The Olin librarian who wears glasses and speaks too loud leaned over and asked me a very serious question yesterday. “You must be a senior, I’ve seen you around a lot over the last few years,” he said. “Do you think Wesleyan’s changed since you got here?” For a moment I thought back to my freshman days, when I had an afro and was generally humbled by my senior-class friends, who at the time seemed jaded and sometimes complained Wesleyan wasn’t “what it used to be.” But the librarian’s quizical look showed he wasn’t talking about the normal dose of senior disenchantment. “I’ve been here since the 70s,” he added, “but in the last two years, hasn’t  this place gotten so…mainstream?”

Now that even the Olin Library staff thinks Wesleyan “ain’t what it used,” I think it is time the senior class admits this school is coming dangerously close to being overrun by an army of freshman and sophomore students who are too busy buying their next pair of Ugg boots on their Blackberrys to care about the stuff that makes this institution so special. Since MoCon was shuttered, Roth was hired, and everyone realized the endowment sucks, this University’s heralded in an age of moderation that, quite frankly, lacks personality and grit.

Applications to Wesleyan are up 22% because freshman and sophomore life at Wesleyan has grown soft and cushy. We’ve traded hardworking Aramark for the more esoteric Bon Appetit — a dining service with the balls to have an “executive chef” serve puky little freshman “arugula salad with raspberry vinaigrette” and  “chilled polenta cakes.” Now, Dave the grill man, who was always nice enough to grill your sandwich in sizzling burger fat, can no longer meet the freshman class because he’s been hidden behind the hamburger grill and replaced by two poorly-used and burnt panini presses.

Where is the sweet old black woman who used to swipe cards? Or James, the toothless man who dished out grammar advice with the day’s main course? (e.g. “Can I have some more mashed potatoes?”… “I don’t know, can you?”)

When we were freshman, people stood on the balcony at MoCon and made public announcements. Unknowing prefosh would lean on the balcony’s handrail and be booed by an entire cafeteria of freshman for not speaking up. Not one person has made a public announcement from the steps of the Usdan Center, and even if someone were to speak up in the carpeted, aiport terminalesque dining halls, they can’t even be drowned out by the harmonic tune of falling cups.

Underclassmen used to smoke weed in the dining hall and no one cared. Upperclassmen enjoyed their dinner with beer or a fine Chablis. Once I saw a hockey player piss in a glass and drink it in front of a group of recruits. Our trays didn’t have the corners cut off so everyone could sit comfortably at the table. We had to make do.

If you wanted kosher you had to go to the Kosher Kitchen in the basement of the Butts and eat in a faux-wood paneled room beneath buzzing fluorescent lights. If you wanted vegan you had to climb four stories to the Vegan Cafe at top of Davenport and take abuse from the angry vegan chef, who offered not four cold bowls of mush, but a plethora of delicious food and drink. WesWings didn’t have marble countertops or flat-screen TVs and the “honey ginger chicken sandwich” was still called the “oriental chicken sandwich.”

Where did all the strange occurrences (and people responsible for them) go? I once saw a kid drive what looked like a Toyota Camry across Andrus Field and do donuts in the WestCo courtyard in broad daylight. There used to be flash mobs and the Boogie Club, a red-headed fellow who wore a pirate hat and walked around barefoot, and streakers, lots of streakers. Feminists used to go topless on the hill before the weather called for shorts. Seniors had dance parties that caved in their living room floors.  An entire library full of students stripped to their underwear to pull a prank on a campus tour.

This school had a soul. Above and beyond being a black and red logo to slap on comfortable sweatshirts for incoming freshman and high-school-overachievers, or to print all over expensive, glossy brochures to make this place seem elite, “Wesleyan” was a word used amongst Wesleyan students for describing what made this campus tick. If the senior class doesn’t pick up its game this semester, that soul is sure to be forgotten.

About Andrew Dermont

Andrew Dermont organized the overhaul of the Argus website. He is now the Blargus Editor and oversees the publication of all online-specific content.
  • Alexis Krisel

    I could not agree more.
    Wesleyan, you’ve gone soft.
    Seniors, let’s keep Wesleyan weird; our predecessors fought so you wouldn’t have to! It seems as though we now need to fight. Let’s show our fellow underclassmen what Wesleyan is really all about.

  • Anonymous

    been there done that.
    Wesleyan WAKE THE Fuck up!!

  • Jonah Blumstein

    A great example of the weird Wesleyan of not too long ago is “I Am No Feeble Christ.” Crass cover band wearing masks and blasting atonal punk rock in the most public places possible (Foss Hill, outside the Campus Center). People would be lying in the hill trying to suntan and suddenly they’d be subject to lyrics such “I vomit for you, Jesus. Shit forgive. Down from your cross. Down from your papal heights, from that churlish suicide petulant child.” Obnoxious, yes, but absolutely hilarious at the same time.

  • Jon Booth

    I agree, as a freshman this place is totally not as cool as i was expecting.

    i think that it has something to do with a concerted effort by the university to recruit and accept a more conservative student body. similar things are happening at a number of colleges, especially oberlin. they want a bigger endowment and less trouble from students.

    lets make this place crazay.

  • Guy

    You admit that there is senior disenchantment but yet you don’t admit to be a senior suffering from it. Classic Ishmael syndrome.

    In a strange way, you are a reactionary. Do You expect people not to be different than one another. You expect people not to change. There is no way that this campus (or anything for that matter) to stay the same. It just doesn’t work that way. Harvard isn’t still a school for Puritan ministers, and Wesleyan isn’t a school for crazy hippies or topless women. The word “mainstream” is simply a way of expressing one’s disenchantment with a younger generation. Shit changes. At least this college has taught me how history works. Go back to Liberty U.

  • Jill ’07

    I could not agree more. Your comments are shared by so many who once attended this school. I agree a university must and will change, but, having been at said party where the floor collapsed, I cannot express how much this comment is appreciated. At the same time, it IS silly to be so nostalgic, especially if you’re still a student; you should go to Fo Cit, get some PBR and then perhaps prepare for a world (real) where none of these frivolous issues are at all relevant . Kudos for striking a beautiful note, though. This post reads like a compilation of the greatest hits of my Wesleyan years.Hey, listen: everyone but the students wants us to become Amherst. You’re a saint for articulating the opposite of that type of thinking.

  • Eli

    I’m not sure if I’d really want most of the things you’ve listed. Although I couldn’t complain about topless women on FOSS, more vegan options, or beer with dinner, many of your nostalgic moments seem worse.

    The lines at Usdan are long enough. I don’t need some dude correcting my grammar, especially since “can”, in the context, is absolutely synonymous with “may”.

    “Grandma” worked at Summerfields last year (I haven’t seen her recently, though). She was very nice, yes, but quite slow. The lines there are too long as it is.

    Trays with the corners sliced off are SO much better than normal trays. They also fit fewer items, which encourages less waste.

    Although I enjoy weed, there’s a time and a place. And the place sure as hell isn’t dining areas. Weed is quite pungent and a lot of taste is smell. I don’t want the already subpar flavors of my politically-correct honey ginger chicken sandwich to be further diluted.

    And drinking your own pee? That’s just gross.

    The think I love about Wesleyan is the ability to go from the mundane to the bizarre without having either forced upon you. Although, I guess I’m just one of those youngsters who doesn’t remember the good ol’ days.

  • Estrella ’07

    With every incoming freshman class the upperclassmen will throw their hands up at the sight of the new “mainstream” classes and worry that Wes is losing its soul. Trust me ’09, we were none-too-pleased when you guys showed up bright-eyed, bushy-tailed and Abercrombie-clad. And I’m sure that when the minivans full of my classmates pulled up in the fall of 2003 the upperclassmen were afraid of the effect we’d have on their beloved Wes, on that intangible “Wesleyanish” (to quote President Roth) quality we so cherish.

    But you know what? Your class turned out just fine, as did mine. Things change, but Wes’s soul can’t be stamped out by superficial things. So stop worrying about some conspiracy by the administration to change Wes and just enjoy your senior spring, and really enjoy everything that makes Wes “what it used to be.” Throw parties, organize campus-wide events, be passionate in your classes, bring back the tradition of announcements in the dining hall, revive older traditions, invent new ones, go streaking, spend time on Foss Hill (sledding, sunbathing, reading, lounging, watching the sunrise, on 4/20, Spring Fling, Wesfest…), support student performances, go to lectures, get deeply involved in your student groups… Look past their Ugg boots and you may find that those high-school over-achievers in their new comfortable red & black sweatshirts start doing the same.

  • BoB

    Did you ask your RA’s permission to put her picture up?

  • woah

    whats wrong with everyone you are weird

  • oriana korol ’09

    Look past their Ugg boots? I can’t cause they won’t go streaking with me.

    So what should Wesleyan be if not weird? Wesleyan is preparation. Wesleyan is a bubble. Wesleyan is many things. But most importantly Wesleyan is practice. Practice getting out of your comfort zone. Practice breaking boundaries. Practice creating, trying, buying shoes that aren’t Uggs. Practice not buying things at all! It’s easier here because it is a bubble. Once you get out there in the “real world” it will be so much harder to create new life forms, new anything because without the protection of the bubble–psafe, the provided food and housing, the health care, the library–we must adhere to almost all norms just in order to eat/sleep/fuck whatever. So if you don’t practice now, how will you ever create space for your mind and body to breath later?

    Yes, there is specified place for everything. But who specifies, who determines this? “Weed is quite pungent and a lot of taste is smell.” Hahahaha. Dude, you don’t enjoy weed if you wrote this. Try again.

    And if you can’t appreciate someone who’s paid 8 bucks an hour correcting your $50,000/yr grammar, you’re either too invested in your words or not invested enough in the world around you.

    I’ve gotten soft. We’ve all gotten soft. We’re too scared to own up to our actions (who said “been there done that”?); we’re too ashamed to own up to our own thoughts (see ACB). I agree with that androgynous anonymous post, though. Wake the fuck up Wes. Touch the world, taste it, breath it in, sing it out, dance on the top of Judd. And if Psafe shows up, they can’t chase you. That won’t be the case next year ’09.

  • Agree with you but not on your examples

    I have been out of Wes for almost a year now and find that most of what you say is true on a general scheme but I don’t agree with the examples. Changing a menu label from “oriental” to something reasonable IS wesleyan, for example. And I think most of the examples go far beyond the dining experiences you discuss.

    Even for me, I saw chalk on the campus grounds when I was visiting as a junior in high school and all the students were reading the New York Times in MoCon. These two things really appealed to me – chalk and NYTimes-reading. And I think those are two of the traits Wesleyan students (in theory) hold in my heart.

  • Good point Estrella

    I agree with Estrella ’07. I suggest that, while it’s cool to express concern, rather than complain, you should do something you think is “Wes-worthy.” Organize something you’d like to see more of and contribute to the campus atmosphere.

  • sam ’12

    let’s fucking bring it back then.

  • Anonymous

    everyone’s mentioning not buying uggs……well, I know I was disapointed when I cam here and everyone was wearing their bands in their eyes, tight pants, little slip-on flats and leggings. True there are people of all types on this campus, but you must admit that we are more than saturated with hipsters. I thought when I came here I ‘d see the insane diverse student population I was told about as a prefrosh…..but I didn’t…..I still haven’t. Where are the goths? Where are the rockers, Where are the hardcore punks, Where are the rappers, where are the hippies…..true there’s one or two around…..but not bathing and smoking some weed does not a hippie make.
    I came here expecting this mismatched pile of interest groups…. and yes, there is still that liberal overall feel to the student body, but for the most part, its pretty uniform. We are uniform in our vintage clothing and non mainstream music. things stop being unusual when 2000 other students are paying the same 80 bucks at urbanoutfitters for a pair of thick black framed glasses and a cotton potato sack that is too long to be a shirt but to short to be a dress.

  • Anonymous

    bangs, not bands**** oops

  • Eli

    Oriana,

    While I would never be caught dead in Uggs, I feel that most people hate them because it’s the cool thing to do. Seriously, in terms of style, they’re pretty bad, but I’ve heard they’re comfy. Judging people by their sense of fashion isn’t cool. If there is a direct correlation between one’s brand of boots and the probability of streaking, that’s a legitimate complaint, I guess.

    You said it… Wesleyan is “practice getting out of your comfort zone.” The key word is practice. When you practice something, you generally take it in limited quantities. You expand your horizons at a healthy, comfortable rate. Wesleyan is supposed to be enjoyable, not an immersion experience into the bizarre.

    Trust me, I’ve had plenty of real-world experience and in comparison, it’s mostly a lot more tame. Not that I’d want Wesleyan to be like that — I come here solely because of the community.

    I’m pretty sure that the majority of the campus would feel similarly about having to smell excessive pot smoke while dining. As I said, there’s a time and a place for weed. I really don’t mind the smell when it’s floating down the hall and I just get a whiff as I walk by, or if I’m actively smoking. However, I don’t want it around me all the time.

    About our grammar-correcting guy: I assert that the aforementioned example is grammatically acceptable in the context. In my opinion, there’s no reason to correct someone’s grammar during a conversation. It makes you look like a smart-ass to do so. If I corrected people every time they said, “where you at?” or “I have some place to go to” or whatnot, I’m pretty sure I’d have no friends.

    If you’re going to dance on Judd, I’m fully supportive of you. Just don’t force me to dance. When I’m good and ready, I’ll join ya up there.

  • Did you

    DID YOU ASK YOUR RA’S PERMISSION TO POST A PICTURE OF HER SMOKING A JOINT??? THAT IS REALY UNACCEPTABLE.

  • anonymous number 4

    1. It’s “quizzical.”

    2. This is nothing new. I’ve seen this same article published time after time. Yes, things change and no, not always for the better. Why not take a look at why the school seems to be attracting all of these students “who are too busy buying their next pair of Ugg boots on their Blackberrys to care about the stuff that makes this institution so special”? You’re saying the same old thing and I think that’s what irritates me the most. Why was this even published?

    3. Your arguments are obnoxious and offensive – why aren’t commenters questioning your language in the fourth and eighth paragraphs instead of debating the popularity of Uggs on campus?

    It isn’t just that I disagree about what makes Wesleyan Wesleyan. And it isn’t just that I find the writing juvenile and demeaning. I also don’t understand the need for this article. If it’s just a chance to reminisce, why the attacks on 2012 and 2011? I’m a little confused and I’d love some clarification.

  • anonymous number 5

    I completely agree with everything the previous person stated. The idea of “weird” is a very privileged concept. What does it mean to actively TRY and be “weird”? It often means that one’s social identities are constructed as normative and that one is USING one’s privilege to do things like pee in a cup in a dining hall, smoke pot all over campus (which I saw happen just yesterday), run around the street drinking at 19, or attend Wesleyan in the first place.

    I am sick of people trying to be weird. Many people are labelled “weird”/different because of their sexual orientation, race, gender identity/expression, class, etc. Instead of trying to be “weird” and use your privilege in unproductive ways, why don’t we try and deconstruct what “weird” and “normal” are? I don’t think they are a bunch of dudes drinking their own urine.

  • anon

    “I am sick of people trying to be weird. Many people are labelled “weird”/different because of their sexual orientation, race, gender identity/expression, class, etc. Instead of trying to be “weird” and use your privilege in unproductive ways, why don’t we try and deconstruct what “weird” and “normal” are? I don’t think they are a bunch of dudes drinking their own urine.”

    Sorry, i didn’t know sitting in our ivory tower, masturbating about deconstructionism was a productive way of using our time.

  • anonymous number 5

    No, but analyzing and deconstructing PRIVILEGE is a VERY productive way to spend your time.

    Masturbation can be fun, too, although I don’t own any ivory towers.

  • Jonna Humphries

    What a great write-up. Thank you.

  • anonagain

    yeah i don’t want at all whatever vision of wesleyan this is not because i’m “conservative” but because most of the things listed (like about dining halls and people being naked) are totally irrelevant to the ways that this institution needs to change. i’m tired of people being upset about wesleyan not being the fetishized hippy paradise they thought it would be, and assuming that everyone shares this dissapointment.

    id rather see this institution strengthen its effort to undermine the power dynamics that it relies upon, and that contribute to the inequality and violence imbued in our society. dropping cups at mocon or people wearing uggs doesn’t matter at all.

  • Sally

    I think most points are valid; however, I think it was a success to ditch ARAMARK – the corporation, not necessarily the friendly workers.

    Despite other options, ARAMARK knowingly chooses to use eggs from caged hens. Cages for egg-laying chickens are a cruel method of confinement that prevents hens from ever leading a natural life. With battery cages, each hen has less space than a standard sheet of paper. These birds will spend their life without ever seeing the sun or feeling solid ground beneath their feet, and will have their feathers torn off from constantly rubbing against the cage bars.

    ARAMARK’s competitors, such as Compass Group, already made the socially and environmentally responsible decision to switch to cage-free eggs. Over 350 colleges have also switched to cage-free eggs.

    Eggs from caged hens is a barbaric practice that has no place in today’s sustainable market.

  • T-Bone

    A variation of this has appeared in the Argus every year for the last 20+ years (search the archives). I suspect similarly intellectually dishonest laments will appear in future decades.

  • Anonymous

    Today’s weird will inevitably be tomorrow’s mainstream. Look at ripped jeans, big sunglasses, converse sneakers, wayfarers, leggings…these were all things that started out as hip, weird and progressive, and then became mainstream. Our mainstream culture doesn’t fall far from our parents’ generation’s liberal culture; it’s not that Wesleyan is becoming more normal, it’s that normal is becoming more like Wesleyan.

  • anonymous

    I understand what you’re saying about some things, but come on: Ugg boots do not provide a reliable basis for conjecture about the university’s character. I beg you not to indulge in such a basic stereotype.

  • la la

    You’re a real jerk-off for throwing up that pic, just to add some thrills to stupid article about (re)creating a self-serving idea of ‘weirdness.’ The fact that you urge us to make a collective effort to ‘be weird’ gives you away. If we spent less time so desperately trying ‘to be’ something, then all of our wasted pretension might actually morph into an image which is both innovative and genuinely ours!

  • zing!

    I don’t think any of the librarians talk too loud, I think they’re perfect the way they are.

  • freshman

    I want wesleyan to be weird. Thats why I came here. But I also thought that in coming here people wouldn’t judge me on what I wear. I’m mainstream. I like wearing my uggs. I’m sorry if I’m ruining your school. But just because I wear the normal clothes I have left over from high school doesn’t mean I’m not crazy on the inside…

  • You are an ass whole

    You’re just an asswhole. Who clearly can’t get over yourself! And the purpose of the picture is?

  • get over yourself

    Wesleyan always turns into a wacker version to the people attending it. It’s all fun and games freshman year and then everyone gets bitter as seniors cuz they have to go out into the real world, write a thesis, and deal with the new class of eager beaver frosh who only seem more mainstream. The fact is they are just as immature as you once were and they are going to find themselves at the end of 4 years just as bitter as you are now, but hopefully more mature. It’s called growing up! Just be happy that Wesleyan lets you get away with the shit they let you get away with. Be weird on your own damn time, and stop petitioning others to join in.

  • haha

    I just love how much attention and how clearly contentious this issue is. Rock ON.

  • Chris

    Well done Andrew. I always had pride in how Wesleyan prevented us from being shocked by almost anything. Now, I’m certain that tolerance has eroded. There hasn’t been anything jaw-droppingly surprising in a long long while and I’m not okay with that. There’s no question this place is a bit more Wonder Bread than it was in 2005. I REALLY don’t want to turn into Williams or Amherst and I think we could be well on our way.

  • person

    fuck uggs

  • ’07

    I’m pretty sure someone in my year wrote a Wespeak that said exactly the same thing. Probably someone in the Class of ’96 did the same. And the Class of ’86. Wesleyan is Wesleyan not because the kids coming in are Wesleyan-ish, but because Wes makes them Wesleyan-ish. So, freshmen are normal, and then they become weird by the time they are seniors. It just happens. That’s the difference between 18-year olds and 22-year olds– the 22-year olds are grown up. So relax. Drink. Party. Graduate. Get depressed.

  • surprised freshman

    wait…you mean transexuals, magic mushrooms, and dance performances about the evolution of lite aren’t weird? i KNEW i should’ve gone to Wheaton!

  • Alumnus from Class of 1993.

    May I quote some of that back to you kiddies:

    “Underclassmen used to smoke weed in the dining hall and no one cared. Upperclassmen enjoyed their dinner with beer or a fine Chablis. Once I saw a hockey player piss in a glass and drink it in front of a group of recruits. Our trays didn’t have the corners cut off so everyone could sit comfortably at the table. We had to make do.If you wanted kosher you had to go to the Kosher Kitchen in the basement of the Butts and eat in a faux-wood paneled room beneath buzzing fluorescent lights.Where did all the strange occurrences (and people responsible for them) go? I once saw a kid drive what looked like a Toyota Camry across Andrus Field and do donuts in the WestCo courtyard in broad daylight.”

    If Wesleyan lost it’s soul, it did so long before it admitted you – (and precisely so it could admit you), whining about … what, your new dining options?! Get back to work on your senior thesis and be thankful you’re there at all.

  • Anonymous

    “Once I saw a hockey player piss in a glass and drink it in front of a group of recruits. ”

    Ah yes! Sign me up!

  • Anonymous

    I’m coming to WesFest this year. Show me what you mean, seniors.

  • Carol Davies

    Ah Yes, I remember the exploding jack-o-lanterns on Science Center, letting the squirrels loose on the telescope during observing hours, then there was the ol’ mummy in the room mate’s bed trick after a particularly long night of drinking. Seems as though things may have changed.

  • K. ’94

    I was at Wes in the 90’s – believe me, it was way weirder then. You could still use (and sometimes live in) the tunnels, people openly did drugs in West Co. and Eclectic, Mocon was run (badly) by ARA, students protested weekly about issues important and not-so important, and freaks abounded. The way you describe your four years there, it sounds like Wes already lost its soul a decade or more ago.

  • Anonymous

    K: That sounds exactly like my freshman year 3 years ago. Tunnels were open, drugs done openly in WestCo (which I’m sure never stopped in Eclectic), Mocon was still run by Aramark and people still protest now. I don’t know how you define freaks.

  • Anon

    You know what’s *really* progressive? Getting to know people for who they are instead of deciding they must be pathetically mainstream just because they wear a certain type of shoe.

  • Adam

    The best thing I learned at Wes is that its not what you eat, what you wear, what music you listen to…etc. that makes you progressive. Its your actions and your unwillingness to be silent. Shout from the rooftops in Ugg boots and march against police brutality in a North Face coat…..just do it.

    I remember as a pre-frosh, sitting in Mocon…somebody came up to the railing with a fan, turned the fan on and blew 100s of little pieces of paper all over the place. They read: Fuck with Shit.

    So, students at Wes. Fuck with Shit. Leave your mark. Don’t be silented. Fight for what is right and study hard. After all, the country despaerately needs smart and progressive leaders, especially now in the midst of 2 wars, crumbling economy, and health care reform. Fuck with shit. Bring it home. Go Wes!

  • Simon Au ’07

    I agree with Estrella ’07 because we were both in CSS and CSS is always right.

    But seriously, the first thing you need to do is bring back the Boogie Club.

  • Anonymous

    Can I add my two cents? Um to the fellow who wrote this article: there is this thing called progress that is beyond our control, and it consists of something called change.

    You are graduating! What the hell do you care about what the people who will be left behind act like.

    It should be up to the people who occupy the school in any given year to decide what Wesleyan should be like – not the class of 1970, 60 …

    Move on and out of Wes with some class and dignity!!

  • The Mummy Guy

    It is nice that people still remember our Mummynapping. While, at the time, we feared expulsion and were like “what the hell did we do”, it makes a great 20 year old college story. Thank Goodness Prez Chace had a sense of humor.

    We had no idea it was a 3000 yr old mummy! We thought it was just some cadaver wrapped in a shower curtain on the 6th floor of the Science building. What the hell was it doing there? Clearly the university didn’t care about it. We were completely sober too. We had just gone to see “Breakfast At Tiffany’s” at the Science Center with these 3 cute girls. lol we scared the crap out of them with the mummy….

    Anyway, it’s good to be a little nuts in college. Don’t huff paint – you’ll end up in a loony bin. Sorry that the drug laws are tighter – it was pretty cool in 1989 that you could go to the dorm room of some guy named Juan, buy an 1/8 of weed for $20, and smoke out of his 6 ft tall purple bong with impunity. Still drugs are bad mmkay.

    Don’t complain about the food being wimpy. Itza Pizza (circa 90-93) was disgusting. MoCon wasn’t much better. Be glad the food is good and fufu. Enjoy your paninis while they last.

    Also, to be honest, I look back and wish I had studied hardier and applied myself more. Unless you are made of money, you don’t get many chances to get the kind of quality education you get at Wes. Learn something. Take a film class with Jeanine Basinger. Take something wacky like South Indian Flute or Gamelan. Stretch yourself. Pot will always be there, but Wes is ultimately a 4 year trip that ends way too soon. Don’t look back and say “If only I’d taken that 20th Century Art class”…do it. Apply yourself. Remember that everything counts – how you approach school, partying, mummy pranks, it all matters. You don’t want to be a 40 year old with no money and a family to support. Trust me. :-)

  • Streaker ‘oh 7

    I always worry that, in the shining absence of my graduated ass, no one is doing an adequate amount of streaking at Wesleyan.

    I never did get naked in this Usdan Palace place. Think of me and my dentures and do it, please.

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