90 Seconds with Madeline Perry

The first time you played squash, you were… Eleven years old, just at the local swimming pool where there were a couple of squash courts. I played a lot of other sports like football (soccer),...

Vassar Goes Co-Ed

By Bill Buckingham In 1969, Vassar College declined an offer from Yale University to merge institutions. Instead it became the first and only of the original “Seven Sister” schools to become co-ed (Radcliffe was later...

Going Her Own Way

By Chris McClintick In the spring of 1922, Howard Roark—the protagonist in Ayn Rand’s 1943 novel The Fountainhead—chooses to leave his architecture school, not compromising his personal architectural beliefs in adhering to the school’s conventionalism. Nearly...

From US Squash

By Kevin D. Klipstein, President & Chief Executive Officer Last year around this time I wrote about how impressive the top squash professionals were both on and off the court, and how much they deserved...

Eightieth Howe Cup Celebrates Championship Diversity

By Beth Rasin Could a coveted national championship really be at stake when competitors were smiling broadly and so easily applauding an opponent’s scrappy play? There was so much joy at the eightieth Howe Cup that...

Sobhy Summer Threepeat

Amanda Sobhy’s August victory, at the Squash Revolution National Capital Open in Maryland, marked her third WSA title win of the summer, making her the first player to win three WSA events in a...

Massaro British Queen

By Richard Eaton Photos by Steve Line/squashpics.com There was a throw-away hint as to why the world’s most successful squash player might suffer her most startling defeat in four years, not long before the British Open...

Perry Pounces on Delaware Open

By James Zug The 2013 Corporate Service Company Delaware Open was held at Vicmead Hunt Club in Wilmington, Delaware, in February. This $10,000 event, now in its fourth year, again featured a good mix of...