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            Web 
              Exclusives: Tooke's 
              Take 
              a PAW web exclusive column by Wes Tooke '98 (email: cwtooke@princeton.edu) 
             
             November 
              7, 2001:  
              Times They Are a Changin'  
              Our prodigal columnist returns to find a different campus 
             By Wes Tooke '98 
             A few weeks ago I returned 
              to the Princeton campus for the first time since I stopped working 
              for PAW. I took the train from Penn station in New York, and as 
              I was sitting on the Dinky, I felt as if I had been transported 
              back through time to the spring of 1998. The thick New Jersey air 
              smelled the same, Route 1 was still a parking lot at midday, and 
              I even recognized the conductor. 
             But a few minutes later, 
              as I walked across campus, that feeling of familiarity abruptly 
              shifted. It occurred to me that I no longer knew a single undergraduate 
              student, and I was meeting the only professor who would recognize 
              me without prodding for lunch. There was virtually no chance that 
              I would bump into a familiar face on one of the paths I know so 
              well. 
             That sense of complete 
              anonymity, which was so completely different than anything I had 
              felt on campus during my college years, was strangely empowering 
              at first. I am an essentially monkish person, and I enjoyed being 
              able to scout my old haunts free from the fear that I would be trapped 
              into a conversation with an old acquaintance. 
             But as wave after wave 
              of Princeton students passed me, most looking vaguely like people 
              I used to know, my liberation slowly evolved into depression. I 
              had always imagined that Princeton would remain a community for 
              me in much the way my old neighborhood has remained a community 
              - a place where I could always return and feel at home. Princeton, 
              however, now felt somewhat akin to a links page on the Internet: 
              Every familiar spot I passed served as a reminder of people who 
              now live in Boston and London and San Francisco. The campus was 
              no longer a home; it was merely a map whose details remained imprinted 
              upon my brain. 
             Eventually I followed 
              the whims of my subconscious mind and went to find my dorm room 
              from senior year. I discovered that my subconscious had conveniently 
              forgotten that the university had remodeled Patton Hall a few years 
              ago. The contractors had replaced our cramped singles and expansive 
              common room with a set of antiseptic and horribly rational mini-suites. 
              My senior year we had carved our names into the old wooden fireplace, 
              alongside the names of a generation or two of previous occupants, 
              and I had often imagined returning to the suite at my 25th reunion 
              and finding my initials. Now even the geography of my memories has 
              changed. 
             So now that I've returned 
              to Berkeley, I wonder why I'm so excited to see the basketball team 
              play on the UC campus in a few weeks. I can barely name three players, 
              and even Coach Carmody has left for more expansive pastures. Yet 
              my interest remains real, and I know I'll root almost as hard for 
              the team as when Mitch Henderson was dumping the ball to Steve Goodrich 
              down low. I suppose the lesson I've drawn is that memory is a funny 
              and fragile creature that thrives in the abstract and dies in the 
              specific. I can watch basketball because watching basketball returns 
              me to a set of old emotions that instantly recall a library of lost 
              memories. But returning to campus alone, at least for a psyche such 
              as mine, serves as nothing other than a brutal reminder of how swiftly 
              a home can change from a concrete place to a concept held for convenience 
              by my gradually decaying mind. 
              
            
            
            
            
            
              
             
             You can reach Wes at 
              cwtooke@princeton.edu 
               
                
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