Two people in the parking lot tackled the man and held him there until a mall security guard arrived.
The victim got his laptop back and the man was charged Saturday with robbery by sudden snatching, a felony.
Two people in the parking lot tackled the man and held him there until a mall security guard arrived.
The victim got his laptop back and the man was charged Saturday with robbery by sudden snatching, a felony.
A: I miss not being able to wear sweatpants everyday. I miss the food from the dining commons. I miss door tags. I miss being able to drink at 2 in the afternoon and not having someone judge me. I miss watching people try to text in class in their ugg boots. I miss getting frustrated going to work to lifeguard at the campus pool for three hours because I knew I was missing happy hour.
Q: How did you go about finding your first job? Was it a difficult process?
A: I had a hard time finding a job at first. I was looking for a teaching position and a lot of schools were looking for somebody who had their masters. I sent out forty applications and went on about five interviews. I was only offered one job. However, I am very happy where I am now.
A: My routine is mostly the same. I work for seven hours until the late afternoon. I come home, do some work, eat dinner and watch T.V. It’s very similar to going to class, doing homework, and just hanging out at night.
A: Yes I have about $20,000 in student loans to pay off. I have been trying to save so I set up a separate bank where I put money that will eventually help me pay off my loans.
A: No I was lucky enough to move out on my own right after college and I am glad that I did so. I think it could be very difficult adjustment if you move home right after leaving college. I still have my independence that I had while I was in college.
A: Luckily they don't know about the nickname. I do however reference stories from my college days, but I leave out the stories that involve drinking. I try to maintain an image of a real person, but I also try to stay professional.
A: Yes at 23, I definitely feel young at times. However, I try to keep the mood light and I feel like people enjoy that kind of attitude
A: I consider myself lucky most of my friends from college live close by. Some of them are working and others go to school and are finishing up their degrees. I see at least one of my friends almost every weekend.
A: For the most part, not really. The only thing that has definitely changed is I have more responsibilities now.
Q: What kind of responsibilities do you have now that you didn't have in college?
A: These days I have to worry about paying bills on time, and even worse having to cook for myself.
A: Absolutely I would, but I do not think I would change much. The only thing I would do differently is study harder my Freshman year.
Q: In order to give some hope to all our graduating seniors out there, what are some benefits of living on your own, working, etc?
He was known as "Big C," back in college, but is now more commonly referred to as Mr. Davitt by his students. He spends his days teaching, cooking his own meals, and relaxing at night. He is also lucky enough to have moved out right after graduation and in turn has been able to maintain the independence he became accustomed to during his time at Keene. While he no longer has his meals cooked by the staff in the dining commons, or can get away with wearing sweatpants on a daily basis, Davitt explains life after college, isn't so bad after all. He says his life now isn't all that different than it was this time last year. He now has a place of his own, money to spend, and still spends time with his friends; now that doesn't seem so bad, does it?
1.) Bad breath boss:
Here at PWDI, we believe in hygiene and not much else. So when a particular douche-nozzle fucks with the one thing we hold dear, it’s a fair bet we’re going to call that bastard out. Big time.
Bad Breath Boss, guess what? It’s your turn. We’ve had just about enough of your condescending pep talks and rampant halitosis. If we wanted to smell like an onion bagel and feel bad about ourselves we’d shower at H&H.
Please in the name of baby Jesus, brush your teeth, chew some gum, have a mint, maybe see a specialist, because when you talk it smells like the plague, and we’re not allowed to bring a SARS mask to work.
And if you continue to violate our nostrils with the smell of hot trash, we’ll have no choice but to rip that DeVry diploma off your wall and shove it down your stink hole. You’ve been warned.
2.) Don't disturb waiter:
Last time we checked, a waiter’s job was to wait on the people. A modern day servant if you will. A modern day servant making more tips than we’re making writing this stupid blog, or pretending to work while we watch cat videos on Youtube.
But some of these skivvies just don’t get the point. Like they’re doing you a favor by bringing your food - plopping it on the table like gruel in an orphanage. You’re missing a fork and there’s a toenail in your risotto? Well too bad sucka, ’cause your waiter’s too busy doing lines in the bathroom and looking pensive by the bar.
Next time you have to deal with this menial serf, go ahead and read him the daily specials: bangers and mash with a side of black eye.
3. Resolution gym hogger:
Ahhh, new year, new crop of hackneyed gym goers. You know the ones. They eat 79 donuts during the holidays in anticipation of fulfilling their new year’s resolution. “This year, Will be the year.” Um, pardon our pessimism, but no, it won’t. Don’t get us wrong, we’re big proponents of getting into shape (we need to keep our stamina up in order to outrun angry mobs). You, however, will join our gym and hog our machines for the first 2 months, until you realize the treadmill is equally as horrible as it was last year, and your Tivo’s getting way too full on this new “workout regime.”
Allow us to shorten the process by offering you this exclusive one-day-only registration special. You pay nothing, and we make the thought of the gym so painful, you stay home and cry off those extra pounds.
4. Passive agressive emoticon user:
Sorry team, you’ll be working late again tonight Looks like we’re gonna have to let you go
Oops, I ran over your cat
Do any of these statements make you feel good? No. So why then, does Passive Aggressive Emoticon User feel the need to end each thought with a rage inducing smiley-face. Or worse, a wink?We’ll tell you why. Because she’s a horrible bitch who takes pleasure in other people’s misery. Should you have your very own PAEU, remind her that projecting her pathological disorder on others is unacceptable by replying to her next email with your own emoticon. What’s the symbol for broken face again?
5. Dude who takes monopoly way too seriously:
When it comes to board games, some friendly competition goes a long way. Keeps things interesting.
But, then there are those who treat every game like a death-match with Dolph Lundgren, turning an exciting game of chance into the most excruciating three hours of your life.
It’s times like these when you need to step back, take a deep breath, and remind “Dude Who Takes Monopoly Way Too Seriously” to chillax.
After all, it’s a game involving fake money, plastic properties and a petite chienne. It’s not the end of the world if you don’t land on Pennsylvania Avenue.
So instead of going all Gary Coleman, threatening to not participate if you don’t get to play banker, how about you pull up your diapers, temper that tantrum and roll the dice. Don’t make us crack open your community chest.
1. Facebook is your home page.
2. You update your status more than twice a day.
3. You have over 500 "friends" half of whom you've never actually met.
4. As soon as you step away from your computer you're on FB on your phone.
5. You are a FB stalker. You qualify as a FB stalker if you
a) click on someone's profile more than once a day even if they haven't messaged or tagged you in a photo.
b) have dragged and dropped more than 3 FB photos (not from your own profile)
c) actually go to a place mentioned on someone's page in hopes of seeing them in real life...creepy!
6. You change your profile picture more than a 12-year=old girl.
7. You have checked your FB page while reading this article.
8. You clean up your "wall" so it looks like you spend less time on FB.
9. You are a member of more than 10 groups and respond to every event invitation "attending" even if you have no intention of going.
10. You change your relationship status just to mess with people.
You’re parents just informed you that they have bad news for you but good news for them. They have just paid your last college tuition bill; a day they have been awaiting since they paid the first one. But unfortunately for you that means the “real world” is just around the corner. It has been four glorious years of cramming for tests, pulling all nighters, partying and getting yourself into countless amounts of other antics. But unfortunately the utopia known as college is all about to come to an end. It’s approaching that time of the year when college seniors begin trading in their books and six-packs for a nine to five,(if they’re lucky) and a whole lot more responsibility and a lot less free time. Fears about leaving college life behind seem to be apparent for seniors throughout the nation.
Aryn Kleiner, a senior at Arizona State University, put it simply when asked what her biggest fear about graduating is. “Change is what I fear the most.,” Kleiner said. Leaving your college experience behind and beginning a new chapter in your life can come as somewhat of a shock for many seniors. Kleiner, a native of Long Island, NY, explained that while she’s excited to move back to the east coast after four years of going to school in Tempe, Ariz., she feels as though she’ll be leaving a big part of her life there. “I’ve created this bubble, 3600 miles away from my hometown and in just a few short months I will have to leave it, possibly to never be a part of it again,” Kleiner said. “With all the friends I have made and networks I have formed, what will happen to all of that?” Kleiner questioned. But this Arizona State senior also realizes that moving back to the east coast, means moving back home with mom and dad. Like Kleiner, many college seniors find themselves moving back home with their parents, and for her that is one other aspect of graduating she is trying her best not to think about. “As the saying goes: their house, their rules,” Kleiner explained.
Morgan Parmet, a senior at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, echoes many of the same uncertainties about graduating as Kleiner. Parmet is one senior who doesn’t plan to move back into the home she grew up in. “My biggest fear is that I won't get a job and I'll have to move back home. I really don't want to have to move back in with my parents. I feel like right now I have so much freedom and I enjoy living on my own,” Parmet said. Sure, RA’s enforced quiet hours and you got the occasional slap on the wrist for playing your music too loud, but such restriction, some college seniors feel, wont compare with living under mom and dad’s roof. But with the troubling economy, not getting a job or being able to afford living on your own, is a concern even more evident for the class of 2009.
Nevertheless, even if moving home isn’t the cards for Parmet, or at least she hopes, once she enters the real world, that means, “no more doing whatever I want, when I want,” she said. The same sentiment resonates with Kleiner. “Freedom is probably what I’ll miss most about graduating,” she said. For most college students, they are required to go to class, maybe a few club meetings, but other than that, the day is theirs to do pretty much whatever they want. Leaving behind friendships, your routine and social life are just some of the aspects of college life many seniors will be abandoning come May.
“It’s the ‘little things’ I’ll miss about college,” said Lemore Hecht, a Quinnipiac University senior. “It will be a big adjustment moving home. My lifestyle at college is just so different than my one at home,” she said. For Parmet she’ll miss small aspects of college life like getting to sleep in and dressing in sweats for class. “I’m addicted to taking naps,” she said. But catching extra z’s during the day isn’t the only luxury Parmet will be leaving behind. “Dressing up for work will be a big downer as well,” Parmet said. A college sweatshirt and jeans is appropriate for wearing to class, but such attire may not go over so well in the workplace.
Once college seniors like Kleiner, Parmet and Hecht commit to an eight to ten hour work day, they realize that means no more sleeping until noon, throwing on the first thing they see and most of all doing what they please. Nevertheless, they all agree that all good things must come to an end, even what many deem as “the best four years of your life.”
As far as their advice for freshman goes, their recommendations all seemed to coincide. Parmet, a self-proclaimed nap lover, urges college freshman to “sleep in as much as humanly possible, because in three years, you wont be doing much of that anymore,” she said. And Kleiner couldn’t agree more. “Make the best of your four years in college because boy, does it fly,” she said. While Kleiner knows doing well in school is highly important, “so are those parties and making friends. Never give up an opportunity to have fun because you’ll wish you had more of ‘those moments’ when they’re all through,” she said. Kleiner’s outlook on college life was only re-enforced with Parmet’s philosophy. “Most importantly don’t forget to be a college student. Have fun! After you graduate, it's onto the real world. Just make the most of it, because before you know it, it’s all over,” she said.