w w w w !w-V° :' mir- _W boov,-s I Brown out How to Survive Your College Daze By G. Brown New View Press 134 pp., $5.95 By Jackie Young N OW THAT WE are all here at the University, and most likely have survived at least the first two months of classes, there is no real need to read How to Survive Your College Daze. The book tries to convey what college is like for the typical student - Joe Average goes to school and gets a roommate who puts his feet up on his pillow, smokes marijuana, and gets drunk. That's just about all that author Brown has to say. Oh, yeah - homework is hell and so is all the loneliness, dorm food and university red tape. Noooo kidding, Mr. Brown. Anyone who comes to college for a week can see exactly what you wrote - I admit it is a slightly realistic portrait of college life, except for one thing - if Joe Average read this thinking that it would tell him all he needs to know about dorm living he would be totally distraught and never attend college. Section one is a beauty. The first paragraph sums up the whole book: "Assuming you picked up this book because you are preparing to go to college, you probably feel like wetting your pants." Well right off Brown assumes too much. I picked up the book because I wanted to see someone's perspective on college living. I am a University sophomore, I have a vested interest in this stuff. Brown gives us some wise infor- mation - he tells me something I never knew. "Not everyone needs to go to college," he says. After Brown establishes that plumbers and technicians make big bucks without a college degree he goes on to one of his more insightful passages and explains, "Get this straight: satisfaction isn't all money." That's an odd statement coming from Brown - it's easy to con- clude after the first few pages that he wrote the book for bucks. What a hypocrite. Here is another comment that struck me as really stupid in just the first chapter. He writes: "Size, as most women know, is relative." This phrase is stuck in the middle of a paragraph where Brown is describing professors and sizes of universities. I think I get his point - but it wasn't very funny at all. Maybe it will be to you, though. In the second part of his book Brown actually offers some tasty bits of creative ideas to work with under the title of "dorm pranks." Brown suggests "a manilla envelope filled with shaving cream" that you can shove under someone's door and then jump on the envelope as hard as you can. I imagine this must take some skill. Late-night phone calls, he says, are "a uniquely satisfying way of getting someone's goat." "Terrorizing someone in his or her sleep is a chance to be extremely inventive and nasty," and Brown suggest that "fire ex- tinguishers can be found in every, dor- mitory, and sometimes they need to be tested.. . Nuff said." Malicious destruction of property and messing with fire extinguishers are terrific pranks - so good that some freshperson who reads the book and says "so that's why they put those fire hoses in the hallway," may find him/herself booted out of the dorm faster than he or she can finish testing Brown's list of pranks. Brown, who obviously didn't attend this university - not to be snobby - but realistic - calls college days "the Best Days of Your Life." Later on, you'll get a job and a family and a stockpile of responsibilities, so for now, just ac- cumulate a lot of funny memories and work on living life to the hilt. But tuck it in your brain somewhere that adult life lurks around the corner. Remind our- self some night when you're ripped to the gills on cheap wine." Brown does hit the nail on the head, though, when he writes "If you don't like beer, you might as well drop out of school right now." He continues by writing"Go out and buy a six-pack right now!" Maybe these sentences are so dear to me because I hate beer. I know I'm probably a minority but I still hate the stuff. Does he have any stock in beer or what? As for football games, Brown has more ridiculous opinions to impose on us. His "rules of thumb" for watching college football games are pretty bad. One states that "the cheerleaders are fair game for verbal abuse, especially the male ones who try to act so en- thusiastic when they really need to get punched out for acting so faggy." Another suggestion is that "it is not considered impolitetowbecome so overexcited that you throw up at your seat. It is impolite to do it down the back of somebody's neck." I found this one suggestion very appealing. But just when you think the book is full of sarcastic suggestions and revolting ideas, Brown turns serious. "You can still be very lonely unless you have enough inner security and sense of yourself to share yourself with another person. That's called love, and it isn't such an antiquated idea," ac- cording to Brown. I'm glad I read this definition of love. My life will be changed forever more. Simplicity, what a concept! Alas, if he only made my calculus problems half as easy! In the final section, Brown makes statements and gives advice that just aren't always true. Brown says, "Although ex- tracurricular activities will be con- sidered by potential employers, grades are still the bottom line ... they are still the most important decision-making criteria when you become a potential candidate for your first major career job." This is just not true and extremely poor advice. When I spoke with an editor of a prestigious newspaper about what he looks for in a young journalist he told me work experience at a newspaper - grades mean nothing although a degree adds a lot. This may not be true for all careers, but neither is the statement that grades determine who will get the jobs. Ex- perience counts in today's job market, no matter what field you may be in. Brown makes a hasty generalization - something he does throughout the en- tire book. Many of his observations are true. But he overstates their significan- ce in examining the meaning of the college experience and distorts things in a disgusting, distasteful manner. At first glance however, all of his opinions. advice, and observations might seem like a good characterization of the Joe or Suzie Average - but even I give these dullards who may really act like this more credit than I give Brown for writing a book about it. College Daze is just not worth the money or the time it takes to read. In reference to his book, Brown says, "without a doubt, I'd buy my book if I was away at school for the first time. Heck, it's the same price as a pizza and two cokes!" I contend that students should go for the pizza and cokes, you'll get a lot more for your money. You'll probably have more insight into what college means for you chowing down on the piz- za, too. Hashing fngC Cents, ibi Reason.4 oEtOlga's KitcJ Being a college student is a good lesson in dollars and sense. Take eating for example. Eating a good meal is sensible. Eating a good meal for under a dollar is sensational. Trying to get a good meal at most restaurants for under a dollar is senseless. But not at Olga's Kitchen. Right now, we're offering good food at a great price--99C. in, Olga's made-fresh-to-order bread, plus a squeezed orange juice for just 990. For lunch or dinner, get Olga's extraor wrapped around your choice of meats, Che vegetables-each just 990. On Sundays, buy at the regular price, and then help yoursel bountiful, all-you-can-eat salad bar for jus I .i ~ ~- 4' Try our Breakfast Olga. 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