Experiencing flurries for the first time

· December 11, 2007, 5:00 am

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Students play in the snow and make a snowman together in the lower Quadrangle.


College freshman Michael Tomback ran outside as soon as he saw it.

He spun in circles. He took photos.

It was finally snowing.

For Tomback and many other freshmen from warm climates, last week's snowfall was not only the first of the season - but the first of their lives.

"I kept on making a very giddy, loud, girlish laugh," said Tomback, a south Florida native. "I was just so happy."

College freshman Carolyn Lee, from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., is usually wearing shorts and a tank top this time of year.

"It was so cold!" Lee said of last week's weather, laughing uncontrollably. "I didn't expect it to be so wet. Like when it melts, I didn't even really think about it."

When asked if she had been looking forward to the snow, Lee didn't even get the chance to respond.

"YES!" shouted two of her friends, who were hanging out in a Hill dorm room.

Lee's friends couldn't help mimicking the questions Lee had been asking them all semester: "When's it going to snow? Is it going to snow before Thanksgiving or after? When do people have to wear mittens?"

Tomback said he also has been anxiously awaiting the snow. In fact, part of the reason he chose Penn was because he knew it would be cold enough to snow.

"My roommate said he was more excited to see my reaction to the snow than the snow itself," Tomback said.

Wharton freshman Jason Vigushin, who grew up in Johannesburg, South Africa, said his friends were also shocked to discover he had never seen snow. But then again, Vigushin joked, his friends didn't realize that he had had electricity in Africa, either.

Vigushin took photos of the snow to send home, and his friends threw snowballs at him.

Tomback also made snowballs, but for him, just touching the snow was thrilling enough.

"I literally sat outside for 20 minutes before my class just letting it fall on me," Tomback said.

He was late for class.

But for others, touching the snow did not satisfy their curiosity.

"I did taste it," Lee laughed. "It tasted like ice."

Comments (5)

wtf

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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hey Jessica Sidman? Did you get the short straw and had to then write this article? wow....simply "wow" is the only word I can say to this ridiculously stupid article. seriously. Please show me any other Ivy-league school newspaper, much less a collegiate newspaper, that has any article even as remotely pointless and stupid as this article. The Daily Pennsylvanian is a JOKE.

student

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Slow news day, apparently...

Penn Parent and adult

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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While others may not appreciate the subject, I certainly do. My daughter attends Penn but has her home in the desert and the first snow was greatly anticipated and much enjoyed. Glad to hear others shared her experience. I read the DP on a regular basis and think very highly of it; I am a writer by profession. However, I have noticed that there is a steady flow of commentary by some students who seem to value cynicism a bit too highly. While I agree that cynicism has it's place, to direct it at this article, this subject is really unnecessary. Grow up and enjoy the small pleasures that life serves up while you can.

DBM

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Enjoy the small pleasures? Life is nothing but misery and suffering. War, torture, rape, Harry Holocaust. The small pleasures (a nice sunset, a crunchy leaf) make for bad poetry. (Awful poetry that you made your offspring suffer through most likely.) But it won't get you money - the only thing worth having in this world. There is no better feeling (not love or any other garbage) than taking out money from an ATM in front of a homeless crack whore. And when begged for money, you scowl: Ã?get a job.Ã? I am nature: cruel, cynical, and utterly loveless. Does a drought care about the feelings of the herd? Does a hurricane worry about people and alter itself? To be anything but an instrument of cruelty is unnatural. Therefore taking joy in small pleasures is unnatural.

Penn Parent and adult

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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So...DBM...I'm guessing you have seen snow before...

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