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The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

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The Swarthmore Food Cooperative

Sports Update 11/17

Scoreboard: M. Basketball: Swarthmore 78, Southwestern (TX) 73 Equinox Classic W.Basketball: Swarthmore 87, Eastern 47 Swat Tip Off M. Swimming: NYU 120, Swarthmore 74 W. Swimming: NYU 131, Swarthmore 74

MEN'S BASKETBALL: Garnet Pirate Equinox Win

HAVERFORD, Pa. - Swarthmore senior forward Steve Wolf scored a team-high 17 points and sophomore guard Matt Allen tied his career-high with 16 points as the Garnet men's basketball team defeated Southwestern (TX) 78-73 in the 16th annual Equinox Classic at Gooding Arena Saturday afternoon.

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: Garnet Blow Doors OFf Eagles

SWARTHMORE, Pa. - The Swarthmore (1-0) and Middlebury (1-0) women's basketball teams picked up season-opening victories as they advance to the 10th annual Swarthmore Women's Basketball Tip-Off championship game. The Middlebury Panthers completed their first game with a 69-59 win while only trailing once (following the first basket of the game). In front of a 220-plus crowd, the Garnet had all five starters score double figures in an 87-47 win over Eastern at Tarble Pavilion on Saturday afternoon.

SWIMMING: Violets Motor Past Garnet

SWARTHMORE, Pa. - Visiting New York University swept the Swarthmore swim teams in the home opener for the Garnet Saturday afternoon. The Violets men (6-0) downed Swarthmore (1-3) 120-74 while the NYU women (8-0) picked up a 131-74 win over the Garnet women (3-1). Sophomores Anne Miller and Julia Wrobel picked up individual wins for the Garnet women while freshman Sterling Satterfield collected a win for the men.

Upcoming Events:

W. Basketball hosts Middlebury Sun., Nov. 18 at 4:00 pm Swat Tip-Off Championship Swimming hosts Ursinus Tues., Nov. 20 at 6:00 pm W. Basketball hosts Elizabethtown Tues., Nov. 20 at 7:00 pm M. Basketball at Arcadia Tues., Nov. 20 at 8:00 pm

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Late Valentine's Day at the Symposium

Today, jackdaws and magpies, the sages have gathered, to talk about love. To talk about love cut through with time. Crippled with the burden of the clocks of our ancestors, we stagger around in the daytimes, and maybe post some chocolates to the dorm next door by the tilting-upward of the next due dawn. In short: we know that we need it. And we don't know how to get it. Or, more specifically—when we don't know just when the getting's good.

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