|
Duke Cancels Saturday's Tailagte; VP Larry Moneta Says Event Is "Embarassment"
|
|
Topic Started: Nov 9 2010, 09:45 AM (1,111 Views)
|
|
sceptical
|
Nov 9 2010, 09:45 AM
Post #1
|
|
- Posts:
- 2,874
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #264
- Joined:
- Apr 30, 2008
|
(abb has articles in the News thread but I thought the topic deserves its own thread.
Tailgate at Duke has been a rowdy tradition for years. The Duke administration has tried to cancel it every few years. The latest incident, involving a 14 year-old brother of a Duke student found passed out drunk in a Porta-potty, was the excuse used by Larry Monets to cancel Tailgate. There are many arguments and counter-arguments about the event, which involves mass alcohol abuse. Those for Tailgate argue that it keeps the mayhem in a confined area where medical and security can keep an eye on the revelers. Pro-Tailgaters argue that banning it will push the mayhem either off campus or spread it out where it will be less regulated and less safe. They also suggest that the event promotes social cohesion at Duke, Those against Tailgate argue that it has nothing to do with football at this point, that it involves dangerous drinking, and that it opens the university to big-time liability.)
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/512985-duke-administration-cancels-tailgate-maybe-students-will-go-to-the-games-now
Duke Administration Cancels Tailgate: Maybe Students Will Got To Games Now
By Mike Kline (Featured Columnist) on November 9, 2010 The Duke University Administration has canceled the school's on campus tailgate event that precedes Duke home football games.
The decision was made when a student was found passed out in a porta-potty this past Saturday. The University called the event an "embarassement."
This occurring just a few weeks removed from another Duke student who was found dead after a fall.
You can't really blame the university as it looks to avoid another tragedy, or at the very least another embarrassing situation.
The event was conceptualized to draw a student crowd to get together, celebrate and then go to the football game.
More often than not, the students were too imbibed by the time the game would start that most never made it.
Anyone who has been to a Duke home football game will notice the student section is typically sparsely populated. The only game this season where the students showed up in respectable numbers was the Alabama game.
Not being a student, it is easy to judge the reasons why the students don't show up. Perhaps it is because the interest in football is just not there. The Blue Devils are currently 3-6 (1-4 ACC). They have struggled in the third year under coach David Cutcliffe and it is typical for non-winning programs to struggle with attendance.
Duke's version of Tailgate has been more about partying than football. Still the team is making clear improvements and strides to becoming a winning program. Yet the students have rarely come out in force to support the team. Granted, Wallace Wade is no Cameron Indoor Stadium, it is still a beautiful venue for football.
Some students on message boards have said they simply aren't interested in football, which is fair enough. But you have to wonder how many more would come if they weren't preoccupied by the drinking and festivities that were a part of Tailgate.
The Duke students' version of Tailgate isn't what many think of. There aren't kids cooking food, drinking a few beers before going over to the stadium. Many times there was loud music, heavy drinking and probably not enough eating to absorb the quantities of alcohol being consumed.
There were moon bounces. Yes I said moon bounces. There were also students in costumes.
It was more of a fair-type atmosphere than a football one. Cutcliffe called out the students a bit after Duke's thrilling 55-48 win last Saturday against Virginia.
While he was happy with the fans who typically show up and support the team,he was disappointed in the students, saying he didn't know what more they had to do, and that they had missed one heck of a game.
Cutcliffe knows as well as anyone that winning teams bring crowds. He is certainly doing something about that part. And surely, as Duke wins more, more students will come.
But if the interest isn't there because student's are too consumed by other things, the Administration's decision to end Tailgate might just give those students who now have nothing else to do on fall Saturdays a chance to come see a game from time to time.
More students would mean more atmosphere. And while no one expects them to try and duplicate what Cameron has for basketball, a more steady student presence would certainly benefit the team.
|
|
|
| |
|
sceptical
|
Nov 9 2010, 09:47 AM
Post #2
|
|
- Posts:
- 2,874
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #264
- Joined:
- Apr 30, 2008
|
Article from Herald-Sun:
http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story/10210045/article-Duke-cancels-tailgate?instance=homesecondleft
|
|
|
| |
|
sceptical
|
Nov 9 2010, 09:49 AM
Post #3
|
|
- Posts:
- 2,874
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #264
- Joined:
- Apr 30, 2008
|
Over 1,200 students have said they are attending a "Main Quad Throwdown" on a Facebook page, stating "Tailgate expands its horizons...". The event is in response to Duke's cancellation of Tailgate.
http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=175900589094131
|
|
|
| |
|
Quasimodo
|
Nov 9 2010, 10:09 AM
Post #4
|
|
- Posts:
- 38,130
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #17
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
I agree with the poster at the Chronicle who said that if Tailgate is cancelled, it will most likely only move off campus, where it will be even less supervised and there will be even more binge drinking and more persons passed out--only, unlike Tailgate there will be no EMS vehicles handy to render aid.
- Quote:
-
that it involves dangerous drinking, and that it opens the university to big-time liability.)
Always an important consideration... (sarc/off)
|
|
|
| |
|
Locomotive Breath
|
Nov 9 2010, 12:15 PM
Post #5
|
|
- Posts:
- 581
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #40
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
Duke's wanted to cancel tailgate for a long time. They finally got their Reichstag fire.
Notice how the reaction was to punish the entire student body rather than the single student who brought and abandoned an underage sibling? Where have we seen group punishment before?
|
|
|
| |
|
abb
|
Nov 9 2010, 12:34 PM
Post #6
|
|
- Posts:
- 39,835
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #4
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
- Locomotive Breath
- Nov 9 2010, 12:15 PM
Duke's wanted to cancel tailgate for a long time. They finally got their Reichstag fire. That's exactly what happened.
|
|
|
| |
|
abb
|
Nov 9 2010, 12:39 PM
Post #7
|
|
- Posts:
- 39,835
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #4
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
Comments section still crackling. Up to 86 now. Watch for The Chronicle to shut down comments soon.
http://www.dukechronicle.com/node/153620/talk
|
|
|
| |
|
Quasimodo
|
Nov 9 2010, 06:27 PM
Post #8
|
|
- Posts:
- 38,130
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #17
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
- Quote:
-
http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/2010/11/tailgate.htmlCancelled Student Event Will Not Affect Other Tailgating Before Duke-BC Game
Officials to work with students to create game day celebrationTuesday, November 9, 2010 DURHAM, NC -- Duke University officials have cancelled a student "Tailgate" event prior to Saturday's home football game versus Boston College, but there will still be tailgating going on in the parking lots outside Wallace Wade Stadium. "Duke's cancellation of the student event, does not affect other tailgating activities prior to Saturday's game," said Michael Schoenfeld, Duke's vice president for public affairs and government relations. "Our fans will still be able to engage in their usual pre-game activities near Wallace Wade Stadium." On Monday night, Larry Moneta, Duke's vice president for student affairs, sent an e-mail to students announcing that students would not be allowed to hold their "tailgate" event this Saturday because "it has long lost its value as a pre-football, spirit building activity and has become increasingly dangerous in every iteration." Moneta added that this spring, administrators will work with students, Duke Athletics and others to develop a new form of football game day celebration, "one that will support our student athletes, be safe and healthy, and showcase the pride of ‘Dear Old Duke.' We will invite your ideas and suggestions and be prepared to celebrate the fall 2011 season with the class and spirit for which Duke is known." He also encouraged students to turn out for Saturday's game. "Before we focus on next year, we have critical games ahead and need your full support of our team. I really hope that you'll all turn out and cheer on the team to a win over Boston College."
|
|
|
| |
|
sceptical
|
Nov 9 2010, 06:48 PM
Post #9
|
|
- Posts:
- 2,874
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #264
- Joined:
- Apr 30, 2008
|
http://neurogenesisfactor.blogspot.com/2010/11/sound-off-tailgates-cancelled.html
Sound Off: Tailgate’s Cancelled
Last night at 10 pm Larry Moneta, Duke's VP for Student Affairs, sent out an email to the student body effectively cancelling Tailgate, forever.
If you don't know what Duke Tailgate is, then watch this…
http://multimedia.foxsports.com/m/video/34359679/college-experiment-hot-girl-duke.htm?q=duke+tailgate
A minor, a sibling of an absolutely moronic, irresponsible student was found passed out in a Blue Zone port-a-john. He is apparently fine, and that's good. But the administration jumped on this as the perfect opportunity to end Tailgate once and for all. They have been trying to end it for many years. Now is the perfect opportunity. Or is it?
Student response to the email was swift. Within minutes, a student had an organized event called "Main Quad Throwdown" up on facebook. Within hours, about a quarter of the student body had RSVP'd as "attending." That is 1250+ students. Within 3 hours. Impressive. The administration potentially has a large problem on their hands.
As of this moment, 1500 people are attending and 4000 are "awaiting reply." This Throwdown could possibly be larger than LDOC and it is going to be right in the middle of the main quad, a crazy, drunken rager right in front of everyone: students, parents, tourists, fans, little kids. And believe me, student response to Tailgate's cancellation has been outrage, but not the kind of outrage that plagues so many "activist groups," where they are appalled but don't do anything about it. No, the students are mobilized, and the administration gave us 5 days to plan it.
There are a few important issues here that need to be put out there:
1. A main reason for cancelling Tailgate, besides the obvious safety concerns, is that very few students actually attend the football game. Most Tailgate ragers go get some food and fall asleep, wake up 6 hours later and rally for Shooters. The football program struggles with attendance so much that they already close the gym on game days to discourage working out during game time. Apparently they feel people will just be like, "Oh, I can't go to the gym so I may as well just go to the game." It doesn't work out that way. Obviously, people don't appreciate a dictator-like move and are repelled. Has game day attendance gone up?
But wait, why the heck is the football team so special??? Attendance is lower at games like soccer and baseball, field hockey and wrestling matches, swim and track meets. So why don't administrators care about those teams as much as our floundering, awful football program? Maybe because they pump a TON more money into the football program and get no return on their investment. They are struggling to rationalize the decision to put so much money into something so bad.
2. OK, you cancelled Tailgate. You got rid of a security-moderated, EMS attended party that brings hundreds of otherwise incredibly independent students together in one place to have fun for a couple hours. The only other events at Duke that are as well attended as Tailgate are the basketball games. There is very little cohesion in our campus culture and you just made it worse. You just empowered the Greek scene even more, and now even larger parties will be thrown off-campus, in Durham neighborhoods, and these parties will definitely not have security guards or EMS on-call. No, do you think kids are just going to wake up on Saturday morning, and instead of Tailgating, go to Perkins and work all afternoon? Or, even go to the game?
No, you should know this by now, but Duke students are smart, and we get what we want. Main Quad Throwdown is a perfect example of a calculated response that was generated within minutes. If students want to party hard on weekends, then they will. We work incredibly hard all week and taking away something like Tailgate may peeve people initially, but I guarantee that very soon, something will be generated to take its place, for the long term. The Throwdown is obviously a one-time deal, but if this "newer, better way to Tailgate and enjoy the game" that admin is "going to be developing during the Spring as an alternative" is lame, the students will create an un-lame alternative very quickly, and if it not supported by the administration, then it will be brought off campus.
Main Quad Throwdown. 11/13/10. Duke University Main Quad. Come, if not to party, then to support a fundamentally democratic movement created and facilitated by Duke Students for Duke Students. I wonder if a news truck will get wind of this ;
|
|
|
| |
|
foxglove
|
Nov 9 2010, 07:07 PM
Post #10
|
|
- Posts:
- 6,542
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #69
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
- sceptical
- Nov 9 2010, 06:48 PM
http://neurogenesisfactor.blogspot.com/2010/11/sound-off-tailgates-cancelled.htmlSound Off: Tailgate’s Cancelled Last night at 10 pm Larry Moneta, Duke's VP for Student Affairs, sent out an email to the student body effectively cancelling Tailgate, forever. If you don't know what Duke Tailgate is, then watch this… http://multimedia.foxsports.com/m/video/34359679/college-experiment-hot-girl-duke.htm?q=duke+tailgateA minor, a sibling of an absolutely moronic, irresponsible student was found passed out in a Blue Zone port-a-john. He is apparently fine, and that's good. But the administration jumped on this as the perfect opportunity to end Tailgate once and for all. They have been trying to end it for many years. Now is the perfect opportunity. Or is it? Student response to the email was swift. Within minutes, a student had an organized event called "Main Quad Throwdown" up on facebook. Within hours, about a quarter of the student body had RSVP'd as "attending." That is 1250+ students. Within 3 hours. Impressive. The administration potentially has a large problem on their hands. As of this moment, 1500 people are attending and 4000 are "awaiting reply." This Throwdown could possibly be larger than LDOC and it is going to be right in the middle of the main quad, a crazy, drunken rager right in front of everyone: students, parents, tourists, fans, little kids. And believe me, student response to Tailgate's cancellation has been outrage, but not the kind of outrage that plagues so many "activist groups," where they are appalled but don't do anything about it. No, the students are mobilized, and the administration gave us 5 days to plan it. There are a few important issues here that need to be put out there: 1. A main reason for cancelling Tailgate, besides the obvious safety concerns, is that very few students actually attend the football game. Most Tailgate ragers go get some food and fall asleep, wake up 6 hours later and rally for Shooters. The football program struggles with attendance so much that they already close the gym on game days to discourage working out during game time. Apparently they feel people will just be like, "Oh, I can't go to the gym so I may as well just go to the game." It doesn't work out that way. Obviously, people don't appreciate a dictator-like move and are repelled. Has game day attendance gone up? But wait, why the heck is the football team so special??? Attendance is lower at games like soccer and baseball, field hockey and wrestling matches, swim and track meets. So why don't administrators care about those teams as much as our floundering, awful football program? Maybe because they pump a TON more money into the football program and get no return on their investment. They are struggling to rationalize the decision to put so much money into something so bad. 2. OK, you cancelled Tailgate. You got rid of a security-moderated, EMS attended party that brings hundreds of otherwise incredibly independent students together in one place to have fun for a couple hours. The only other events at Duke that are as well attended as Tailgate are the basketball games. There is very little cohesion in our campus culture and you just made it worse. You just empowered the Greek scene even more, and now even larger parties will be thrown off-campus, in Durham neighborhoods, and these parties will definitely not have security guards or EMS on-call. No, do you think kids are just going to wake up on Saturday morning, and instead of Tailgating, go to Perkins and work all afternoon? Or, even go to the game? No, you should know this by now, but Duke students are smart, and we get what we want. Main Quad Throwdown is a perfect example of a calculated response that was generated within minutes. If students want to party hard on weekends, then they will. We work incredibly hard all week and taking away something like Tailgate may peeve people initially, but I guarantee that very soon, something will be generated to take its place, for the long term. The Throwdown is obviously a one-time deal, but if this "newer, better way to Tailgate and enjoy the game" that admin is "going to be developing during the Spring as an alternative" is lame, the students will create an un-lame alternative very quickly, and if it not supported by the administration, then it will be brought off campus. Main Quad Throwdown. 11/13/10. Duke University Main Quad. Come, if not to party, then to support a fundamentally democratic movement created and facilitated by Duke Students for Duke Students. I wonder if a news truck will get wind of this ; What a bunch of babies!
|
|
|
| |
|
foxglove
|
Nov 10 2010, 07:01 AM
Post #11
|
|
- Posts:
- 6,542
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #69
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
Of course, an edict coming from Larry Moneta, who is a phony, probably doesn't help.
|
|
|
| |
|
jarms
|
Nov 10 2010, 09:13 AM
Post #12
|
|
- Posts:
- 351
- Group:
- Members
- Member
- #443
- Joined:
- Feb 28, 2009
|
- foxglove
- Nov 9 2010, 07:07 PM
- sceptical
- Nov 9 2010, 06:48 PM
http://neurogenesisfactor.blogspot.com/2010/11/sound-off-tailgates-cancelled.htmlSound Off: Tailgate’s Cancelled Last night at 10 pm Larry Moneta, Duke's VP for Student Affairs, sent out an email to the student body effectively cancelling Tailgate, forever. If you don't know what Duke Tailgate is, then watch this… http://multimedia.foxsports.com/m/video/34359679/college-experiment-hot-girl-duke.htm?q=duke+tailgateA minor, a sibling of an absolutely moronic, irresponsible student was found passed out in a Blue Zone port-a-john. He is apparently fine, and that's good. But the administration jumped on this as the perfect opportunity to end Tailgate once and for all. They have been trying to end it for many years. Now is the perfect opportunity. Or is it? Student response to the email was swift. Within minutes, a student had an organized event called "Main Quad Throwdown" up on facebook. Within hours, about a quarter of the student body had RSVP'd as "attending." That is 1250+ students. Within 3 hours. Impressive. The administration potentially has a large problem on their hands. As of this moment, 1500 people are attending and 4000 are "awaiting reply." This Throwdown could possibly be larger than LDOC and it is going to be right in the middle of the main quad, a crazy, drunken rager right in front of everyone: students, parents, tourists, fans, little kids. And believe me, student response to Tailgate's cancellation has been outrage, but not the kind of outrage that plagues so many "activist groups," where they are appalled but don't do anything about it. No, the students are mobilized, and the administration gave us 5 days to plan it. There are a few important issues here that need to be put out there: 1. A main reason for cancelling Tailgate, besides the obvious safety concerns, is that very few students actually attend the football game. Most Tailgate ragers go get some food and fall asleep, wake up 6 hours later and rally for Shooters. The football program struggles with attendance so much that they already close the gym on game days to discourage working out during game time. Apparently they feel people will just be like, "Oh, I can't go to the gym so I may as well just go to the game." It doesn't work out that way. Obviously, people don't appreciate a dictator-like move and are repelled. Has game day attendance gone up? But wait, why the heck is the football team so special??? Attendance is lower at games like soccer and baseball, field hockey and wrestling matches, swim and track meets. So why don't administrators care about those teams as much as our floundering, awful football program? Maybe because they pump a TON more money into the football program and get no return on their investment. They are struggling to rationalize the decision to put so much money into something so bad. 2. OK, you cancelled Tailgate. You got rid of a security-moderated, EMS attended party that brings hundreds of otherwise incredibly independent students together in one place to have fun for a couple hours. The only other events at Duke that are as well attended as Tailgate are the basketball games. There is very little cohesion in our campus culture and you just made it worse. You just empowered the Greek scene even more, and now even larger parties will be thrown off-campus, in Durham neighborhoods, and these parties will definitely not have security guards or EMS on-call. No, do you think kids are just going to wake up on Saturday morning, and instead of Tailgating, go to Perkins and work all afternoon? Or, even go to the game? No, you should know this by now, but Duke students are smart, and we get what we want. Main Quad Throwdown is a perfect example of a calculated response that was generated within minutes. If students want to party hard on weekends, then they will. We work incredibly hard all week and taking away something like Tailgate may peeve people initially, but I guarantee that very soon, something will be generated to take its place, for the long term. The Throwdown is obviously a one-time deal, but if this "newer, better way to Tailgate and enjoy the game" that admin is "going to be developing during the Spring as an alternative" is lame, the students will create an un-lame alternative very quickly, and if it not supported by the administration, then it will be brought off campus. Main Quad Throwdown. 11/13/10. Duke University Main Quad. Come, if not to party, then to support a fundamentally democratic movement created and facilitated by Duke Students for Duke Students. I wonder if a news truck will get wind of this ;
What a bunch of babies! Don't know who's more immature, the students or the administration. Tough call!
|
|
|
| |
|
Locomotive Breath
|
Nov 10 2010, 09:15 AM
Post #13
|
|
- Posts:
- 581
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #40
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
- jarms
- Nov 10 2010, 09:13 AM
- foxglove
- Nov 9 2010, 07:07 PM
- sceptical
- Nov 9 2010, 06:48 PM
http://neurogenesisfactor.blogspot.com/2010/11/sound-off-tailgates-cancelled.htmlSound Off: Tailgate’s Cancelled Last night at 10 pm Larry Moneta, Duke's VP for Student Affairs, sent out an email to the student body effectively cancelling Tailgate, forever. If you don't know what Duke Tailgate is, then watch this… http://multimedia.foxsports.com/m/video/34359679/college-experiment-hot-girl-duke.htm?q=duke+tailgateA minor, a sibling of an absolutely moronic, irresponsible student was found passed out in a Blue Zone port-a-john. He is apparently fine, and that's good. But the administration jumped on this as the perfect opportunity to end Tailgate once and for all. They have been trying to end it for many years. Now is the perfect opportunity. Or is it? Student response to the email was swift. Within minutes, a student had an organized event called "Main Quad Throwdown" up on facebook. Within hours, about a quarter of the student body had RSVP'd as "attending." That is 1250+ students. Within 3 hours. Impressive. The administration potentially has a large problem on their hands. As of this moment, 1500 people are attending and 4000 are "awaiting reply." This Throwdown could possibly be larger than LDOC and it is going to be right in the middle of the main quad, a crazy, drunken rager right in front of everyone: students, parents, tourists, fans, little kids. And believe me, student response to Tailgate's cancellation has been outrage, but not the kind of outrage that plagues so many "activist groups," where they are appalled but don't do anything about it. No, the students are mobilized, and the administration gave us 5 days to plan it. There are a few important issues here that need to be put out there: 1. A main reason for cancelling Tailgate, besides the obvious safety concerns, is that very few students actually attend the football game. Most Tailgate ragers go get some food and fall asleep, wake up 6 hours later and rally for Shooters. The football program struggles with attendance so much that they already close the gym on game days to discourage working out during game time. Apparently they feel people will just be like, "Oh, I can't go to the gym so I may as well just go to the game." It doesn't work out that way. Obviously, people don't appreciate a dictator-like move and are repelled. Has game day attendance gone up? But wait, why the heck is the football team so special??? Attendance is lower at games like soccer and baseball, field hockey and wrestling matches, swim and track meets. So why don't administrators care about those teams as much as our floundering, awful football program? Maybe because they pump a TON more money into the football program and get no return on their investment. They are struggling to rationalize the decision to put so much money into something so bad. 2. OK, you cancelled Tailgate. You got rid of a security-moderated, EMS attended party that brings hundreds of otherwise incredibly independent students together in one place to have fun for a couple hours. The only other events at Duke that are as well attended as Tailgate are the basketball games. There is very little cohesion in our campus culture and you just made it worse. You just empowered the Greek scene even more, and now even larger parties will be thrown off-campus, in Durham neighborhoods, and these parties will definitely not have security guards or EMS on-call. No, do you think kids are just going to wake up on Saturday morning, and instead of Tailgating, go to Perkins and work all afternoon? Or, even go to the game? No, you should know this by now, but Duke students are smart, and we get what we want. Main Quad Throwdown is a perfect example of a calculated response that was generated within minutes. If students want to party hard on weekends, then they will. We work incredibly hard all week and taking away something like Tailgate may peeve people initially, but I guarantee that very soon, something will be generated to take its place, for the long term. The Throwdown is obviously a one-time deal, but if this "newer, better way to Tailgate and enjoy the game" that admin is "going to be developing during the Spring as an alternative" is lame, the students will create an un-lame alternative very quickly, and if it not supported by the administration, then it will be brought off campus. Main Quad Throwdown. 11/13/10. Duke University Main Quad. Come, if not to party, then to support a fundamentally democratic movement created and facilitated by Duke Students for Duke Students. I wonder if a news truck will get wind of this ;
What a bunch of babies!
Don't know who's more immature, the students or the administration. Tough call! You beat me to it.
|
|
|
| |
|
abb
|
Nov 10 2010, 09:26 AM
Post #14
|
|
- Posts:
- 39,835
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #4
- Joined:
- Apr 28, 2008
|
The students have an excuse. They're young and don't know any better.
|
|
|
| |
|
sceptical
|
Nov 10 2010, 10:43 AM
Post #15
|
|
- Posts:
- 2,874
- Group:
- Tier1
- Member
- #264
- Joined:
- Apr 30, 2008
|
The facebook site "Main Quad Throwdown" has been taken down and there are reports Duke pressured the organizers of this alternative Tailgate to do so. There was another rumor that Duke administrators threatened to cancel the Last Day of Classes celebration if students go overboard on Saturday. The comments section in the Chronicle on the subject is up to 133.
|
|
|
| |
| 1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
|