represented a majority of
students on campus with a liberal bias, the Swarthmore College
Republicans were revived as a group in the spring of 2008.
Greek life
Two Greek organizations exist on the campus in the form of the
fraternities
Delta Upsilon and Phi
Psi. Notably absent are sororities, which were abandoned in the
1930s following student outrage about discrimination within the
sorority system. Interest in resurrecting sorority life has
recently returned with an all-female student group known as LaSS
(The Ladies' Soiree Society) organizing campus wide charity events
and social functions.
Sports
Swarthmore offers the full panoply of sporting teams with a total
of 22 Division III Varsity Intercollegiate Sports Teams. 40 percent
of Swarthmore students play intercollegiate or club sports.
Varsity teams include
badminton,
baseball,
basketball,
cross country,
field hockey,
golf,
lacrosse,
soccer,
softball,
swimming,
tennis,
track and field and
volleyball. Notably lacking among these teams is
football, which was controversially eliminated in 2000, along with
wrestling and initially badminton. The
Board of Managers offered a number of reasons for eliminating
football, including lack of athletes on campus and difficulty of
recruiting, Swarthmore also offers a number of club sport options,
including
rugby,
ultimate frisbee,
volleyball,
fencing, and
squash.
The Swarthmore
fencing team, though
officially recognized as a club sport only recently in 2007, has
quickly grown to include over 30 competing members, and has made
itself known as an up-and-coming team by setting an example with
many early victories. In 2009, Swarthmore hosted the annual SAC
(Southern Atlantic Conference) championships, claiming 2nd in both
women's and men's. In 2010, the college will host the USACFC
Championships, the largest collegiate fencing tournament in the
world.
Publications
The official weekly newspaper of Swarthmore College is
The
Phoenix. It is published every Thursday, except during final
week and vacation time. Some staff positions are paid a token
amount. The newspaper was founded in 1881, with online editions
beginning in 1995. Its current tabloid format is more similar to a
newsmagazine than a newspaper, with a color front cover.
Two
thousand copies, free of charge, are distributed across the college
campus and to the borough of Swarthmore
. The newspaper is printed by Bartash printing in
Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania
. The newspaper's staff runs
The Phoenix'
website, with bandwidth-search engine capability provided by
the Swarthmore College Information Technology Services. In 2000,
The Phoenix was an
Online Pacemaker for the
Associated Collegiate Press
award.
The
Daily
Gazette is another student newspaper. Unlike
The
Phoenix, it is e-mailed daily to 2,500 people; like "The
Phoenix," its content is independent of both the administration and
student government. Its coverage includes news, arts, and daily
sports reporting. The first issues were distributed through e-mail
during the fall semester of 1996, with an online edition soon
following. Like
The Phoenix, it is partially funded
through the Student Activity Fee, with additional income from
advertising.
There are a number of magazines at Swarthmore, most of which are
published biannually at the end of each semester. One is
Spike, Swarthmore's humor magazine. The others are
literary magazines, including
Small Craft Warnings, which
publishes poetry, fiction and artwork;
Scarlet Letters,
which publishes women's literature;
Enie, for Spanish
literature;
OURstory, for literature relating to diversity
issues;
Bug-Eyed Magazine, a very limited-run science
fiction/fantasy magazine published by
Psi
Phi, formerly known as
SWIL;
Remappings (formerly "
CelebrASIAN"), published by
the Swarthmore Asian Organization;
Alchemy, a collection
of academic writings published by the Swarthmore Writing
Associates;
Mjumbe, published by the Swarthmore
African-American Student Society; and a magazine for French
literature. An
erotica magazine,
!
(pronounced "bang") was briefly published in 2005 in homage to an
earlier publication,
Untouchables. Most of the literary
magazines print approximately 500 copies, with around 100 pages.
There is also a new photography magazine,
Pun/ctum, which
features work from students and alumni.
The school's yearbook,
The Halcyon, has been published
annually since 1887. Because Commencement is such an important
event,
The Halcyon includes professional photos of the
ceremony and is therefore printed later, in the fall. The new
alumni, however, receive their book in the mail over the summer.
The Halcyon is free to all students who attended
Swarthmore for at least one semester during the academic year it
covers. As a result,
The Halcyon is the college's most
costly student publication and there is currently a movement to
offer books free only to seniors, and to reallocate money towards
subsidizing student textbook costs.
A Cappella
As of the 2009-2010 school year, there are five active
a cappella groups. Sixteen Feet,
founded in 1981, is the college's oldest group, as well as its
first and only all-male group. Grapevine is its corresponding
all-female group, and Mixed Company is a co-ed group. Essence of
Soul is the school's youngest group, whose music focuses on soul,
R&B, and the music of the African Diaspora. Lastly, Chaverim is
a co-ed group that includes students from the Tri-College
Consortium and draws on music from cultures around the world for
its repertoire. Once every semester, all of the school's a cappella
groups collaborate for a joint concert called Jamboree.
Radio
WSRN 91.5 FM is the
college radio station. It has a mix of
indie,
rock,
hip-hop,
folk,
world,
jazz, and
classical
music, as well as a number of radio
talk
shows. At one time, WSRN had a significant news department, and
covered events such as the "Crisis of '69", extensively. Many
archived recordings of musical and spoken word performances exist,
such as the once-annual Swarthmore Folk Festival. Today WSRN
focuses virtually exclusively on entertainment, though it has
covered significant news developments such as the athletic cuts in
2000 and the effects of
11
September 2001 on campus.
War News
Radio and The Darfur Radio Project do broadcast news on WSRN,
however. Currently, the longest running show in WSRN's lineup is
"Oído al Tambor", which focuses on news and music from Latin
America. The show has been running non-stop, on Sundays from 4:00
to 6:00 p.m., since September 2006.
Swarthmore Fire and Protective Association
Swarthmore College students are eligible to participate in the
local emergency department, the Swarthmore Fire and Protective
Association. They are trained as firefighters and as emergency
medical technicians (EMTs) and are qualified on both the state and
national level. The fire department responds to over 200 fire calls
and almost 800 EMS calls a year.
Activism and community service
Swarthmore is known as a center of social and political activism.
The Lang Center for Civic and Social Responsibility, endowed by
philanthropist and Swarthmore alumnus Eugene M. Lang '38 in 2002,
prepares students for leadership in civic engagement, public
service, advocacy and social action. Swarthmore students are active
in the local community, performing outreach programs in nearby
Chester. The college has recently received significant coverage due
to two student groups founded in 2004, the
Genocide Intervention Network
(now an independent non-profit organization) and
War News Radio. Swarthmore's political
landscape is generally considered fairly left-wing, though student
activism is far less than it was in the heyday of the protest
culture of the 1960s. Recent high-profile campaigns included a
living wage organization (Swarthmore Living Wage & Democracy
Campaign); actions surrounding the
electronic voting machine manufacturer
Diebold Election Systems (now
Premier Election Solutions) by
campus groups
Students for
Free Culture and
Why War?; and a "Kick Coke"
campaign aimed at replacing soda machines offering
Coca-Cola with alternative products. The Kick-Coke
campaign had a victory in November 2006 when the College agreed to
cut its contract with Coca-Cola. However, after finally receiving
verification that Coca Cola performed ethical business practices,
contrary to the Kick Coke campaign's assertions, the college signed
a new contract with Coca-Cola in the summer of 2009.
Swarthmore College Computer Society
Swarthmore College Computer Society (SCCS) is a student-run
organization independent of the official ITS department of the
college. In addition to operating a set of servers that provide
e-mail accounts, Unix shell login accounts, server storage space,
and webspace to students, professors, alumni, and other student-run
organizations, the SCCS hosts over 100 mailing lists used by
various student groups, and over 130 organizational websites,
including the website of the student newspaper,
The
Phoenix. The SCCS also provides a number of spaces that are
open to members of the student body, as well as to faculty and
staff:
- A computer lab of Debian Linux and Mac OS X
machines
- A meeting space
- A specialized library of computer books, indexed as part of the
college library's collections
- A digital darkroom with color
calibrated negative scanning, editing and archival printing, used
by the Photo Club and other students
- An 8-foot projection screen with Wii,
Xbox 360, DVD, VCR, PlayStation 2,
NES, Atari, and other gaming systems in the "Video
Pit"
The computer lab and Video Pit together comprise the SCCS Media
Lounge, located in Clothier basement beneath Essie Mae's snack bar.
The SCCS staff consists of a group of students selected by existing
staff and approved by members of a student body-elected policy
board.
Impact
In September 2003, the SCCS servers survived a
Slashdotting while hosting a copy of the
Diebold
memos on behalf of the student group
Free Culture Swarthmore, then known
as the
Swarthmore
Coalition for the Digital Commons. SCCS staff promptly complied
with the relevant
DMCA takedown request
received by the college's ITS department..
The SCCS was noted in PC Magazine's article "Top 20 Wired Colleges"
as one of the reasons for ranking Swarthmore
#4 on
that list. During the 2004-2005 school year, the SCCS Media Lounge
served as the early home of
War News Radio, a weekly
webcast run by Swarthmore students and providing news about the
Iraq war, providing resources, space, and technical support for the
project in its infancy.
Two SCCS-related papers have been accepted for publication at the
USENIX Large Installation System Administration (LISA) Conference,
one of which was awarded Best Paper.
Alumni
Swarthmore's alumni include five
Nobel
Prize winners (second highest number of Nobel Prize winners per
graduate in the U.S.), including the 2006 Physics laureate
John C. Mather
(1968), the 2004 Economics laureate
Edward Prescott (1962) and the 1972
Chemistry laureate
Christian
B. Anfinsen (1937).
Swarthmore also has 16
MacArthur
Foundation fellows and hundreds of prominent figures in law,
art, science, business, politics, and other fields.
Other
prominent alumni include Seventh
Circuit Judge Frank
Easterbrook (1970), Congressman Christopher Van Hollen (1983),
Senator Carl Levin of Michigan
(1956), Author Mark
Vonnegut, musical composer and satirist Peter Schickele (1957), astronomer Sandra M. Faber (1966), The Corrections author Jonathan Franzen (1981), Caltech
president and Nobel
laureate David Baltimore (1960),
Georgetown University Law
Center
Dean T. Alexander Aleinikoff (1974),
Berkeley Law Dean
Christopher Edley, Jr., philosopher
David Kellogg Lewis
(1962),
Justin Hall (1998), widely
considered to be the first
blogger, and the
eminent Polish theatre director
Michal
Zadara (1999).
Wall Street
magnate and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts &
Co. founder Jerome Kohlberg,
Jr. (1946) founded the Philip Evans Scholarship
Foundation in 1986 at Swarthmore. Suffragist and
National Women's Party founder
Alice Paul graduated in 1905.
Eugene Lang (1938), founder of the
I Have a Dream Foundation, has
endowed many buildings and programs on campus, including, as noted
above, the Lang Center for Civic and Social Responsibility.
Swarthmore College Peace Collection
An internationally important archive of papers and books concerning
the work of pacifist organizations and individuals, the Peace
Collection forms part of the Swarthmore College Library. Its
mission is to gather, preserve, and make accessible material that
documents non-governmental efforts for nonviolent social change,
disarmament, and conflict resolution between peoples and
nations.
[22338]
Points of interest
See also
External links
References
- Supplemental Information on the “National Grade”,
Richard
Sander, June 2005
- Swarthmore: Quick Facts”, Swarthmore College website, June
2008]
- Margaret Hope Bacon (1980), Valiant Friend: The Life of
Lucretia Mott, page 199, ISBN 1-888305-09-6
-
http://chronicle.com/stats/usnews/index.php?category=Liberal+Arts+Colleges
- Greene, Howard and Matthew Greene (2000) Greenes' Guides to
Educational Planning: The Hidden Ivies: Thirty Colleges of
Excellence, HarperCollins, ISBN 0-06-095362-4, excerpt at
HarperCollins.com
-
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3718&page=1
- http://www.wsjclassroom.com/pdfs/wsj_college_092503.pdf
- http://www.reed.edu/ir/phd.html Weighted Baccalaureate
Origins Study, Higher Education Data Sharing Consortium,
October 2006. This shows baccalaureate origins of people granted
Ph.D.s from 1995 to 2004. The listing shows the top 10 institutions
in the nation ranked by percentage of graduates who go on to earn a
Ph.D. in selected disciplines.
- http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2073477,00.asp
-
http://www.theprincetonreview.com/schools/college/CollegeAdmissions.aspx?iid=1024057
-
http://www.forbes.com/lists/2008/94/opinions_college08_Americas-Best-Colleges_Rank.html
- http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200311/peck
-
http://media.www.dukechronicle.com/media/storage/paper884/news/2003/10/15/News/Atlantic.Unveils.New.rankings-1465508.shtml
-
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Admin/publications/bulletin/index.php?id=85
-
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/best-value-colleges.htm
-
http://www.princetonreview.com/financial-aid-rating-press-release.aspx
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/quickfacts.xml
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/admissions/unspun/index.php
- http://thedartmouth.com/2002/02/27/news/reed/
-
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Admin/publications/bulletin/archive/98/dec98/collection.html
-
http://www.swarthmorephoenix.com/2004/03/25/news/grade-inflation-not-a-concern-for-professors
-
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Admin/publications/bulletin/archive/99/june99/letters.html
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/x17822.xml
- http://members.ucan-network.org/swarthmore
- [1] Swarthmore Quickfacts
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/x17668.xml
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/x16525.xml
-
http://www.greaterphiladelphiagardens.org/press.asp?PressReleaseID=33
- Campus Map
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/x4593.xml
- http://www.swarthmore.edu/wireless.xml
-
http://daily.swarthmore.edu/2007/4/11/sestak-town-hall-meeting-focused-on-environmental-issues/
- http://daily.swarthmore.edu/2008/4/10/grave/
- [2] Discrimination in the sorority system
- [3], Ladies Soiree Society
- Athlete recruiting difficulty
- Athlete recruiting difficulty
- Crisis of '69
- Swarthmore Folk Festival
- Cuts to athletic programs
- [4], SCCS, student-run computer society
- Swarthmore College's response to the DMCA takedown
request
- Top 20 Wired Colleges, PC Magazine
- 21st Large Installation System Administration (LISA)
Conference, Dallas, November 11-16, 2007
- Work-Augmented Laziness with the Los Task Request
System, Thomas Stepleton. Pp. 1-12 of the Proceedings of LISA
'02: Sixteenth Systems Administration Conference, (Berkeley, CA:
USENIX Association, 2002)
- Fighting Institutional Memory Loss: The Trackle
Integrated Issue and Solution Tracking System, Daniel S. Crosta
and Matthew J. Singleton, Swarthmore College Computer Society;
Benjamin A. Kuperman, Swarthmore College. Pp. 287–298 of the
Proceedings