Swarthmore College

As good as it gets.

For an alphabetical index of the New England College series of pieces, click here.

Swarthmore College is not an easy place to get admission to. With an acceptance rate of just 9% it rivals Harvard for exclusivity and its graduates occupy the highest reaches across any number of disciplines in the US. The small student body of just 1,620 has delivered 5 Nobels, 11 McArthurs, 30 Rhodes, 27 Truman and 10 Marshall Scholars, along with 201 Fulbright grantees. Phew! A seriously high SAT score is the key dictate for admission here. That, and the right personality fit, for this is no degree mill.

So it was with some trepidation we set foot on the campus which is a few minutes south west of America’s 6th largest city, Philadelphia. Oh! Boy!, was it ever an experience, on a picture perfect day. It’s hard to convey the glories of this richly endowed campus, whose endowment capital of $2.1 billion computes to a stunning $1.3 million per student, affording the college an 8:1 student:faculty ratio and grounds that have to be seen to be believed. From memory only Princeton, Harvard and Yale are richer on a per student basis. There is not one iota of deferred maintenance to be seen, and all is perfection. Many a moment I thought I was back in the Kew Gardens of my youth, west of London, albeit without the rain.

Swarthmore is a liberal arts college and before you start telling me that STEM is the future I would remind you that the core tenet of capitalism is to obsolete its costliest component: Labor. To that end the foretellings of Kubrick’s ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ are writ ever louder in our society, with machine intelligence taking over from man. But one thing machine intelligence will never do is supplant human imagination, original thinking and writing. Just about anyone can do math. Few can communicate. That takes a solid liberal arts education and Swarthmore offers the best there is.

Please join with me in sharing in the abundant glories of this magnificent campus.



Parrish Hall is the oldest building at a school which dates from Quaker roots in 1864. Note the French-style mansard roof.


There are several observatories in the grounds.


Youkun Zhou conducts the Information Session, before our Tour.


A view of the Pearson-Hall Theater which is the largest performing arts stage on campus.


Mobile sculpture.


The same stone is used in all the buildings, regardless of age.


The main observatory.


We visited on registration day, with classes starting next week. The atmosphere here was simply electric. Thrilling beyond belief.


To be surrounded by tomorrow’s leaders is a rare privilege.


Acres of lawns make for a peaceful whole.


Our tour guide, Jack MacManus, hails from Hawaii. A political science Junior, Jack’s enthusiasm was infectious.


The park-like setting is conducive to peaceful thought.


Autumn is around the corner.


The modernistic bell tower.


In the lovely McCabe library. My son Winston is in the straw trilby.


On tour in the manicured grounds.


‘Sappho’ by Alekos Kyriakos, 1962.


Sharples Hall is the main dining place and is beautifully designed, with walkways galore. Here’s one of the stained glass windows.


The Scott Outdoor Amphitheater. How do you improve on this?


Graduation ceremonies take place here. Where else?


Maintenance is to a very high standard.


The Magill Walk leads directly from Parrish Hall to the Swarthmore train station, which is on the campus. The alley of oak trees was planted in 1881 – those on the right are smaller as their opposite numbers shield them from the sun!


Adirondack chairs make for a pleasant way to relax.


Dorm standards are fully consonant with the rest of the campus. Here is a common area in one of the dorms, mostly co-ed.


A charming cottage at the local Swarthmore train station which is a 10 minute walk from Parrish Hall.


You can be in central Philadelphia in just 10 minutes.


In the style of Claes Oldenburg, Winston models the giant Adirondack chair, with Parrish Hall behind.


Where it all comes together. Winston concluded our visit with an interview here. Luckily, the professional staff includes several alumni from his prep school, Northfield Mount Hermon. It’s always nice to be among friends.


A final view of perfection.


What an extraordinary campus, and what a special day in the life of my son. The small world feel and the open and generous nature of the many students we spoke with was a flashback for Winston to the fall of 2015 when he first interviewed at Northfield Mount Hermon, his Massachusetts prep school. On that day, long past, he told me that NMH was his school of choice. Today his emotions were similar.

Haverford College

Small size, high quality.

For an alphabetical index of the New England College series of pieces, click here.

The extended hiatus for this blog was caused by the author’s dedication to helping his son with preparation for the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT). This shakedown scheme sees hundreds of thousands of students studying millions of hours annually for a test which addresses very little taught in high school. Comprising 96 English and 58 Math questions, all but 13 multiple choice with severe time limits, it’s the key to getting an offer from a good college.

With Winston’s SAT polished off last Saturday, Tuesday found us at beautiful Haverford College just northwest of Philadelphia. The pristine setting of this Little Ivy comprises an arboretum of 216 acres, open to all. The school was founded by Quakers in 1833 and admits just 1350 undergraduates. That’s a fraction of that of the Big 8 Ivies yet there are no concessions to academic standards, with just eight students per faculty member. There are no teachers’ assistants instructing classes – you get the real thing for your tuition dollar. 5 Nobel laureates, 6 Pulitzer Prize winners, 20 Rhodes and 104 Fulbright scholars hail from Haverford, where the most popular majors are English Literature, Biology and Economics. All students live on campus, testifying to the tightly knit undergraduate body …. and the less than impressive Philadelphia surroundings.



Our tour begins. WInston is wearing the hat.


Campus housing may not look great but it’s clean and modern inside. All dorms are co-ed.


Arboretum abstract.


Study areas did not look like this when I was a kid.


Our guide is a philosophy Junior.


Arboretum setting.


Beautiful interior of the Marion E. Koshland Integrated Natural Sciences Center.


Classic northeastern architecture. The campus is in superb repair throughout.


Exquisite balustrade inside Founders’ Hall.


Quaker roots. Haverford is now a secular school – alumni include former Goldman Sachs co-chair John Whitehead.


As befits a truly civilized school, Haverford students play cricket.


An academic setting – no Greek life, no wild parties. You are here to learn.


In gorgeous Founders’ Hall. Note the Chippendale pediment.


The dining hall – sushi, vegetarian, Kosher and Halal options are all available.


Another part of the arboretum setting.


The Memorial Chapel.


The same stone is used throughout, making for an integrated whole.


Dogs – and non-students – are welcome to enjoy the grounds.


In the woodworking shop. I have seen better dovetail joints!


Flowers galore.


No academic featherbed, this.


James House is a non-curricular space for students to express their artistic drive.


Attending the informational session – conducted by a Swarthmore grad!


Haverford is well endowed at $522 million or $385,000 a student. A frequent shuttle service connects students with Bryn Mawr and Swarthmore. You can take your major at these schools while a student at Haverford, which speaks to leverage of the brainpower of three academic exemplars. Unsurprisingly, admission requirements are similar for all three.

Apple. Stupid.

Greed redefined.

You can get a top quality BenQ 27″ monitor, with stand for $600:


The 27″ calibrated BenQ monitor.

Apple however Thinks Different and has determined that not only will its new monitor sell for $5000 (likely using a regular LG panel) but wants you to pony up an extra $1000 for the stand ….


The $1000 stand for the $5000 monitor.

Either Apple has concluded that their professional customers base is, you know, stoopid, or they need a new CEO. Heck, they have needed a new CEO, someone who occasionally has an original idea, since Steve passed.

As for myself, I use a 30″ Apple LCD monitor in its elegant aluminum case which I bought used 5 years ago for $400. It calibrates nicely using a puck and is a joy to behold. And yes, it came with a stand included.


The elegant 30″ Apple LCD monitor.

Mac Pro 2019

Function over form returns.

For an index of all my Mac Pro articles, click here.


Meet the new Mac Pro, same as the old Mac Pro.

Solidly aiming at their right foot, Apple managed to disenfranchise a huge chunk of its professional user base with the idiotic ‘form over function’ Mac Pro 2013 which looked like a trash can. Designed to show off your fingerprints and collect dust and detritus in its open cylindrical center, the ads showed this wonder unconnected to any peripherals, devoid of the clutter of wires that so spoils the work aesthetic of the modern hipster. Of course once you added the required external storage and so on, the thing started looking like the mess it was:


2012 vs. 2013.

The result of this design disaster saw two results. AV and music pros started abandoning the Mac Pro for competent HP workstations running newly reliable versions of Windows. Those trying to stick with the Mac Pro applied a variety of upgrades to this wonderful modular chassis. These included faster CPUs, more and faster memory, fast SSD boot and system drives, and tons of storage, the latter easily accommodated inside the Mac Pro’s big box. The truly masochistic even upgraded wi-fi from 802.11b to 802.11n, masochism being the required mindset in securing those minuscule antenna wires. I have done many and the 50th is no easier than the first. The results were fine, the machine newly speedy and every bit as bog reliable. And in the event something failed, a rare occurrence, the bad part was easily replaced in minutes. The massive 980 watt power supply saw to it that there was always ample current available for all those internals and the truly enormous CPU heatsinks made for the most reliable computing platform ever.

So Apple determined they should throw away their base and the attendant goodwill in place of the joke that is the Trash Can Mac Pro. Of course there was always the overpriced MacBook Pro for ‘power users’, the only problem being that when real computing power was required the notebook would throttle back its CPUs lest they melt under the strain. The MacBook’s cooling was never its forte compared with the myriad fans in the big Mac Pro.

Now, after a 6 year hiatus with an offering that was never updated and had already obsolete graphics when it came to market, Apple has realized the error of its ways and introduced a large, modular Mac Pro chassis. Or is that ‘reintroduced’, for sticking with the original box with later CPUs and memory would have been trivial to do, and that large base of power user advocates would not have been largely lost?

You get faster CPUs with more cores and lots of options, faster memory and vast capacity, and a bill for some $10,000 if you max it out.

But, for heaven’s sake, why did they make that grate so ugly?