Category: Matt Bittle (page 2 of 2)

The Hen in winter

One of the things I like best about Delaware is how beautiful the campus is. For a large chunk of the year, my university is gorgeous. Trees and bushes are blooming, there’s color everywhere, and the sun shines down overhead as you hang out on the Green. Unfortunately, there’s also a period when this is not so true. This dark time is known as winter, and it’s quite different from spring, summer, and even fall.

But I love Newark in the spring. If you’re anxious to get in a spring state of mind (and given the bad weather we have had lately, I don’t blame you), just go on the Internet and use your favorite search engine to look up images of campus in the warmer months.

photo by UDHP student Mary Jean Rainsford

Starting around the beginning of March, the weather warms up and campus begins to come back to life after the cold winter months. Trees grow, flowers bloom, and the grass turns greener. One aspect I love about Delaware during this time is seeing the trees between Memorial Hall and Lammot du Pont Lab bloom. I don’t know what kind of trees these are, as I am not a dendrologist (meaning one who studies trees), but they produce beautiful pink blossoms.

As I walked to the dining hall for breakfast one morning last week, I noticed the blossoms were coming out. These buds, to me, signal the beginning of spring’s arrival. Over the course of the month of March, all the other plants of campus come back to life and bloom. By the time we return from spring break at the start of April, campus is gorgeous.

The Green is truly green, trees everywhere have their leaves, the bushes are flourishing, and the weather is warm. Students flock to the Green, spending time reading, playing catch, tanning, or even napping outside. It’s truly a welcome change from winter, when seemingly all the foliage around here is dead and only the bravest dare to venture outside without additional layers.

photo by UDHP student Mary Jean Rainsford

Soon the fountain by the library will be turned on, and the weather will be warm enough that people can wear shorts without worrying about freezing en route to class. Delaware has so much color in the spring, thanks to all the fresh and beautiful plants on campus.

Spring is the most glorious time of the year, a period of rebirth and beauty. And my friends, it is upon us.

~Matt Bittle

I didn’t choose the dorm life—oh wait, yes I did

Hello world (or at least Newark). This is my first post for 186 South College, and like one of my fellow bloggers, I have decided to include a brief introduction to me, your humble author. I am a junior at the University majoring in English due to my love of the language. Ok, that is a bit strong. But the reality is I do enjoy reading and writing, and I desire to become a wordsmith—someone capable of expertly using words to express precise meanings. But enough about me.

About 8,800 of the University’s 16,000 undergrads live off-campus. That’s a majority. Given that fact, and that I am a junior, you might suspect I live off-campus now or at least plan to move into a house or apartment next year. That’s not the case.

What can be so bad about a dorm with a giant TV and a Wii tournament?

I have lived in Honors housing my three years here so far and intend to do the same next year. Why would I want to live in a stuffy old dorm and rely on dining halls when I could have my own place, you ask?

Well, in my experience, dorms are not that bad. Sure, the rooms might feel a bit cramped at times and you might want to cook more often (most dorms have a kitchen somewhere in the building, though it may be in use by other students when you want to use). But overall, a dorm is not a bad place to live.

For starters, it’s simply easier to live in dorms. They are on-campus and thus close to the university’s many buildings. This makes getting to classes easy. From my dorm, it’s literally a three minute to my farthest class right now. You also get the chance to make friends with people living in the building. Because you are right next to these people, sharing a bathroom with them and often seeing them around campus, it’s easy to become acquainted with them. I met my best friends here because they lived on the same floor as me.

Now to another common concern: the food. I really don’t have a problem with the dining halls. Sure, sometimes the closest one might not have food I like for lunch or dinner (I am a picky eater, granted), so I will just take a two-minute walk to Trabant. And of course, there’s always Main Street, home to a wide variety of restaurants.

For most of my tenure at UD, I have not minded living in a dorm. Sure, there are times where I wish I had my own place, but then I’d have to worry about making breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day. Plus, I’d be paying monthly rent and utilities and having to walk much farther to campus.

As I mentioned earlier, I have living in Honors housing my three years. I recommend this, as in my experience, the students are a bit quieter and more focused on schoolwork than those living in regular housing might be.

Overall, dorm life is not bad at all.

~Matt Bittle

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