2014: βThe grass sheets look particularly quilted today.β
She was right. The new grassβthe eighth or 10th sodding of 2014βwas doing a poor job of hiding the seams between each strip. Like many things at Boston College, the grass is always changing in incremental ways, usually for worse. I looked at the pizza I could no longer trust.
βThe foodβs getting worse, too.β
2015: βTH1515BC, present yourself!β
The voice flags me down, and I shuffle to their table. I had walked as far away from the donation module as BCβs new Grass De-walkification Policy allowed, but the Quadβs concrete path is narrow.
Two fellow TH1515BCs are asking for a donation to the senior gift. I had done so well avoiding them all senior year, but there are so few legal places to walk these days. I fill out an absurdly lengthy donation form, which, according to the girl, will get me into the habit of donating early. If I practice filling out donation forms now, she reasons, I can do it in my sleep when Iβm 40!
βHere, have a TH1515BC insignia.β I accept the sticker. My contribution of $10 is greatly appreciated. The guy explains that donating 1/6000 of tuition is hardly a βdrop in the bucket,β but will instead pay for accoutrements to keep BC a βtop, top university.β The two inform me that the idea to purchase 1000 square feet of Olβ Kentucky Blue Sod for the Stokes lawn had just been nicked by the 14/4EVR senior gift. The TH1515BCs were open to suggestions, the most popular ideas being a down payment on a University helicopter, something called βthe million dollar escalator,β and a particularly expensive dog. I say βthe escalator sounds funβ and leave.
2017: βLook at TransLoc. Look how close together these two buses are. Itβs like that every day.β
βOh no, thatβs the new Eagleβs Beak. Itβs a super bus.β Thirty-two minutes would elapse before the Eagleβs Beak slowly lurched around the College Road bend. Per the official releaseββWith the wind at its back, the Eagleβs Beak reaches peak velocity at 19 knots!ββEagleβs Beak is the largest student public transit vehicle in the region, even enjoying 7 percent more capacity than the famous Double Deckers Harvard just bought from England (for the color, presumably).
The Eagleβs Beak is indeed quite spacious. Crudely welding the front of one bus to the back of another doubles the space while cutting operating costs. Many students complain, though, that the Eagleβs Beak suffers from horrendous overcrowding. Others complain that the noise of two busloads of drunk kids singing dueling renditions of βSweet Carolineβ is thoroughly unpleasant. But BC loves the Beak, planning to cut costs further and lower congestion during key hours by welding one of the other buses onto the Beak. Despite objections, BC believes its Bus Centipede, or βThe BC,β is keeping with University Values.
2019: βHave your Student ID ready. Keep your arms up for the spraypaint.β
βI should probably just get the yellow shirt/salmon shorts paint, right?β Freshmen are confused. For many, this is their first experience with the Gold Pass, along with the SuperFan SuperSuit, a sterilized full-body white spandex jumpsuit onto which students could have any BC-related designs painted at the many paint stations where the concession stands used to be.
Alumni Stadium was a frontrunner in the race for Cleanest Stadium in the ACC, and BC wasnβt taking any chances. βNow everyone can βProtect This House!ββ the slogan went. Many old enough to remember the halftime hot dog toss resented these changes, but most students agreed that those old rituals were barbaric and out of touch with University Values.
βHurry, weβre gonna miss the national anthem!β No one missed the national anthem ever since BC started flying the singer in on its new helicopter. Although it had caused a few problemsβnamely the Turf Pellet Disaster of 2018, which forced BC into becoming the first ACC school to play on Olβ Kentucky Blue Sodβthe helicopter was a welcome addition. It was, however, currently nameless, in light of backlash over βEaglechopper,β a name which for many evoked the image of a ghoulish avian guillotine. A committee was working on it.
2014: βItβs an assembly line, man. These are all just factories.β
Boy was he impressed with the analogy heβd just made. His friend across the table wasnβt listening, but whatever. He saw smokestacks coming out of Stokes. The Fulton Factory Floor and its foremen and foremen-in-training. Cramped factory boardinghouse dormitories. Administrators and authorities like strike-breakers, more impatient and restrictive every year.
βThey donβt care about us. They treat us worse and worse every year.β
βI miss the CTRC,β his friend said. Then they both ate lunch.
Featured Image by Arthur Bailin / Heights Staff