News, Ideas and Conversations from the University of Pennsylvania May 22, 2008

Skimmer

Skimmer


Photo credit: University Archives


Before there was Spring Fling, there was “Skimmer”—an annual rite of spring for Penn students, held mostly in Fairmount Park, featuring concerts, dances, athletic events and, most prominently, lots of
partying.

The event began somewhat informally in 1949, when a group of Penn students trekked down to the Schuylkill River to cheer on the Quaker crew team. In just a matter of years, though, the original purpose of the event was forgotten. Not long after the bands started to show up, Skimmer earned a reputation as a big-time blowout, and students from up and down the East Coast started making the trip. The parties grew bigger—too big, according to some—and soon both the University and the Fairmount Park Commission were making efforts to tone things down.
These tactics had only limited success, however, so University officials eventually decided to move Skimmer events out of the park and back to campus. The students reluctantly accepted the change and, starting in 1973, Skimmer was replaced, finally and officially, by Spring Fling.

For more on this and other notable moments in Penn’s history, visit the University Archives web site at www.archives.upenn.edu.

 

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Quoted Recently

"They shoot the cop and he goes out in a blaze of glory. They have no regard for their lives. They're not selective in who they kill. They're already dead."

—Chad Lassiter, adjunct professor in Penn's graduate School of Social Policy and Practice, on the sense of hopelessness and disregard for human life in cop-killers and why they are "walking time bombs." (Philadelphia Daily News, May 7, 2008)