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Welcome to our newest member, Garrettced |
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03-10-2011, 12:09 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 18,137
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lovespink88
Ditto what Gusteau said. If my dorm is really the 6th worst then every other schools' dorms must be SUPER nice. Forbes wasn't great, but it was by no means THAT BAD, lol
I liked the comment for one of the other U of I dorms. "It's too loud and E-14 is far". 1) the Six Pack dorms are the fun dorms, if you wanted quiet, you shoulda picked ISR. 2) Quit whining about E-14 (parking lot) being far. You're a freshman, you shouldn't have a car!!!
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^^^LOL.
There are similar complaints about a dorm at KSU that's the "party dorm." If you ask around, you KNOW it's the party dorm, so if you don't party, you need to pick something else (there are quite a few non-party options!)
<---- was smart and asked upperclassmen where NOT to live if I wanted to actually get some work done. lol.
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03-10-2011, 12:51 AM
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thetaj, doesn't it help that I was trying really really hard?
In all seriousness, some of my favorite people have come out of JMU, and I have nothing but respect for the Delta Chi chapter there. I'm just really sick of Mason being talked down in favor of JMU when all facts point to Mason as a superior institution (in my opinion, obviously).
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03-10-2011, 01:04 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Florida
Posts: 884
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gusteau
thetaj, doesn't it help that I was trying really really hard?
In all seriousness, some of my favorite people have come out of JMU, and I have nothing but respect for the Delta Chi chapter there. I'm just really sick of Mason being talked down in favor of JMU when all facts point to Mason as a superior institution (in my opinion, obviously).
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YES CLEARLY you were trying REALLY HARD you turd
Only kidding  I'm not from VA and I left JMU after my freshman year to go somewhere in my home state. So honestly I couldn't care less about the other state schools. I have no complaints about Mason at all.
EXCEPT that it was almost entirely non-JMU students that made Springfest blow up, and I am kind of pissed about that. Of the 70-something students that got arrested at the scene, something like 3 or 4 of them were from JMU. And we got SOOOO much crap for it. uugggghhhhhh. But that wasn't just Mason. It was more Tech than anyone.
/rant
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03-10-2011, 01:42 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Posts: 12,783
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OMG I was totally reading the list and thinking to myself "Well, Georgetown would clearly NEVER have a dorm on this list *hair flip*"
I totally gasped audibly just now. We're #3.
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03-10-2011, 08:53 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Columbus, Ohio
Posts: 856
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I agree that the list (I won't call it an article, because nothing was really written) wasn't that great. One comment was "It's NYC, so you take what you can get, but our bedroom was too small. No room to walk or open the closet door..." Really? Pretty much every freshman dorm is small, especially in a big city. At Pitt, the freshman dorms were in round, cylindrical towers, and so all of the rooms were pie-shaped and super small. Pretty awkward.
Just saw! Tower A is ranked as #14 worst dorm in the country.
Even better, I just saw the "best dorm" list. A quote from one: "WEST CAMPUS IS WHERE ITS AT. SOUTH IS COOL TOO. MAIN IS ALSO THE SHIZ." Ha.
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Last edited by AnotherKD; 03-10-2011 at 08:57 AM.
Reason: add
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03-10-2011, 01:32 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Tatooine
Posts: 2,173
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Yeah nothing on that list is near what I dealt with freshman year. I LOVE my alma mater, but they are lacking in their care of historic or just plain old buildings. I lived in the same dorm my sorority hall was on until I got my bid and moved up. The sorority halls tend to be better kept than the rest of the dorms...cleaner, more cheerful, etc. But we had:
-Hot/cold air units with mold in the vents in every room.
-No way to individually control room temperature. The HRL office controls whether you have hot air or cold air. So in the spring and fall when the temperatures fluctuate wildly you're just SOL.
-You could smoke (at the time I lived there, not now) in your room if you turned on the air and blocked the bottom of the door with a towel. You could also smoke on the balconies. Obviously, this would cause smell issues.
-At the time we had barely working laundry facilities with outrageous charges for use. I've been told they're now new machines and are free, so kudos to them for that.
-HRL would let summer soccer camps use our sorority hall (and all of the others) because it's nicer. The camp kids wrote on walls, kicked holes in them, left soccer balls up in the ceiling tiles, wrote on the wardrobes, spilled things...everything you can think of. HRL doesn't fix that damage.
My parents told me when I got to campus I would have to live in the dorms until my senior year. I moved out of the dorms with their blessings at the end of my freshman year. I was also sick almost the entire year and was fine once I left. This happens to a LOT of people and my theory is that it's related to the OOC mold.
There are two mens' dorms that were far worse.
Also as a sidenote, Tutwiler at UA gives me the creeps. And it's gross. So gross.
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03-10-2011, 01:42 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2002
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It's funny--I always thought community bathrooms were part of the college experience. My freshman dorm, however, had it set up where every two rooms shared a bathroom. That was nice--and the custodians let us keep our stuff in the bathrooms. It was a nice surprise, but since we couldn't pick our freshman dorms it wasn't a big deal.
We were also required to live in the dorms for the first 3 out of our 4 years. About half the senior class lived off-campus. I stayed in the dorms, as did most of my friends and virtually all of my sorority sisters. The way I saw it was that I had the rest of my life to live "off-campus." I could walk to my classes and all the restaurants/bars, someone was cleaning my bathroom, and it was as high-security.
When I think of the "worst" dorms, I think of vermin, mold, elevators that don't work, ancient fire alarms that trip easily, out of date wiring (my freshman dorm didn't have that many plugs--maybe fine for the 1950s when it was built, but not so much for the late 90s), and the actual quality of life stuff. College kids today--ridiclously pampered!
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03-10-2011, 01:51 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Munchkin03
It's funny--I always thought community bathrooms were part of the college experience. My freshman dorm, however, had it set up where every two rooms shared a bathroom. That was nice--and the custodians let us keep our stuff in the bathrooms. It was a nice surprise, but since we couldn't pick our freshman dorms it wasn't a big deal.
We were also required to live in the dorms for the first 3 out of our 4 years. About half the senior class lived off-campus. I stayed in the dorms, as did most of my friends and virtually all of my sorority sisters. The way I saw it was that I had the rest of my life to live "off-campus." I could walk to my classes and all the restaurants/bars, someone was cleaning my bathroom, and it was as high-security.
When I think of the "worst" dorms, I think of vermin, mold, elevators that don't work, ancient fire alarms that trip easily, out of date wiring (my freshman dorm didn't have that many plugs--maybe fine for the 1950s when it was built, but not so much for the late 90s), and the actual quality of life stuff. College kids today--ridiclously pampered!
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Vermin: Check
Mold: Check
Elevators that don't work: Check (well...it worked most of the time but sometimes it would just stop. I guess it got tired.)
Out of date wiring: Check (The internet connections in the rooms would go in and out...the campus didn't have wireless until a couple of years ago). ETA: Plus IIRC the rooms I lived in had two plugs and they didn't want you to plug in more than a certain number of things even with a surge protector.
And yes, we had community bathrooms. That was my first experience always showering with shoes aside from summer camp. They were ok except for on weekends when the cleaning staff didn't come. Not everyone cleans up after themselves. *shudder*
I think even with the updates they've made a couple of campus dorm and the new dorm (which I've never been in but have been told is really nice) most people here live off of campus. It's generally cheaper, actually.
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03-10-2011, 04:06 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 18,137
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Munchkin03
. My freshman dorm, however, had it set up where every two rooms shared a bathroom. That was nice--and the custodians let us keep our stuff in the bathrooms. It was a nice surprise, but since we couldn't pick our freshman dorms it wasn't a big deal.
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This was MY dorm. Loved it (barring the neighbor from hell one semester.)
I was also a long-time dorm dweller.
Most people were DYING to get off-campus after sophomore year (school had 2 year live-on requirement.)
I stayed on until my last year of school, when I moved into the sorority house and lived there til graduation. Sidenote: Yes, I spent my last year of college in the sorority house, and didn't die of not being able to drink. That's what bars (and other sister's apartments) are for.
People were all "OMG why don't you get your own place or rent a house with your friends!!!!"
My theory was that I'd have my whole life to pay rent and live on my own, I was going to milk my room and board scholarship for all it was worth (and take full advantage of my parents being willing to pay for me to live in Sigma.)
I was one of few people who didn't get their own apartments until grad school.
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"Remember that apathy has no place in our Sorority." - Kelly Jo Karnes, Pi
Lakers Nation.
Last edited by KSUViolet06; 03-10-2011 at 04:09 PM.
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03-10-2011, 04:32 PM
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Is this a joke!?!?! They have Miller Hall listed at Ole Miss. Miller Hall is in the process of being demolished! (Literally they started yesterday!) So I guess this isn't really an accurate list!
Oh and I told my husband that his alma mater (Mississippi State) was mentioned a few times. He said those most be the new dorms mentioned because when he went to State the dorms were awful!
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03-10-2011, 04:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OleMissGlitter
Is this a joke!?!?! They have Miller Hall listed at Ole Miss. Miller Hall is in the process of being demolished! (Literally they started yesterday!) So I guess this isn't really an accurate list!
Oh and I told my husband that his alma mater (Mississippi State) was mentioned a few times. He said those most be the new dorms mentioned because when he went to State the dorms were awful!
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They mentioned that Miller Hall was slated for demolition; also, they discussed the fact that the dorms at State were new. They looked pretty nice in the picture, though.
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03-10-2011, 01:37 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Texas
Posts: 14,146
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This makes me happy that I lived in apartments during undergrad. I hung out with people in the dorms, but I don't know if I could live in said dorms.
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03-10-2011, 02:22 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Michigan
Posts: 15,823
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My dorm had vermin too. That was the hardest thing to deal with. The typical freshman dorms were single gender and I was NOT going to be caught dead living in an all girls dorm. So, I carefully crafted my answers on the residence hall questionnaire to ensure that I got placed in the International dorm, the only other dorm where freshman could live. We had kitchens, it was open year round and through breaks so you could stay on campus and work if you needed to. Problem is, during breaks and summer is when they exterminated the other dorms. Mine never got a full extermination treatment. They would spray your room when you complained about roaches and the little critters would run next door for safety. When that room got sprayed, they'd come back to yours. Ick. We had mice rampant at one point too, but they did get those under control pretty fast. Due to the kitchens, and it being the international dorm, the smells were... uhh.. interesting? Back in the 80s you could always smoke everywhere so people smoking and smelling smoke didn't seem like a big deal. I can see how it is a big deal now. Our elevator seemed to work most of the time but I was only up one floor so I used the stairs most of the time. The laundry was awful. Three washers and three dryers for probably 200 people? Ick. I remember we had a trash disposal area where you opened the door and threw your trash down. It was a ramp that led to who knows where, the huge trash pile. Two rooms shared a bathroom but nobody from the university cleaned it, that was our job. I was so thankful not to have community bathrooms though.
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03-10-2011, 02:56 PM
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 6,291
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I'm surprised so many people are THAT opposed to community bathrooms. I mean, I get it, but.. looking back on it, that was probably the most entertaining part about living in the freshmen dorms.
Let’s see…
There was the drunk girl who pretended to be a matron, pushing the hand dryer button for everyone who used the bathroom.. and she handed out candy before you left.
There was the one time I got written up with one of my friends for cutting through the boys bathroom (the bathrooms were in the middle of the floor, with a door on each side), and one of my other friends WOULD have been written up too, if she hadn’t kept running.. right out the door to the floor and down the stairs. The very serious “report” written up by the RA – which I still have to this day – reads, “A third female fled the scene.”
There was the time someone used police caution tape to wrap all of the stalls.. and that other time when someone filled all of the shower stalls with Jello.
Then there was the blonde girl who had all of her friends helping her to dye her hair red.. and then came the screaming when it turned orange.
Ah, memories.
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03-10-2011, 03:06 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Texas
Posts: 14,146
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ASTalumna06
written up
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Another reason I'm happy that I didn't live in dorms.
I remember visiting UF with a fraternity brother and hanging out at his sister's "dorm" (it wasn't officially on-campus, but the only tenants were female students from the university). Their community bathrooms were cleaner than the individual bathrooms in the dorms at my alma mater.
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