|  
               
            Web 
              Exclusives: Raising Kate 
              a 
              PAW web exclusive column by Kate Swearengen '04 (kswearen@princeton.edu) 
             
             October 
              10, 2001: 
               Offering 
              to help the frosh move in  
              A sophomore 
              finds the new kids in the quads, well, different 
             By Kate Swearengen '02 
              Illustration: 
              Henry Martin '48  
               
              I'm not sure what to 
              think about this year's crop of freshmen.  
              For one thing, there 
              are too many of them: The Class of 2005 has 1,185 students, 20 more 
              than Fred Hargadon bargained for. But hey, so what if our dean of 
              admission is bad at math? Given my high school math grades, I should 
              be glad that I have an ally in West College. 
              And, really, I should 
              be grateful for other things. I haven't yet run into the crowd of 
              bottle blondes who spent their pre-frosh weekend queued up to buy 
              cigarettes at the Wa last spring. Apparently, they all decided to 
              go to Dartmouth. Still, after hearing frosh exchange the following 
              remarks on campus, such small consolations are inadequate:
              "Hey, man, you 
              won't believe what happened. I woke up this morning with a cut on 
              my face, someone else's prox in my pocket, and no shirt." 
              "So if I buy porn 
              and charge it to my U-Store card, the bill will be sent home to 
              my parents?"
              "Well, there's 
              nothing in the Housing Department guidelines that says you can't 
              have piranhas." 
              Take a look at the parents 
              of the Class of 2005, and you'll understand how the kids got that 
              way. I spent Saturday morning skulking around in a Butler College 
              T-shirt, offering to help the freshmen find their dorms and to carry 
              their bags. Reasoning that an earlier shift would mean fewer people 
              and, therefore, less work, I had signed up to work at 9:00 a.m. 
              All that an earlier shift means, though, is that you're stuck with 
              students and parents from the tri-state region. If I had been smart, 
              I would have signed up for a later shift, one filled with polite 
              Midwesterners and laid-back Californians. As it was, these were 
              the kind of people who I got to deal with: 
              "Did you know that 
              Leonard was cotreasurer of his senior class?" someone's parent 
              asked me. 
              Seeing as I had only 
              met Leonard three minutes earlier, I had to admit that I didn't. 
              
              "Well, he was. 
              And he scored a 1420 on his SATs. He's a pretty impressive kid, 
              alright." 
              Most of the parents 
              I met were unwilling to ask a girl to carry heavy baggage, and motioned 
              me away when I asked if I could help. Ordinarily, this situation 
              would have annoyed me, but I relished the opportunity to avoid further 
              contact. Sadly, my luck did not last. 
              "Do you need any 
              help?" I asked one man. 
              "Sure," he 
              said, opening the tailgate of his Jeep to reveal a massive refrigerator. 
              "How about giving me a hand with this?"
              "Well," I 
              said doubtfully. "I guess the two of us could probably lift 
              it."
              "No can do," 
              he said sadly. "I just had surgery for a hernia last year. 
              You're on your own for this one." 
              "You know, on second 
              thought, I'm not sure that your refrigerator complies with the Housing 
              Department regulations. It looks kind of big to me." 
              "That refrigerator 
              is exactly 5.2 cubic feet," he said proudly. "The maximum 
              allowable size. And I drove all over New Jersey to find it." 
              
              But what business do 
              I have complaining about other peoples' parents? My own parents 
              planned to come on Saturday, three days after I had arrived on campus, 
              in order to bring me wire hangers. I tried to dissuade them from 
              coming, telling them that one of my friends would have extra hangers, 
              and that I had stored everything from last year on campus. 
              "We already have 
              the tickets," my mother said. "And besides, we'll be able 
              to take you to Target and K-Mart. And to the Princeton Diner. You 
              can't get there on a bicycle." 
              So my parents joined 
              me in Princeton, bought me groceries at Wegman's, and took me out 
              for lunch and dinner. Toward the end of their stay, my mother commented 
              that this year's group of freshmen looked less preppy than my fellow 
              sophomores. 
              "That's about the 
              only positive thing you can say about them," I told her grumpily, 
              as I limped to the rental car.
             You can reach Kate Swearengen 
              at kswearen@princeton.edu 
             
            
            
             
              
             
            
             
               
             
                
             |