Erika Jarvis, Features Editor Dorm life turning chic ST. PAUL, Minn. _ When University of Minnesota student Jade Pirlott was looking for a place to live last year, she yearned for a convenient loca tion, a nice kitchen, a spacious bedroom, air conditioning and heated under ground parking. And, after a freshman year spent sharing facilities with doz ens of dorm residents, she definitely wanted her own bathroom. Without having to move off campus, she found what she wanted: Riverbend Commons, a new style of residence hall that serves as an example of what many of today's college students _ especially upperclassmen _ want and will pay extra to get. "I think everyone who comes to college should have the classic dorm experience," where small, shared rooms lead to the forced togetherness that helps freshmen get on their feet socially, Pirlott says. Beyond that, though, she wanted a change. "This, I don't consider a dorm at all. It's small apartments." Following a national trend and responding to student demand, most of the residential construction the U of M has done over the past several years has been upscale, from two single bedrooms connected by a bathroom to places with full kitchens and living rooms. "Students don't want to live in traditional residence halls anymore, but they don't necessarily want to live off campus," says Chad Horsley, Riverbend's apartment coordinator. And they're asking for amenities. Riverbend Commons, for example, has barbecue grills on a huge patio overlooking the Mississippi River, a party room with a full kitchen and tables on one end and a big-screen television and CD player with surround sound on the other, basketball and sand volley ball courts, a state-of-the-art computer center, free washers and dryers and an ice machine. The underground parking costs an extra $lOO a month. The fancier setups cost more: A triple-occupancy room at traditional U of M residence halls costs $1,696 per semester; a "Super Single" at Riverbend Commons costs up to $3,241 per semester. Across the country, "people are considering residential living as full ser vice," says Jennie Robinson, residential life director at Hamline University in St. Paul. They want technology, including card access for security, Internet service and cable television. Some colleges eliminate telephone jacks in the rooms and give students cell phones. Students also want co-ed living _ even co-ed bathrooms, kitchens and living rooms. But, Robinson says, "I've only heard of a couple of schools that are doing co-ed rooms." And students want a "self-directed community," which means they make their own rules and get along without a paid staff person living with them. Few colleges prohibit members of the opposite sex from staying over night anymore. The College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, however, draws the line at 2 a.m. "We get a lot of students who complain, but a lot understand it's about privacy, about the safety of the building, about the mission of the Sisters," says complex coordinator Sabrina Anderson. St. Catherine's would like to keep more upperclassmen on campus, though, and is considering building more housing. Before construction, they'll listen carefully to what the mostly female student body wants, Anderson says. Women's colleges seem to be particularly sensitive to the way students live. In a national student survey on dormitory quality, nine of the top 20 "Dorms Like Palaces" were women's colleges, with Smith and Bryn Mawr among the top five. Loyola College in Baltimore ranked first in dorm quality in the Princeton Review's annual college guide, "The Best 351 Colleges." The top 20 "Dorms Like Dungeons" are mostly at state universities. "Quality-of-life issues have become serious things for schools to consider, especially in the recruitment process," says Erik Olson, editor of the Princeton Review. "It's a key consideration, especially when a student is looking at similarly selective colleges. ... The amount of money that schools are sink- ing into developing bigger, nicer dorms is astounding Crossword ACROSS 1 Water trail 5 '6os hairdos 10 Practice blows 14 Maturing agent 15 Intimidate 16 Aggressive remark 17 Geometry calculation 18 Me too! 19 Fall event? 20 Peter Pan's arch enemy 23 Hubbub 24 Planted 25 Splash of liquid 27 Sch. grp. 29 Some NFL linemen 31 Commit capital 32 Gardener's tools 34 "Bill Haley and the " 37 Unrestricted 38 Calendar units 39 Newts 43 Turns aside 45 Mall unit 46 Shorebird with an upward curving bill 49 Styled after 51 Deli loaf 52 Marathon or mile 55 Part of PA. 57 Columnist Smith 58 William H. Bonney 62 Kind of rock or rain 64 Time off base 65 Bronte sister 66 Diner reading 67 Consumed 68 Frat getup 69 Advantage 70 Garb 71 Team in a yoke DOWN 1 Female military g r p• 2 Tat Mahal's place 3 Memento 4 Poetic Muse 5 Tacking on 6 "I'll Be Seeing You" songwriter by Debra O'Connor Knight Ridder Newspapers All rights reserved 7 Babe's family Solutions 8 In first place 9 Police sources 10 E. Bilko or Snorkel 11 Sea villain 12 Remains 13 Gunshot 21 Cobbler's punches 22 Philosopher Immanuel 26 Boob tube 27 PGA member 28 Spigot 30 Wound reminder 33 Make a law 35 Mel the Giant 36 Tableland 38 Itemized 40 Military post honoring the first 46 Burning 56 Former Pac secretary of war 47 Spoken alliance 41 Attempt aloud 59 Montand of "Z" 42 Meet with 48 Seeping 60 "Picnic" 44 Word of action 50 Grows dark playwright 45 Miss Universe's 53 Sharply defined 61 College bigwig band 54 Make joyous 63 Expected The rankings are in; Through the looking glass; by Mike Pmgree KRT Campus The monikers are straight out he said, but it's "done a tremen of a high-school yearbook: dous job of building its core un- THEY SHOULD PUT A SIGN THERE! "Most likely to succeed," "most dergraduate business program. A driver lost control of his van on a highway in Scotland, skidded happy," "most quirky." Last year, they had nearly 800 and came to rest on the side of the road. Minutes later, another driver But they're being used to de- recruiters come to campus, and lost control on the exact same spot, skidded off the road and crashed scribe colleges, not people. I think the graduating class was into the van. Carleton College is the "most only about 1,000." fun-loving," Bentley College the Most of the schools are pri- MOM, STOP, YOU'RE OUT OF CONTROL! "most career-focused" _ and vate and pricey. Only two pub- A 34-year-old woman threw a birthday party at a Pennsylvania hotel they share the trait of being lic schools are listed, mainly be- for her teenage son and his friends, during which she became heavily among the 12 hottest colleges, cause most state schools aren't intoxicated on booze and pills. She then proceeded,•police say, to according to the eighth annual spending as much money on in- come on strong to her son's friends, baring her breasts and trying to Kaplan/Newsweek college novative programs, Basili said. lick their faces. She pulled down her pants to show them her thong, guide. At private schools, "people but the boys said she wasn't wearing any underwear. The boys kept Throwing scientific rigor out are spending money building moving away from her as she approached them. She faces an the window, the guide's editors new dorms, new libraries. At assortment of charges. opted to find less well-known state schools, we're not seeing schools, but those that were that kind of growth," Basili said. HER FACE? NO OFFICER, BUT I CAN DESCRIBE HERBOOBS! likely to offer an engaging and Public schools also got lim- A female mugger snatched a woman's purse in Clapham rigorous education through an ited play because the guide's Junction, England, ran a short distance, then turned and flashed her unusual curriculum, diverse stu- editors looked for colleges that breasts at stunned onlookers. A police officer speculated on her dent body, vibrant location or received a high number of ap motives: "Perhaps it was an attempt to confuse the public." other unique reasons. plications. "The list is completely biased. "State schools tend to get ap- L It's not a ranking," said Seppy plications every year from the Basili, contributing editor to the same high schools. There's not "How to Get Into College enough buzz about them, be- Guide." cause of the sheer demography," "We look for programs that Basili said. have something innovative go- Some private schools on the ing on," he said. Rankings "to- list saw a steep rise in applica ta 11 y dominate too many tions, such as St. John's College, people's minds. Our hope is to which received almost 20 per represent schools that people cent more last year, Basili said. may not have thought about." Evergreen State College, in For instance, Carleton Col- Olympia, Wash., is one of two lege, in Northfield, Minn., is public schools on the list, be named the most fun-loving cause it offers "private college school partly because "there are attention at state tuition prices," 1.9 Frisbees per student on cam- Basili said. pus," Basili joked. The liberal arts and sciences But Frisbees aren't the only school teaches a variety of reason the school is listed. courses to about 4,000 students, Carleton also offers 17 theme and out-of-state tuition is about dorms from which to choose, $12,000, he said. "We think it's and two-thirds of students spend an unprecedented bargain." their junior year off-campus, he Louisiana State University, in said. Plus, three 10-week terms Baton Rouge, is the other pub mean students can take a vari- lie school among the hottest ety of classes. schools, partly because of its Bentley College, a small busi- diversity program. Twenty-four ness school near Boston, is sue- percent of the 29,000 students cessful in connecting graduates are minorities, and the school with jobs, Basili said. graduates more black chemistry "Twenty years ago, Bentley Ph.D.s than any school in the was a small accounting college country, Basili said that didn't get much attention ' ® ... ...._ ...,.,... i jr - !('. - 1 :: *" :p _.<... , . An..ll‘ . Zi0.,,,, l iv..ll, oi ns -- ,<,,b1,41m -1,.. I.srmi ' wiNEllt- ~,:. 4 , 4 ,ilt i a , Ar;;:ili',„o.. lextc ~,„, 0r1i,,,a Friday, September 19, 2003 by Andrea Coombes Knight Ridder Newspapers American Womens Services Contact us at 1-814-874-3500 at our convenient Erie location! Sexually Transmitted Disease Testing - Gonorrhea - Chlamydia - Syphillis - HIV Also Available: Free Hepatitis Vaccinations Free Critical Cancer Screening Risk Reduction Counseling Program Sponsored by the PA Department of Health Testing and Treatments are 100% Call 1-814-874-3500 or Toll Your Appointment TODAY! 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