When I was eight years old I was a damn good hockey player. When I was 11, my family moved from Long Island to Tucson. In Tucson, the people are not so fond of Canada. Also, it's very hot. I had to stop playing hockey.
Last weekend, my roommate went on a retreat with the Harvard Glee Club. In fact, he is the president of the Glee Club. (We-me, his parents and his lovely sister Dianne-are all very proud.) On their retreat, the Glee Club played games, and apparently, one of these games was a variation of hockey. At least, this is what I assume since my roommate brought home a box of plastic hockey sticks.
In the past few days, I have re-discovered my love of hockey. For countless hours I have stood in my common room with a miniature red hockey stick and a bright yellow tennis ball taking slap shots at my roommate's brand new, 27-inch, Panasonic television. In the meantime, a lot has been going on...
The recruiting process has started up. So has the perennial stream of articles about recruiting, and the dinner-table dissection of its moral merits. In case anyone is still wondering, recruiting has no moral merits. It is a practical route to lucrative employment, not a life philosophy. There-now everyone has more time to discuss the last two disappointing episodes of "Dawson's Creek."
Last Thursday, a handful of Harvard's security guards accepted early retirement. Most of the guard force is being replaced by cheaper and better-trained guards from an independent contractor. In Adams House, a petition has been posted so that students can protest this obviously irresponsible move on the part of University bean-counters.
Last Saturday, the LSAT was administered at various locations around Boston. The sight of blood makes me queasy, and I have not taken a single substantive college science course. Having ruled out the MCAT, I took the LSAT instead. I heard somewhere that Harvard Law School has the lowest student-satisfaction rate of any similar institution in the country. It's my first choice.
Gov. Jesse Ventura came to campus this week. According to most major newspapers and the cable channel CNBC, this was a very big deal. Ventura has been the target of much criticism lately for comments he made in an interview with Playboy. I picked up a copy of the magazine in order to judge his remarks for myself. It turns out that a female boxer is photographed naked in the same issue. I didn't even know there were female boxers.
The New York Mets earned a spot in the playoffs for the first time since 1988. Back when I played hockey, I was a huge Mets fan. I remember watching Bobby Ojeda throw the winning strike of the 1986 World Series. At the time, many of the Mets' best players were crack addicts, wife-beaters or both. Maybe the Mets will win the Series again this year.
Read more in Opinion
Why Gore and Bradley Must DebateRecommended Articles
-
The 'V' Spot: Harvard Hockey is All in the Family"I want to write hockey." I missed the introductory meeting for comping Crimson Sports way back in my freshman fall.
-
ATHLETES OF THE YEARA.J. Mleczko finished her career with her signature play--she created a scoring opportunity for her teammates. The No. 1 Harvard
-
A Small Screen SummerI t's a funny thing. In nine months of school I watched hardly any television. Sure, every now and then
-
No-Hockey WeekendMy father was in town this weekend. He wanted to know where I spent all my Friday and Saturday nights
-
On RootingA T THIS time last year, I was shuttling between agony and ecstasy. I remain a loyal New Yorker and
-
ScoreboardTODAY'S GAMES Men's Varsity Basketball at Dartmouth, 7:30 p.m. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS None NHL Los Angeles 5, Quebac 5 New York