The last hurrah . t Five years at UNL really makes for best years of life _ - TODD MUNSON is a senior broadcasting major and Daily Nebraska columnist Well, this is the moment East ? Campus has been waiting for. It’s time, for me to say adios to the DN and dear old Nebraska U. , " Believe it or not, come May 81 V' will be graduating, unless I join the 't circus instead of taking my last final. Who’d have thought a moron like me could graduate from a third-tier institution of higher education? My high school counselor didn’t. ~ He told me to skip college because I’d just find myself on the A.P. list. He made sure I knew he wasn’t talking about advanced placement. Well, poop on you, buddy. I’m graduating in just half a decade, and never was I once placed on academigf probation. And poop on that English > teacher who said yoq cai* .pever staitaV; sentence with the worcf ‘and.’ But the last bit of poop is the biggest A fong'-tuhebago, Ewasknowrt v classified as a “gifted and talented” student. I think the correetterm was “able? student. Able to do what* i. rj . ; don’t know. After a few years of the egghead biz* I realized goofing off was a lot more fun than writing a 20 page research paper about Sweden at £;age 12.. >.r. , • rive years after tailing off the aca demic wagon, I applied to a special mentoring program where high school: •: seniors could shadow a professional out in the “real world.” Instead of /1 wanting to observe a radiologist orany other “ist” job, I wanted to see what it was like to be a radio DJ. Two weeks after applying, I u > received a letter in the mail from a ( woman telling methat I didn’t have the talent needed for toe mentoring; program. Actually, it told me I was stupid more than anything; If I were 1 the kind of person who carried anote pad with names of people who needed to be killed, either execution or gang land style, she’d be near the top. The letter was that nasty. -•? . „. ” Fast forward to Todd’s first week of college. The confused little fresh man couldn’t find his way around campus without a map, but, duh gee, he must have grew some brains over the summer because he was on the air at KRNU. A couple of weeks later, he was showing the new people how to run the station. That means showing people how to be a DJ, the very posi tion he was too stupid for just a year earlier. just UKe a rock star,.any good columnist needs a list of thank yous. First on my list is Rick Alloway. Y’all know him as the NRoll guy. Rick - who’s so cool, he doesn’t even go by Prof. - thought that I would make a fine teacher’s assistant. He saw me as someone eager to learn, not as the kid with the reputation for not doing his famous presidents word jumbles in history class. , Not even a week into it, I knew college was a very cool place. It was a chance for a new beginning. Mast importantly, it was a chance to study the subject of your choice without die mindless busy work. Mine was broad casting. Declared as a freshman and - never changed. I thought about it just once, but the “no math requirement” for broadcasting students was too good to pass up. For five years, Rick and the broad casting faculty have put up with my shenanigans. They set me loose with all sorts of cool gear and now that I’m ready to be set loose, I’d just like to say thanks. Next on the list is dear old Nebraska U. It may be a third-tier land-grant institution, but it’s our third-tier land-grant institution, damn it. And iffc responsible, at least in part, for everything I’ve experienced in the"’ , past five years. In high school, I gave a lot of thought to not going to college. Unless a magical fairy ever drdps a million bucks and a baker’s dozen of virgins at my feet, I don’t think there’ll be anything I’m more thankful for than the education I’ve received here. Every now and again, I think of what life would have been like without going to college, and all 1 can do is shudder hke a crackhead going through withdrawal. Instead of becoming a lay-about slacker, I used opportunity. I’ve learned more than I ever drought I could leanrand experi enced many great things. Wife the exception of just a couple of bad apples, the professors here are top notch and should really be paid what they’re worth. btanamg aoove me resns me two person film studies department of Drs. Dixon and Foster. The effort they put into their classes is incredible. Thanks to the film studies program, a huge lpyer of cnid was scraped away from ^ my brain andadam of creative juice i was opened wide up. 4f * % f I ■ I’d also like totftaniklhe state of “ Nebraska - not the government but the .whole damn state. Believe it or not, I’nf proud to say Tm from-Nebraska. * Growing up in Nebraska has taught me a good many things. Topping the j chhrt is politeness, ;My feeble math skills tell me that at a rate of 12 people per day, it’d only take 34.2 yeai$ for , someone, to pissqffthe entire state. Thus, being polite to everyone is very j important Mqve out of state - you’ll see tome jsn’t agpnecal populace more polite than NebrasWs. !f). ., There’s a^o -the ethos known as the Nebraska work ethic. iff you’re 4 from out of state, you’re living in Lincoln for the summer and need a job, I highly suggest uber-heinous task of detasshngcorn. I wprked in the fields for a couple of summers, j and honestly, it was the worst job a person could have. Spend just a week getting . up before dawn to do 10 hours of paid slave labor out in a muddy swelter-, „; ing maze of com with a “Lord of the Flies” esque management structure and you’ll never complain about how your jod sucks and vow never to J drop out of col- .J lege. If you’ve |J| done it, you’re a mmk better and , JhH stronger person | than most of the country: If you grew up in . Nebraska with out detassling Wk■ for at least one * summer, you’re I® a pathetic weak- \ Last butnot W least are my friends. Like my ill johnson, the Ust is long but distin- || guished. In fact, the list is too long to named everyone involved. A special thanks goes out though to the BSB and all the Comfed Mofos out there. That collection of rat bastards probably took five years off my life but that’s OK. It was definitely worth it. Even in my last semes- ** IS ter, I’m still making some great ' Mends. The brochure to get into this - joint says you’ll make a lifetime of Mends here. I couldn’t agree more. Wow. That was pretty heavy back there. Tell you what, I just realized I own not a stitch of Nebraska-related parapher nalia. So while I take a break to go get some tacky Husker item, enjoy these _ factoids. Then we’re gonna get to the funptuff. By The Numbers and Other Insigjnifica (or how Todd spent five years of college) 300: Approximate hours spent watchmg “The Simpsons” 660: Approximate number of bur ritos eaten 3: Number of broken bones 18: Number of different room mates"---. 1820: Approximate hours spent playing Ultimate 7500: Approximate number of miles ridden by bicycle '■ 8: Number of times drove to class 22: Approximate number of times vomited due to excessive partying 0: Number of times arrested I believe I now own what is quite possibly the most obnoxious Husker item in existence. I am now the pos sessor of a big-ass Big Red cowboy hat. Just putting it on makes me feel 30 years older. That gives me an idea. The year is 2029. Todd is 53 years * old. At the dinner table one night, the mashed potatoes remind him of a par ticular experience he once had in col lege. For the next five hours, he launches in a misty-eyed tafle of how ! 'great his college days wCre, forcing his children into dyspeptic fits and his wife into shock. The following are the tales worthy of teltiilg 3Q^ears from now. “When I was a freshman... ” We filled our time not with study ing, but with tomfoolery at its finest We made a bazooka and shot bottle rockets at the chicks living across the w;ay at Sa^ck^JHaJl., , - . We bounCed bbWling ; ' , balls off the ~ floor and - 1" X '■»s ceiling to annoy our neighbors and when we grew bored with that, we sent the bowling balls down the trash chute to annoy everyone. I drank a glass of tabasco sauce for 15 bucks, and then had to crawl on my hands and knees to get some Pepto Bismol at the Q4Qwik. A week later, I valiantly tried to eat 15 bowls of Cap’n Crunch but the Soggies got to me. Then we had those dry ice bombs ... “Back when bands knew how to ' rock...” I went with my roommate to go see KISS in Kansas City. The show started at 8 p.m. He picked me up at 5:30. It was a three-hour drive, mind you. In the back seat was cooler full of beer and frozen peas to keep it cold since ice was too expensive in those days. Six pee stops later, we made it just in time to find our seats in the absolute last row of the arena. After the show, I blew the last three dollars to my name on a waffle house waffle. The next morning we woke up at a rest stop not knowing how we got there. “I woke up in more than a few strange places... ” But none were stranger the field where I woke up all discombobulated and bruised like a faffed apple. Why? Thought you’d never ask. It was a party ofepic proportions and in a vain attempt to win the party, I arranged the empty kegs like bowling pins, walked to the top of a very steep hill and rolled down like a human bowling ball. The kegs, fell and so did I - face down into a world of hurt. .. “Shenanigans? Why, we were the kings of the game... ” We established our dominance one cKaeding ffie night before new students moved to campus to b£ exact; At 3 am, we went around to isrf' V! v *»fiI iRftvtfi riiii t .; every emergency phone and drew chalk body outlines complete with fake Wood. A grist% crime sceneht every turn had students and their par ents mortified. We just laughed and laughed and laughed. “Ultimate, I’ve got more tales about that sport than the folks at Canterbury...” I’m sorry, but if I tokl you, I have to kill you. They’re top-secret. But let’s just say our motto was “We might not win every tournament, but we’ll always win the party.” “The best day of college? I did n’t have one, I had two... ” When I was a senior, we got a fall break and damn it, we made the best of it. I had one day to have fun and after driving all night We had break fast in Winter Park at 8 a.m., mountain biked all day and by 3 a.m. I found myself face-down in a waffle house parking lot. That very day was the def inition of “epic.” The other best day was Jan. 31, 1997. We spent all day in frpnt of the Stuart Theater to be the first in line for the re-release of Star Wars. By itself, that was great, but what really made the day great was at 12 that morning, I got laid. What a day! Oh, I pulled all the chicks. Um ... sorry honey. i ri~ ■.. / - I The future is now Well, space is at a premium right now so I better pinch this sucker off. For two years, I rotted your minds * with worthless swill and demented ideas. Right now, I have but one last bit of advice for y’all and please, if you only remember one thing I ever write, remember this bit of advice. When in doubt, never be afraid to go big. That said, I’ll see you turkeys later. ■ I’m going to Hollywood.