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Features
Are You a Renaissance Soul? Margaret Neisser Lobenstine 65 divides the world into two categories. One includes those highly focused, decisive individuals who come into the world knowing exactly what they want to do when they grow up. ...the other category, the one comprising people Lobenstine calls “Ben Franklins.” Inventor, publisher, writer, philosopher, public citizen, statesman, Francophile, founder of a university and a post office, and all-around Promethean thinker, Franklin was what Lobenstine calls a “Renaissance soul.” Notes for Life By Sasha Issenberg 02 Just before 12:30 on a Saturday afternoon in early June, six children gathered around a piano 4 miles from their homes in Chester, Pa. They sang a song about how easy it is to go home, written by a man who never had to run a car pool. Associate Professor of Music John Alston’s left hand floated through the air, conducting as his right plinked out a melody on the piano. “Goin' home, goin' home,” the children sang, “I'm a-goin' home.” Spreading Their Wings By Andrea Hammer Tumbling from the nest of college life into the work world requires graduates to find their wings as they explore new territories. A World That Is Not Just Ours Bill 72 and Amy Vedder Weber 73 challenge us to preserve wildlife. By W.D. Ehrhart 73 When Henry David Thoreau wrote that most people live lives of quiet desperation, he clearly did not have in mind Bill 72 and Amy Vedder Weber 73.
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In My Life | Books and the Arts | Alumni Digest | Editors Note | Letters | Bulletin Style Guide | “In My Life” submission guidelines All contents copyright 2009, Swarthmore College Bulletin, Swarthmore College |
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