[AT] Old trains/now NC State foolishness

charliehill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Wed Dec 9 07:30:29 PST 2009


Oh yes I remember the chem 101 tests very well David.  In my day it was a 
theater seat in Harroldson Hall with a itty bitty swing up desk and a Post 
Versalog slide rule.
30 multiple choice answers for some very complex problems.  90 minutes to do 
the exam.   The 5 possible answers on the multiple choice answer sheet were 
the right answer and the 4 most probable errors.  Under the time pressure 
you didn't have time to re-check your work.  If you didn't know it dead cold 
you were screwed.

In my opinion it came under the heading of cruel and unusual punishment. 
For the rest of us (non NC state) folks.  Chem 101 was a weed out course. 
1/2 to 2/3 of the kids that took it would fail by design.  They wouldn't 
even take time in class for exams.  Every few weeks (I forget the frequency) 
you had to go at night to an assigned class room somewhere to take the exam.

I'm not ashamed to say I was a victim of that course.  Dr. White (what 
White) told us the first day.  "look to your left and your right and 
remember the faces well, they won't be here in 4 years".  Then he asked how 
many folks in the theater (200 or more) had high school chemistry.  Most 
raised their hands.  He followed:  that's good but more important in this 
class is high school physics.  I knew right then I was screwed.  I went to a 
small high school.  My senior year only 3 people in my class signed up to 
take physics and they didn't teach the course.

Charlie
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Bruce" <davidbruce at yadtel.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 10:11 AM
Subject: Re: [AT] Old trains/now NC State foolishness


> Charlie,
> I also thought they were childish.  In my day and on central campus the
> water fights always came after the chemistry tests.  They were in the
> evening (on Thursday at that) and comprised all sections of Chem 101 -
> so starting about dark one would see the "lemmings" headed toward most
> every auditorium or large lecture hall on campus.  After the test was
> over there was the great water fight and some sort of attempt at a panty
> raid.  It wan't unusual for a few days afterward to have water balloons
> coming from the upper floors of the tri-towers (the other two were
> female and the middle one was co-ed).
>
> David
> NW NC
>
> charliehill wrote:
>> I didn't comment on the water fights because I didn't participate and to 
>> be
>> honest thought  they were pretty childish.  However, they were an every 
>> year
>> thing on ... did they call it reading day?.... the day off prior to 
>> exams.
>> Basically every water faucet in every dorm room in Lee Bragaw and 
>> Sullivan
>> dorms were open all day long.  Folks dropping water ballons off the 13 th
>> floor of Sullivan.  I saw one hit a kid on the shoulder and knock him 
>> flat
>> on the ground.  You couldn't get to or leave your dorm room without 
>> getting
>> wet.
>>
>> About the time I left State they made Lee dorm Co-Ed.  Meaning that they 
>> put
>> girls on a couple of floors.  In 1969 there were roughly 15,000 on campus
>> students and less than 1000 of them were female so the ladies were pretty
>> well respected.  Someone in the student gov't figured that out and the
>> decision was made to make Lee CoEd.  That pretty much ended the water 
>> wars
>> for the immediate future.  I don't know what happened later in the early
>> 70's.
>>
>> As for the Great panty raid (there were others but one huge one)  I 
>> didn't
>> even know about it until it was over.
>> I was in the Cat's Eye (night club) down at 5 points listening to Billy
>> Stewart sing the blues and opening some shim stock.  The basketball great
>> Tommy Burleson was in there that night too.
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxEcFWHfjYA
>>
>> Charlie
>>
>>
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