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The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

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The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

A whole new kind of Barbie world at the Kitao Gallery

On Friday, February 10, the Kitao Gallery opened its latest installation, "Barbie for President," by Laila Muller '06 and Lisa Nelson '06, an amusing exhibition of the various methods of manipulating and contorting Barbie dolls in the name of art. The exhibit will be open Monday through Thursday from 4:30-5:30 p.m. and Saturday from 2:00-3:00 p.m.

Artists everywhere have chosen the human form as their subject but Muller and Nelson have chosen the Barbie form, the familiar, pliable, plastic princess who has been the subject of both idolization and controversy. Her duel image is highlighted by select articles on Barbie available to visitors to the gallery, which range from referring to the luxuriously "uambitious" Barbie lifestyle to describing Barbie as among the world's most successful "harlots."

Love her or hate her, the bright eyed blonde and an assortment of her friends and alter egos have been burnt, shorn, dismembered, and displayed throughout the gallery, but the centerpiece is a film documenting some of these processes and revealing some of the more unusual ways in which one can play with a Barbie doll. Among the most oddly endearing moments being the release of two gerbils amidst a field of Barbie bits.

Ultimately, the exhibit is a whimsical and surrealistic escape into the creative possibilities of a Barbie doll. Funny and a little bizarre, the installment is an entertaining addition to the Kitao and bound to challenge anyone's previously held conceptions of a Barbie girl.

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October 30th, 1929- The Day a Cow Entered Parrish

In the wake of Halloween, I think it’s appropriate to celebrate the 80th anniversary of one of the more wonderful pranks ever pulled at Swarthmore: the Cow Episode. On December 4, 1929, the editor of the Phoenix received a letter from the owner of Crumwald, a nearby farm with some loose connections to the college.

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