Valentine wish So, I walk in the door today to sit down and diligently write my column and my editor looks at me and says, "Is it on Valentine's Day? Because the cover story is on Valentine's Day." Well, I thought; I hadn't planned on writing about Valentine's Day but, now that they've mentioned it, I have a few things to say about this holiday. And I'm always in the mood to write a bitter, hateful column anyway, so why not? As a kid, Valentine's Day was al- ways a monumental event in my house. For some unexplainable reason my mother really got into the heart thing. She would annually construct a shrine =; s ; s <. :, .. ' F . , 4,r- ,, . ,- ,. F, t ; ITrougkout i yeears, customs may ckange but i Valentine spirit remains Ik e same Fy Jams Ns a n d Mijchelle Lee Thompson to St. Valentine complete with a huge Valentine box, plenty of candy and pink construction paper hearts. My sister and I always had to dress in cute little red and pink outfits. (Really I hate pink and found this to be a torture I would only endure once a year.) , Now that I have matured (and this is all in how you look at it), I find my mother's gratuitous displays of heart paraphernalia to be a bit obsessive. In fact, I would go as far as to say they are nauseating. Actually, I find the whole holiday to be nauseating at this point. In my current state of datelessness, I find myself longing for a return to elementary school days when everyone had to give everyone else cards and candy. It made the whole thing much more simple. We were guaranteed at least 15 valentines and no one had to worry about who liked who. We put all our petty dislikes behind us and played nice, if even for only one day. Even this happy childhood memory takes on a new light upon a little reevaluation. When it comes right down to it, valentine exchanges weren't as equal as it might seem. I mean, my friends definitely got the better cards and any boy I liked at the time got an extra special one. Those people who I hated always got the ones with the characters I thought were the worst. So much for simple. Since I have been old enough to date, the whole idea of day devoted to love has kind of worn thin. I seem to have a knack for breaking up with people, if I happen to be dating anyone when February hits, eitherjust before or right after this stupid day. Not exactly a pleasant Valentine wish, huh? I'm sure that everyone has their own Valentine's Day horror stories about boyfriends who got caught out with another woman or girlfriends who didn't appropriately appreciate a gift. I seem to have more than my fair share of these tales. For example, when I was a senior in high school and was dating my first serious boyfriend, he made me so mad on the 14th that I refused to go out with him at all. I gave the flowers I had bought for him to my mother and he gave me the cookies he baked for me a few days later. But, in the end we still were broken up in less than a week. My freshman year here I felt so much pressure to have a date that I went to a fraternity date party with a total loser. I spent the whole night talking to * my neighbor who had also gone and dancing the obligatory dances. Defi- nitely a less than stellar experience. It seems that regardless of how often or how little one thinks about romance or dating, once February first rolls around, everyone's thoughts turn to Cupid and his arrow. This seems like an awful lot of pressure to me. Who says that if we are single then we suck? Obviously we have taken the meaning of a little guy who flies around naked shooting people with arrows just a bit too far. Who uses arrows now anyway. Guns are in now Cupid, catch up. (I am not advocating .filnn A n a t .r di h.. ttls I sow hempseed. Hempseed I sow. He that loves me best, Come after me now. So went the verse of English maidens in the 1700s, expressing the utter randomness of finding a mate for a Valentine date. The young women circled a church at midnight on the eve of Valentine's Day, then seen as a holiday centered on emnlovinp the fates to find lads her home of women who put together cards consisting of flower petals and lace. Howland's business eventually pulled in more than $100,000 a year - no small change in 1847. But the mass-produced fantasies and whim- sical greetings of Hallmark and other card manufacturers have replaced the quaint lace salutations of yore. In 1993, one billion valen- tine cards were sold. These days, ex- f r m pressing the bott for the lasses. Although s indeed find w o m e n w h o g r o w h e m p more at- tractive still in today's society, transgressions such as libera- tion render th above verse ou dated. And althou the verse is ind old, it is not ne as antiquate some Valent Day tradition simple as the h seems today,i gins are comp The C church hasf saints named' - one of who ecuted on Feb after apparent heart o ;ome men do volve the bo y our w avera; for< long- rose fl aroi oi- sh - F igh eed ay y d as ine's s. As holiday ° its ori- lex. hristian had two actu Valentine however. Hmm. feelings rm of your often in- scraping ottom of vallet. The ge price a dozen -stemmed s, usually und $14 $15, oots to 330 in mid- ebruary. Flor is ts confirm that the price of rose seeds, fertil- izer, dirt a n d wa- ter (t ally rise, Roses are not even a woman's best friend -diamonds are. Eighty-one percent of women reported that jewelry is a romantic gift, while only 70 percent of men think so. Surprise. Hey though, guys: this is college, you get off easy. On campus, most women don't need diamonds to be wooed - just an expensive dinner. Say three or four courses. And some advice for those who have found themselves dateless for the last few years: Taco Bell isn't the place. If that's where you went last year and the woman broke up with you immedi- ately thereafter, try something better this year, like Burger King. BK is flame-broiled, and 50 percent of Americans say that a candlelight dinner is "extremely romantic." Or ask Lee his little about little secret. Lee exclaimed, "I'm gonna get laid!" when asked about his V-Day plans. Although the graduate student doesn't actually have a girlfriend or even a date, he said he would "get laid" by "whoever answers the call" and in fact seemed quite confident that he would indeed "get laid." But just ask a student who was identified by his girlfriend only as "Toolbox" what he is doing next Tuesday. "Dinner and, you know ... a hotel or mo- tel." Toolbox said. "Not with me!" his apparent soon-to-be- ex-girlfriend said as she walked off. So on Valentine's Day c. 1995, it would appear that some men want to have sex. An- other shocking fact. Coincidentally enough, medical "experts" report that hormone levels sag in the wintry gloom, a fact lost on many libidos and their owners. A recent study shows that some of the reasons sexual activity increases in college are that students have no curfews in college and often reside in co-ed dorms. You see ... Marie Beauchamp, manager of Condoms 101, reports that sales of her most flexible product more than double around Valentine's Day. Some students want to have sex but can't, which doesn't necessarily distinguish Feb. 14 from any other day of the year. "I have an exam the next day and a paper due the day after that. My boyfriend has two exams the next day," said LSA student Jennette. Good luck on that poli sci and orgo, guys. Just one of the many inconveniences of having Valentine's Day in the middle of the week. But Awi, an Engineering student, says, "Love doesn't stop for the weekdays." Awi says his ultimate Valentine fantasy includes finding a female friend inside his dorm room upon returning from class, turning down the lights except for decorative ones, and "just cuddling." LSA student Amanda said she's not look- ing forward to Feb. 14 at all. "I haven't had a boyfriend on Valentine's Day since ninth grade! I think I should wear black ... on my calendar I have black hearts." Valentine's Day seems to bring out the worst kind of vitriol among the lovelorn, who delight in making spite of their more romantic peers. Sue, an LSA student, and her uninvolved hallmates were clad only in black last year, a not-so-subtle protest against the pithy senti- mentality of the holiday. "We just thought (the holiday) was all lovey-dovey," she said. "We were going against the flow." But this year, she swears off the statement. Sue says she'll attend her sorority's Valentine's Day formal - but not with a partner. Love stinks. Amid the hubbub of day-to-day college existence, many couples - even the diehard romantics - find their more amorous plans dampened by exams. It's an unpleasant reality check. Cupid evidently isn't on the University's payroll. "Who scheduled our midterms for that week?" asked Peter, an LSA sophomore, with a hint of disgust in his eye. In an impersonal environment such as this, where students are reduced to numbers look- ing for true love in an alcoholic haze, it is somewhat consoling to find couples finding solace in each other - Valentine's Day and throughout the year. And it doesn't necessar- ily mean special plans for Feb. 14. Staring into open textbooks and nibbling on candy hearts, Stephanie and Eric exem- plify the rushed romance of college life. They haven't planned anything particular for Valentine's Day, as the day falls in the middle of a week of exams for both. "Maybe next year," Stephanie sighs. Valentine's Day is but an occasion when romance collides with academics. It's easy - perhaps too easy - to play the cynic, dismiss- ing the holiday as an inflated excuse to hawk chocolate and greeting cards in all shades of pink. But for at least a few couples on campus, the occasion does hold some significance - even if that's only as a chance to "get laid." If it works for the birds ... Is romance dead? You be the judge. Even in the days before midterms weighed on the minds of would-be lovers, there were those who scoffed at the holiday. In the late 1800s, people bought penny dreadfuls, which were not so complimen- tary as the hempseed verse: Tis all in vain your sim- pering looks, You never can incline, °), With all your bustles, stays, )m was ex- b. 14, A.D. ly marrying 496 young couples against the law of Emperor Clausius II, who thought single men made better soldiers. Yet another theory holds that the Valen- tine holiday was modeled after an ancient Roman festival called Lupercalia, during which men whipped women with animal hide to make them fertile. After that, the wounded women deposited their names in a pot, and the whippers got to draw a name and court her. But the earliest English records of Valentine's Day say that the day was chosen because that was the day birds chose their mates, explaining all those silly winged crea- tures on Valentine cards. The first Valentine was sent by a Frenchman named Charles, Duke of Orleans. From prison, Charles sent a rhyme of love to his wife on Feb. 14. The first commercial Valentines were made in the 1800s - before Hallmark was around - and were crafted by one Kate Greenaway of England. The pre-Hallmark cards were brought to the - Blame it on the floods in the Nether- lands or poor growing conditions -just don't blame Dolly Holeck. The manager of Univer- sity Flower Shop says she actually cuts the store's per-unit profit in February. Her cus- tomers - about three-fourths of whom are students - wouldn't tolerate being bilked, she says. Retailers are a little less than smitten with the cold weather, which threatens an other- wise bountiful Valentine's Day. Since the holiday falls on a Tuesday, retailers expect normal or above-normal sales: Saturday or Sunday Valentine's Days spell disaster for flower shops. DIAM ND& THE A ~JU3T FHJIND~S~ HLAHT-~SUApfl; ON, > y.~~~ .:XFN V A o jA 30FF 14 ANY OHEP DA OF TO YFR -7~VIY~UF N ATIIG Y DIGU~L KOO-AID great U.S. of A. by John Winthrop, governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, who wrote to his wife: "February 14, 1629, Thou must be my 6. vi PU DANA 4 1-10 UXYU 3 ~ANDY. ~f NA I ..