Waverly Cole died Friday

August 31, 2009

You can read the obit here, which includes links to offer condolences and donations.  Dr. Cole, the man for whom the Cook-Cole College of Arts & Science was partly named, was an important figure in the developement of Longwood over the past decade. But besides his well earned reputation as a benevolent donor, we remember him as a laughing, joking man who never seemed to suffer from any of the memory problems and crotchetiness that make the average old person so damn annoying.  We also remember those awesome blue suede suites he would occasionally wear.  Cool dude.  Happy trails, Dr. Cole.

WaverlyCole

We couldn't a find a picture of him in the suede jacket. Just trust us -- it was badass. (photo credit: Longwood University)


INTERVIEW: Fighting Lotus-Eaters and Parking Services

August 28, 2009

Hubris toward Poseidon earned Odysseus a ten-year trip back to Ithaca.  Talking to our friend Andy, you can’t help but wonder what god he must have pissed off.  When Andy decided not to return to Longwood for the fall, after seven years in Farmville –  the same amount of time Odysseus spent on Calypso’s island — we were alternately sad and furious to see him go.  How the hell could someone with Andy’s intelligence decide to walk away when all that stood between him and a degree was a language requirement?  Andy recently answered some questions from The Longwood Hole, and his story – an exile’s travelogue filled with exchange students, threesomes, and a cycloptic-sized dude punching holes through doors – can only be described as epic.   

The Longwood Hole: How did you end up at Longwood? You’re not from Virginia, right?

Andy:  Correct. I’m originally from Pennsylvania. I started college at Penn State, but was really unhappy there. Classes too big, professors didn’t give a shit, yada yada yada. However, the real reason I came to Longwood was because I made the age-old mistake: I did it for a girlfriend. She had started here and really liked it. I came down to visit her a couple times and liked it as well. Plus, I wanted to get away from home. Everyone else I knew from high school had gone away for college and was having the time of their lives, while I was living at home going to a Penn State satellite campus and it was like I never left high school. So I applied and got in and left the following year. Of course, the girlfriend and I broke up a month later, and college had soured on me way before then, so I dropped out. A year and half later, I came back to finish, this time in my 5th major, music.

TLH:  How many semesters at Longwood did you take classes? What were some high points? Did the problems with housing and classes start from in the beginning, or did things gradually decline?

Andy:   It started with two semesters before I dropped out. Then after my return, I did another nine. So, I attended Longwood for a total of nine semesters. That’s almost six years for those of you keeping count. In my first year, before I dropped out, I had made some friends that I still have today, but overall, the experience was fairly dull. I never went out and did anything, I just stayed in my room and watched movies or played games. However, in my return, I was a different person, and in the music majors met a different type of people: people who wanted to hang out with me. As I got comfortable, it got easier to have a good time. However, I still found classes hard to go to no matter how popular I was.

In my first year, I had no problem with my housing. When I returned, however, it was a different story.

The semester I returned, (I returned in Spring of 2005, so we’re talking about housing in the Fall of 2006) a friend of mine and I decided to room together. In July before the new school year, we get our housing assignments. We were placed with two different people on two different sides of the Cunninghams. Not even close to rooming together. So, I called housing to explain the problem and they told me that nothing could be done until October because all assignments are locked down until then. At the time, I thought they knew what they were talking about. Until two weeks later when we receive new assignments. Now they had us on the International Student Hall as suitemates, living with Chinese exchange students. Well, that’s fucked up because that’s not what we signed up for. So, I called again to explain the problem and the woman gives me the same line about the assignments being locked down until October. This is where I blew up and started on a rant about how my friend and I handed in our paperwork on time and pay the same good money everyone else does, so why are WE the ones getting tossed around. WE should get the same treatment as everyone else and WE want to room together, and thats the ONLY solution WE are willing accept. She said to calm and she’ll go get Doug Howell. Doug comes on the phone very calmly and explains that there must’ve been a mix up. He has paperwork that I was signed up to live on the International Student Hall. Then, I remember that before my friend and I decided to live together, I went to two interest meetings about living on the ISH. However, the dude that supposed to run the meetings, the REC of the Hamms, (who coincidentally got fired the following year for having sex with a student; GO LANCERS!) never showed to the meetings. So, the meetings never happened. So, as far as I was concerned, I didn’t sign up for SHIT. I tell Doug this and he says he’ll look into it and see what he can do. Two weeks later, which about a week and a half before MOVE-IN, my friend and I get a room together…..on the ISH. Fine. Whatever. At least we’re finally rooming together. So, on move-in day, I get to the room first and open the door……and its a handicap single room. Thanks Longwood. They never mentioned that. So both my roommate and I had packed thinking we were going to have a regular sized room. It was WAY cramped in there all year. WAY too cramped for two people to live comfortably. At least the bathroom was big enough to fit a fucking wheelchair. So, we got what we wanted right? Wrong. Three weeks into the semester, the NEW REC comes to our room to tell us that there are two Chinese students living together and that they want American roommates. She told us that Housing wanted to split us up and make us live with Chinese students since we were two Americans living together living on the ISH. We tell her, very confidently, that we will not, and that if they want that to happen, they’re literally going to have to pick us up and move us and also that we DARE her to try exactly that. Now, let it be known that our suitemates were ALSO two Americans living together on the ISH, but they were baseball players, so they didn’t wanna fuck with them. WHAT IF THEY LOSE A GAME?!?!?!?! Fuckers. After the REC left that night, we never heard from her again about the move. I guess we got through to her.

Ah, the Landings. The escape for the student that doesn’t want to live “on-campus”, just across the street from it. AND ITS NOT A DORM ROOM! I was one of the first students to live in the Landings. When move-in day of that year occurred, Fall of 2006, one of the four buildings wasn’t finished. Guess which one I lived in? So in August, about two weeks before move-in, I get a letter saying that I will be placed in temporary housing at the Poplar Forest Apartments. This is a good five miles from campus. Past Wal-mart. They also said that I still have to park in resident parking…even though they’ve placed me five miles away against my will. Nice. Not every student got lucky to stay in Poplar Forest, though. Some had to stay in the Days Inn. That must’ve been a JOY. So, after the first of two weeks we lived there at the beginning of the semester, they say we’re allowed to use commuter parking. Thanks. I appreciate it. So, we get to move-in…again…and I claim my room. I could almost stretch my arms to either side. I had NO IDEA these rooms were going to be this small. Never told, so AGAIN, I had TOO much stuff for a small room. Also, my friend transferred and I couldn’t find another roommate, I was stuck with two basketball players (I’ll bet into basketball later) and a pothead art student.  During my time in that apartment, I had my room broken into TWICE and had shit stolen. Had a dude almost cut one of my roommates for having a threesome with his girlfriend. (He was, I saw all three of them go into the room.) And I figured out that I could break into ANY of the bedrooms in the Landings with a credit card because of shotty construction. Hope you feel safe. I didn’t. I never had to call the cops in my life until I went to Longwood. I called them a total of seven times during my tenure at Longwood and I have NEVER called them anywhere else in my life.

TLH:  What was the very first major problem that you experienced?  Why, today, do you carry ill feelings regarding certain aspects of our school?

Andy:  The VERY first problem I faced happened on MOVE-IN DAY of my FIRST DAY AS A STUDENT AT LONGWOOD. So, this was in Fall of 2002, the year after which I dropped out. I was trying to get a parking permit, and after the line of twenty-five people in this narrow hallway finally thinned out, I got up to the window. The lady looks at all my paperwork and says that because I have a freshman standing, I can’t have a car on campus. I told her that I live in Philadelphia. I drove down from Philadelphia. How am I supposed to get my car BACK to Philadelphia. She said I could drive it back and have someone drive me back down. I told her that was insane. I can’t do that. Classes start in two days, it’s a six hour drive to Philly from here. That’s assuming I don’t hit bad traffic in NOVA. She just shrugs at me. I tell her I NEED to talk to someone else who can do something about it. She looks frustratingly at the line behind me, but I don’t budge. She sighs and goes to get a rather older woman, who still works there to this day, and SHE is able to give me a parking permit. She said that Freshman from OUT OF STATE are allowed cars on campus. NO FUCKING SHIT!! WHY DOESN’T YOUR LITTLE HELPER KNOW THAT?!?!?!?!?!

Now, my ill-feelings toward Longwood stem from one assumption. Let me be clear, that as much as I would want this assumption to be correct because it would be satisfying to hear it from Cormier’s own mouth, it IS only an assumption. That assumption is as such: If you are accepted as a Longwood student, the administration sees you as nothing more than a money source. However, if you are a prospective student, then you are GOD HIMSELF and they will do ANYTHING for you. It’s the little things. Like parking, or food, or the fact that they made a bad basketball team Division I, thus making them a HORRIBLE basketball team. Now, I could care less about basketball, but when they made them Division I, I was furious. When you become a NCAA Div. I team, you need certain facilities on campus for your athletes. Hence, the new Activities Center by Hull and the highrises. Now, I know that most of the money to build this place comes from donations and state funding. However, the NCAA requires yearly dues. It’s like a club and when you become Div. I, the dues become higher. Mainly because as a Div. I team, you get national explosure on TV and ads everywhere. The NCAA, like all the universities in its membership, is a business, and business has never been better. So, the money for those dues? Where does it come from? It’s going to come from a yearly source of income. Hmm…we have a bunch of gullible fucking kids giving us thousands of dollars a year. How about asking for MORE thousands of dollars a year! Yes! Thats it! I’m so glad I got to pay for the education of a small group of individuals on campus, instead of myself.

Now, basketball isn’t the only thing that gives me a sour taste in my mouth. Hell, it isn’t even the biggest thing. The biggest and probably most blatant middle finger to the student body has got to be parking. It’s EASILY parking. Ok, so we built this Brock Commons thing. MAINLY so we can fit a bunch of teacher parking in a garage underneath it. This will free up a bunch of spots on campus for students. WRONG. Instead some of the spots under Brock Commons lay empty everyday. I know this as a music student as I walk under there everyday from Wygal to go to the cafe. Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of staff parked under there, but why all the empty spaces? Who isn’t using them? Anyways, empty spaces aside, this didn’t clear up parking for students. The biggest help we got was when Wynne was demolished [Wynne was the building where education classes were held; it was demolished Febraury, 2006 -- Ed] and made into a parking lot. I mean, that’s great and all, but what about the people who live in the Colonnades? Surely you don’t expect them all to fit in that tiny lot behind that church? Oh wait, that’s Commuter parking that NO ONE USES. So, you DO expect them to walk the close to two miles to get to their cars. Wow. That IS a large middle finger you have, Grandma. Okay. Fine. I guess we could use the exercise to work off the completely unhealthy food you give us at the dining hall. But, we’ll get to keep that parking area right? NO. Next to the Lancer Village (formerly Stanley Park) they are building a parking lot that will be ALL parking for students, commuters included. Then students will have to take a fucking SHUTTLE to their cars. NICE. I’m glad I got out when I did. Have fun with that, this year’s freshmen.

As I said, this is only an assumption, but I don’t think it can be too far off. Check into it.

TLH:  Will do.  Since you’ve been through a lot, could you describe the most flat-out insane thing you ever witnessed at Longwood?

Andy: The most insane thing I must have witnessed had to have been when that dude almost cut my roommate in the Landings. So, I was coming home from a friend’s place, and I saw one of my basketball roommates (you’re welcome, douchebag) walking up to our building with two girls. One of which was his girlfriend who literally lived with us and was a fucking slob. Anyways, we get off the elevator on the fourth floor where we lived. Oh yeah…have I mentioned yet that whenever I lived on-campus, I was placed the TOP floor? I haven’t? Well I was. That’s fucked up. Anyways, we go into the apartment and I lock the front door behind us, because I’m the only one who does. I walk into my room and the three of them go into his. I get undressed and ready for bed and go to go to the bathroom. Heavy bass is spilling out of his bedroom and over all of it I hear giggling. My thought was, good for him. I go to bed. I’m about to fall asleep when a HUGE bang happens on the front door. I hear this dude yelling drunkenly. He pounds on my roomates door, then mine. I throw pants on and open the door. He had punched a hole into it AND the other door as well. He asks me where Dana is. That’s my roommate…not his girlfriend. I tell him he punched a hole in my fucking door. He says he’s sorry and asks for Dana again. I tell him he’s in his room and I close my door and lock it. (which doesn’t matter in the Landings.) Then I hear yelling and threats. I call the cops. The guys leave to take it outside and must’ve seen the cops come because Dana doesn’t come back that night. The cops come to the room and I explain what happened. Dana’s FRIENDS are there, not DANA and THEY explain what happened, even though THEY weren’t there. I tell the cops that these dudes weren’t even there, so nothing they’re saying is true. The cops told me that THEY would decide what was true. Nice. So, a dude shows up that night to repair the front door that the guy LITERALLY KICKED IN LIKE A SWAT TEAM. By fix, I mean he screwed a piece of wood to the doorframe to the door would lock. However, my grandmother could’ve leaned on the door and broken it open. That was probably the most fucked up thing I saw during my stay at Longwood.

TLH:  Your experience with the foreign language requirement was pretty dark. What happened?

Andy: I mean…the deal with the foreign language department, at least through the eyes of someone who isn’t a major, is that the department goes through Spanish teachers like a five-year-old goes through a bowl of ice-cream. I mean, it’s a REALLY fast turnover rate. So, every time I took Spanish, which was six times at different levels, I had a different teacher that had a different teaching style. Not to mention, I’m just REALLY bad at the subject. So, I go to my teachers to tell them that I struggle with the topic and they usually give me the same response. Ask questions, come in for help, get a tutor, blah, blah, blah. I do all that and still fail. Fine, I fail, because I’m not good at it. I’ve accepted that. I also can’t blame Longwood for having the requirement as most liberal arts colleges — that’s what Longwood is whether Cormier think so or not – have this requirement. Fine. I can deal with that; I came to grips with my inability to learn another language YEARS ago. But, it was a couple of instances where the teacher flat-out told me that if I can’t learn it, then I shouldn’t be there. Wait…be where? IN A FUCKING SCHOOL?! YOU FUCK HEAD! YOURE A LANGUAGE TEACHER! WHAT POSSIBLE RESEARCH COULD YOU BE DOING! TEACH ME GODDAMMIT! Anyways, that my view on foreign language and how it can suck my dick.

TLH: Do you feel that the problems you faced were common to a lot of students?

Andy:Do I think my problems were common? No. I think a select few get screwed like I did. The REAL problem is that I think a growing number of students are going to get screwed like me. As in, the problem is getting WORSE, not BETTER. As the school grows, mainly in buildings, not in student body like it wants to, the problems will grow. That’s what happens in running a university, though. Kids are there, then they’re gone. New problems arise. However, I think Longwood has an inability to SOLVE new problems. I feel as though Longwood sees a NEW problem and shoves it under the carpet to be handled at a later date. Does it finally get solved? Yes. But it happens way after it should have. Running a university is a business, but Longwood has shown that it doesn’t have much business sense. The reason it sells its product is because it is a cheap, state school that kids can go to and not be TOO far from home and their parents can afford. Many of the girls at Longwood seem to be there to find a husband, and they’re education majors so in case finding the husband doesn’t work out, they have something to fall back on. Again, this is just an assumption. But, I’ve been there a while and have seen many girls come and go there. Most of them engaged. Just being honest. More people I knew in college in the past two years have gotten engaged or married then I ever thought. I knew nine couples that engaged this summer alone and another four got married. I know I’m going off the subject of the question, but I already answered the question. It just that I think there some more problems then Longwood seems to realize or wants to realize. But, like I said earlier, it doing something right in its recruitment. A prospective student is god. They got that down.

TLH: Have you thought about coming back, since you’re so close to finishing? I know one of your reasons for getting out stemmed from the idea of “fuck it, they’re not getting anymore money from me.” But, still, you’re so close. Or do you not think of it anymore?

Andy:  I’ve thought about returning to SCHOOL, but I won’t be returning to Longwood’s campus as student ever again. There are other ways to finish the degree, the problem is that I’ve been doing college for so long, some of those credits are about to expire. (Yes, they expire.) So going back is not just going to be taking two classes. I need a break. I just want to work and actually have money go INTO my pocket slowly, rather leave my pocket quickly. I have no shame working shitty jobs. As long as I can afford the basics, which is easier than most people realize or would like you to think. To be honest, I consider higher education to the biggest scam in the world. Kids are being conned day in and day out and either don’t know it or are too scared to accept it. There’s nothing that says that if you don’t have a degree, you’ll end up on the street. All it does is make the job search easier. JUST THE SEARCH. The job is going to hard either way. It’s a great way to discover yourself. I know I discovered a TON about myself at college. THAT was the invaluable experience there. NOT the “education”. However, that experience is not worth the $50,000 debt minimum that college students end up in. In an economy that was almost completely destroyed by loans, we still force people to take money out to go to college. Just seems weird that it should cost that much. Especially for state-funded schools.

TLH: What are your plans these days?

Andy: I’m moving out to Illinois to be with my girlfriend, a Longwood graduate, as she finishes up grad school at the University of Illinois. I’ll be working somewhere wearing a uniform and maybe asking if you want fries with that. But, its not horrible. I could be on the street. I’ll survive without my degree. Just because I don’t have the degree doesn’t mean I’m not educated. Technically I’m about as educated as someone with a PhD. That’s gotta count for something somewhere. Just got to find out where.


Hey! You got any of that LU uncut? I need some for the weekend.

August 27, 2009

That rumor about attendance being down this year by a hundred?  Pretty hard to believe.  Especially if you’ve  ever watched those LU uncut! videos.

LU uncutzHaven’t ever watched them?  You should take the time to do so, right now.  If potential students are flies, these videos are four big-ass honey pots.  Shit is real.  Raw.  Un-fucking-cut. 

Let’s examine the first in the series: “Ep!sode One: Discover What Power?” 

What power?  I’ll tell you what power.  The power of some LU uncut.  Everyone’s got some.   Did you hear what I said?  Shit is uncut.  Just look all the folks in D hall, shouting for some!  Even the geeky library girl wants her LU uncut.  That’s the power I’m talking about. 

Some highlights: 

*The moment where a guy advises to “not just build a relationship with [professors] as a teacher and a student, but like really get to know them and let them…” – at which point his eyes go blank with horror/shame – ”…help you. ”

*One dude who has had some LU uncut explains the brilliance of small classes.  “Because with the small classes, you don’t have to worry about, like, getting behind in the classes.” 

Oh, and there’s this chap:

uncutzzz1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We know what the campus has to offer, son.  It offers LU uncut.  And it looks like you’ve had too much.

 Be sure to tell all your college-seeking friends about the wonders of LU uncut.  Shit will blow your mind.  It’s uncut.  Raw.  Like fucking ground beef raw.  Uncut.  LU.


Obama chooses gonzo novel by 2006 John Dos Passos Prize recipient for summer reading

August 25, 2009

The book is Plainsong, by Kent Haruf, who came to Longwood during the Fall 2007 semester to recieve the prize.  We remember him as gracious and quite humble about his huge literary reputation.  We also read the book…sort of.  It was…about this guy in Colorado…who…uh…was going to Las Vegas to cover this motorcycle race…yeah, that’s it.  Oh-oh-oh!  It had this killer opening line:  “Here was this man Tom Guthrie in Holt with two bags of grass, seventy-five pellets of mescaline, five sheets of high-powered blotter acid, a saltshaker half-full of cocaine and a whole multicolored collection of uppers, downers, laughers, screamers, looking over the back lot where the sun was just coming up.”  

Below are some of our favorite photos of Haruf.  For the rest of Obama’s reading list, go here.

haruf

The Freewheeling Kent Haruf

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2007 speech at Wygal Auditorium

2007 speech at Wygal Auditorium

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A very stoned Kent Haruf

A very stoned Kent Haruf


Stop the fake, satirical presses!

August 25, 2009

This weekend, a friend posted this video from The Onion News Network.   We watched it and agreed that, yes, the featured protester near the beginning of the video, Lynn Holzer, did look a hell of a lot like former Longwood Spanish professor Susan Hildebrandt.  Dr. Hildebrandt, who moved this summer to teach at Illinois State University, we remembered as a fan of fake news.  Walk by her office in third floor Grainger and you sometimes heard The Colbert Report.  And didn’t she once tell us in Span 201 about how her friend works for The Onion?  Possibly — our Spanish comprehension skills always wavered between sucky and non-existent.  

We contacted her and learned that, yes, it was her.  Effin’ fabulous.  Dr. Hildebrandt said that she took a train up to New York in April and had a great time filming the segment and seeing her BFF, who is head writer for The Onion News Network.         

So that’s all the news for today.  Oh, and Longwood has moved up to #8 in The U.S. News and World Report ranking of Top Public Master’s Universities in the South.  Hell yeah — we’ll take that.

US NEWS2

#9 Winthrop University partakes in a mustache ride from Longwood


If you haven’t heard of Acoustic Long Island, “the #1 acoustic podcast on iTunes”…

August 24, 2009

…well, you should probably check it out, because our favorite singer-songwriter Jacqueline Stem, a senior, is pimpin’ out the homepage this week.

The whole set is fabulous and recommended listening, especially if you haven’t heard Jackie live before.  Also, catch in the introduction the part where the speaker, a little bizarrely, changes Longwood’s Battle of the Bands to Longwood’s Songwriting Competition.

Full Disclosure: An editor of The Longwood Hole owes money to Jacqueline Stem.


RUMOR: Members of Longwood 5-0 Get Their Petition On!

August 21, 2009

So we hear that the Longwood Police feel ill-equipped to serve in the modern campus crime environment.  These days, it’s not enough to have cars and guns.  Even the bad guys have cars and guns!

What the Longwood Police are hankering for, we hear, are Segways.  And they’re whipping up a petition to make sure they gets what they deserve!

According to the dealer, Segways are great for the environment, and they’ll save money the school money look pimp!

Fight the good fight, Longwood Police.


A few thoughts from a concerned parent

August 20, 2009

Hello, my name is J. A. Anders.

anders

You may call me Mr. Anders.  Hah!

move in

As you may or may not know, Longwood and I have quite a history.  Back in 1982, when my net value surpassed ten million dollars, I saw in this college a prudent investment opportunity:

donation1

donation2a A smart fellow named Warren Buffet once said, “Someone’s sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”  Well, today I have returned to this campus for the first time in over twenty years, and while those around me are soaked in sweat from the heat and humidity, I myself feel the heart-quelling cool of shade.  That’s right!–the shade of Money Well Invested.

campus

I remember when a damn street ran through here!  Look how pretty it is now!  Hah!  Goodness me.  I could not be happier to be sending my daughter, Jasmine to this college–excuse me, University.  I told Jasmine that I hope she looks up from her Sidekick long enough to realize what a vivacious, inspiring school her father is paying for her to attend.  I also told her to watch out for the boys, especially that cunning group from my Alma Mater, Hampden-Sydney!

"Be careful with those boys, Jasmine!  They haven't lost their edge--I can tell!"

"Be careful with those boys, Jasmine! They haven't lost their edge!"

Anyway, have a safe and exciting first week of class.  Be social, but don’t drink to excess–especially on school nights!  Hah!  And always be at the very least courteous when dealing with the Longwood Police–or, as we used to call them in my day, the Longwood Faux-lice.

anders

See you at Parent Week.


Member of English Dynasty Sought for Study Session

August 19, 2009

Let’s examine the many different ways in which we’re going green, courtesy The Great Dismal Swamp of Longwood:

swamp

Scenic, breathtaking, etc, etc.  We tried to make a wish and toss a nickel in the water, but the slime caught the nickel and threw it back at us…

"Step the fuck off!  Don't be throwing your coins in my home!  I got private donors funding me!  Bitch!"

"Step the fuck off! Don't be throwing your coins in my home! I got private donors funding me! Bitch!"

   Nothing worse than arrogant, entitled Swamp Things. 

Here’s this: 

tudor


INTERVIEW: The girl who got paid to watch us shop

August 18, 2009

walmart

We worried for Ashley this summer.  Poor thing, it seemed like every time we visited Walmart there she was, steering her cart slowly down the aisles, listening to her iPod, like it was her job.  

Turns out, it was her job.  This summer Ashley, a rising senior at Longwood, helped her local Walmart catch shoplifters.  She recently spoke with The Longwood Hole about her experience. 

The Longwood Hole:  First, what is the title of your job? How did you get hooked up with such an unusual/sweet gig? How many days a week do you typically work?

Ashley:  The position is called Walmart Asset Protection Associate. I got into it when Mom told me about it. She’s in private investigation and saw this as an opportunity for herself, but got a better offer for another job, so I applied for the position instead.

I worked five days a week and forty hours. But the hours change from day to day because we have to have at least two people covering at all times. Also, depending on whether we were onto something, we could stay longer one day and shorter another. It all depended on whether we found someone to apprehend.

TLH:  On average, how many people would you nab a day?

Ashley:  Depends on the week and how busy the store is; you really couldn’t predict it. I’d get three one week and none the other then two here and one there.  It was random.  The most I got in one day was three.

TLH: How did you communicate with the security department when you caught someone?

Ashley:   Um…I basically was the security department.  I was the one to stop the shoplifters and put myself at risk.  Once, I chased a woman down the parking lot and got her by the arm!  I twisted it behind her and walked her back to the store. 

TLH: Woah.

Ashley: I did have to have a manager present.  I would call the store and have them page a manager to the front or, if I could avoid being seen, I’d use the walkie.

TLH: How many disguises did you wear? What was the most extravagant/fabulous disguise you wore?

Ashley: I don’t know…I had three wigs, two hairpieces, glasses, outfits, different make-up styles…there were too many to count.  I also tried not to stick out too much…I don’t know what my most extravagant costume was…one day I went out as a full-out goth, dark eye-liner and black hair…the works.

TLH:  Did you ever have any special music you played while you were stalking someone?

Ashley:  No. I wasn’t allowed to listen to music.  I used my ears as much as my eyes. Listening for packages opening and tags ripping off.  But I had ear-buds in sometimes…but plugged into nothing.

TLH:  That’s sly.

Ashley:  I know!

TLH:  What was the most unusual item you caught someone shoplifting?

Ashley:  Glade Scented Plug-In Refills (Apple Cinnamon Scent)…that was all he stole.  I was like WTF? Why? WHY????

TLH:  Who was the most unusual person you caught shoplifting?

Ashley:  Between the guy in the wheelchair….and the 55 year-old that reminded me of Ms. Ganush from “Drag Me to Hell.”

TLH:  A guy in a wheelchair?

Ashley:  I was like…OMG?  Is he…?  Is it wrong to stop him?  NO!  Cause he’s a thief!  Crime doesn’t discriminate.

TLH:  Have you learned any valuable skills you plan to utilize this semester at Longwood?

Ashley:  Hmm…I wrote a lot of reports and I learned the importance of accuracy and detail.  Plus following protocol. There were a bunch of rules and elements you had to obey to make a stop.  And you had to be SURE of yourself.  I also learned confidence in confronting people.

TLH:  Were you ever in any situations where you were physically threatened? With a blade, perhaps?

Ashley:  I was never ”threatened.”  I got pushed down and had carts pushed at me and swatted at and things like that. 

TLH: Have you ever shoplifted? If you saw someone shoplifting in Wal Mart now, would you alert security, out of habit?

Ashley:  I once shoplifted candy when I was little.  I got caught, though.  That did it for me.  If I caught someone now I would definitely alert Wal-Mart…it’s something of habit now because I even do that in other stores, like Roses.  I know the numbers of the other APA’s and the managers.  I wouldn’t hesitate to call.

TLH:  One a scale of one to ten, ten being the highest, how would you rate your experience?

Ashley:  Ten.  I loved the job.


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