Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Graduating and Don't Need That Fridge? Just Leave It Behind

Leaving a Big Mess on Campus

Each and every year after students take their last final, have one last party with their friends to celebrate taking that last final and finally get around to cleaning out their room on campus, college kids everywhere always seem to leave behind a bunch of their stuff they no longer want.

At Pomona college in California, after students moved out, maintenance crews found about 50 unwanted mini-refrigerators, 40 computer printers, scores of microwave ovens and window fans, mounds of mattresses and couches, piles of pillows and clothes, a store's worth of detergent, shampoo, books and ramen, not to mention some bicycles, stuffed animals, crutches and even some exotic underwear.

"Not until you are here sorting through it all do you realize the actual magnitude of what was previously being trashed. And what could be put to good use for families of need," said a Pomona student who along with her classmates collected some of the salvageable items left behind to donate to charity.

So why do students leave so much of their shit behind? Some say its mostly graduates who will no longer need a tiny dorm room fridge to keep their beer icy cold. Others say it may be because today's college students are simply just living in much more of a throwaway culture than in the past.

Whatever the reason, most of the stuff left behind gets put to some good use eventually by another student. One student's shit may also be another student's shit - but he may put that shit to good use. Word.

Sig Ep Brother Hit in Cancun Car Crash Making Recovery

Friends Rally Around Crash Victim

A Sigma Phi Epsilon brother from the University of Delaware who was critically injured when he was hit by a while on spring break in Cancun is on his to making a recovery.

Paul Conticelli was walking back to his hotel room with one of his fraternity brothers around 4 a.m on March 25. When they went to cross the street, Conticelli was hit by a speeding drunk driver who didn't have his headlights on.

Paul fractured his skull and a leg and had to be put in a medically induced coma. He's now about 80 percent back to normal, he told a newspaper in his hometown.

Top Shelf

Summer School Students Keeps Penn State Police Busy

DUIs, Disorderlies, Keep Police Busy

Just because most Penn State students are home for the summer, doesn't mean kids staying in State College for the summer can't have fun.

Among some of the call police near Penn State University had to respond to last week were DUIs, underage drinking, public urination, a man being hit with a golf club and two bouncers fighting after one reportedly threw beer on the other.

Emoria State Phi Delts Finally Getting New House

Frat House Zoning on Agenda for Tuesday

All that's left for Phi Delta Theta's Emporia State University to do before they can move into their new house is to get approval to re-zone the property where it sits.

The fraternity will ask the city's planning commission tonight for the approval. Ground broke about a year and a half ago on the new building and the brothers had originally hoped to move in last fall.

With approval, the Phi Delts will move in this September. They raised about $170,000 to help build the new house.

Local Akron Frat Deep In Tradition

Local Frat Has Lasting Legacy at UA

The brothers of the local fraternity Pi Kappa Epsilon at the University of Akron have more than 125 years to be proud of and are celebrating the milestone of an anniversary by reminiscing with alumni.

"Some people would claim that the movie Animal House was based on us,'' one of their alumni brothers who graduated in 1954 told an Akron newspaper. Known as the "Lone Star" fraternity on campus, their chapter is one of the oldest local fraternal organizations in the country.

The brothers have long been known as pranksters on campus. The Akron Beacon-Journal reported that they once borrowed a human skeleton from a lab and placed it in the women's restroom. They gobbled ice cream intended for a faculty gala. They posted signs that read ``No Classes Today,'' to name a few.

Boobs Du'Jour

Sigma Tau Chi Brothers Raise Money for YMCA

Frat Donates to the Oswego Y

While some fraternity brothers spent April 20 celebrating what they consider the "highest" of all holidays, the brothers of the State University of New York in Oswego's Sigma Tau Chi chapter spent their second year helping kids at the local YMCA.

“The fraternity brothers, who volunteered their time, were a significant help for both events and worked very well with the kids. We certainly look forward to having their assistance again for other events that will take place for 2007,” the YMCA's event coordinator told the Palladium Times.

Sigma Tau Chi, a local fraternity, also volunteers with kids at the YMCA for Halloween. The also held a spaghetti dinner to raise money for the kids.

Yankees Slugger and Former Long Beach State Star Admits Using "Stuff"

Tuesday's Frat Boy News Daily Sports Page

California State University in Long Beach
(compiled by the Long Beach Press-Telegram)

Former Long Beach State Dirtbags star Jason Giambi has handled his past mistakes with honor. He admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs when asked by a grand jury and now speaks out against them.

Giambi, on Friday, was hitting a respectable .273 as the New York Yankees designated hitter. He's a star without the juice. The slugger last week sent this message to Major League Baseball: Apologize to the public for the steroid problem. That's sound advice. It's time for baseball to shine a light on the shadow hanging over too many big bats.

Nothing would send a better message to young fans than admitting that cheating was not only widespread, but that several players risked their health and reputations.

Steroid use, we should note, was up among children in last year's nationwide drug survey. Though parents are ultimately responsible for their kids' behavior, the athletes teens idolize don't help by bulking up with juice and then denying it.

This is what Giambi told USA Today: "I was wrong for doing that stuff. What we should have done a long time ago was stand up - players, ownership, everybody - and said: `We made a mistake."'

Giambi demonstrated that he is sorry and can still hit.

Will the rest of baseball follow his swing?

Sorority Bonding

Turning Drug Dealers Into College Grads

Tuesday's Frat Boy News Pause for the Cause

Wayne County Community College
(compiled by Amber Arellano)

Let's face it. Few people have sympathy for convicted drug dealers. They tended their garden, now they're living with the fruits of their cultivation.

Generally, I agree. Lately, though, I've been re-thinking my stance, particularly in regards to the societal value of preventing small-time convicted marijuana dealers from getting college financial aid.

My editorial board has help make this problem clearer to me as Wayne County Community College leaders have told us about how every year, dozens of such young men cannot afford to attend the school because their criminal record makes them ineligible for federal financial aid.

On one hand, I don't have much sympathy for convicted drug dealers and their aspirations. They don't deserve to have their behavior rewarded.

On the other hand, when these people -- overwhelmingly young men -- don't find a viable career path, they're more likely to go back to drug dealing and to need state welfare assistance to support their families.

And they're just as likely or more likely to pay back college student loans.

"There's no evidence that shows young kids who smoked marijuana in the past or who have a rap on their record are less likely to pay back their student loans," says William Pollack, a Harvard University researcher who is among the nation's top experts on the gender achievement gap.

"Overwhelmingly," he added, "middle class kids are just as likely or more likely to default on their college student loans."

It's in the federal and state governments' best interest to get these young men to college, into good jobs, and turn them into strong contributors to their families and communities, including as taxpayers.

This is one area of federal intervention that needs to be revamped, and quickly, before another few thousand young men in Michigan are turned away for financial aid and give up on their college dreams.

Girls Attacked Near UCLA

The Frat Boy News daily campus police report for Tuesday:

UCLA
(compiled by ABC7.com)

Two female UCLA students have been attacked in the last week, although police won't say if the assaults could be related.

The first attack occurred in the lobby of an apartment building on Kelton Avenue just off campus. The victim fought back and got away.

But it's raised fears among other students living in that same building.

"There's lots of girls in this apartment so we are a little on edge, always locking our doors, we have the bats inside, we have our pepper spray but it's when you're alone, we do walk on and off campus and we are sometimes alone so, it's a little scary, yeah," Erica Bender, a UCLA student, said.

The second victim also got away. She did not get a look at her attacker.

Campus police released a sketch of the suspect. If you've seen him call UCLA Campus Police, at 310-794-5824.

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