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Column: Why I hate Duke

February 9, 2010
1990 columnist

I recall a strange and hazy time about four and a half years ago, fretting in the sweltering heat of Hinton James 244, sitting on my bed while the rest of the residents scurried outside.

My suitemate from Brevard was parading his spittle collection, a particularly nauseating mass of his oral waste that he kept in three 2-liter bottles above the door. My roommate spoke in a dialect from Edenton that barely passed for anything on our side of the language tree, and the only things I had to wear in the 105-degree weather were corduroy pants from my goofball private high school. Tripping over bricks, showing up for classes in rooms miles away from where the classes were taught and getting lost by the water tower, I might as well have had a huge placard wrapped around my neck that said "Oh so clueless" and a number to call in case anybody found me peeing in his yard.

But there was a time before that. I call it The Time When I Thought I Wanted to Go to Duke.

For some unexplainable reasons having to do with planetary alignment or a chemical imbalance, I was set on going to that university in Durham. My high school in Virginia brainwashed us all into thinking that if we didn't end up going to either Duke, UVA, or one of the Ivys we would surely end up stocking Pampers at Wal-Mart. So off I scuttled to those schools, all bushy-tailed and bated, hopin' to impress some institutes of higher learning. By the time I got to visiting Duke, however, the luster of collegge had begun to dull into a bleak haze.

My tour guide's name was Lorna- no lie- and she spoke in a loud, brash voice that seemed to shake the leaves from the cute little shrubberies. "And on your left is Duke Chapel, the centerpiece of our Gothic campus. Our university is considered by many to be the most beautiful campus in America."

"Umm, excuse me," I said, "Where do all the kids live?"

"The kids," she said, in a voice of utter disdain reserved only for parents whose child has been very, very naughty. "The Duke student body mostly lives in the buildings you are looking at right here, with the beautiful Gothic architecture."

"Well, how hard are the classes here? Would I be studying all the time?"

She fixed her cruel New Jersey gaze on my frightened 17-year-old soul. "Look, that's totally assuming you even get in here at all. I know tons of people that would have given their left arm to get in here. And not only that, but- Oh, hi, Thad!" Some senior named Thad wearing Vuarnets and baggy khaki shorts ambled up with an evil Gleem smile.

"Leadin' the kids around, eh Lorna?" he asked, and cackled like the frat Grinch.

"Yeah," she giggled, and the two whispered to each other while exchanging muffled laughs.

I was herded into the cafeteria and stuck in a line for pizza, while Lorna went off into the crowd with some of her friends. A scowling guy slapped a piece of rubber pepperoni pizza on my plate, and as I walked across the room to sit down, I tripped on one of those Gothic little cherub things on the floor and sent my pizza flying 20 feet onto the sweater of a girl named Annabeth, a junior English major from Bridgeport, Connecticut.

"Oh my God!" she squealed, and every face in the entire joint looked right at me. Thad the sunglasses man started to clap, and half of the cafeteria joined in my humiliation.

Suddenly, I was back in third grade, and all the boys and girls were pointing and laughing at the picture I'd drawn of my family. Suddenly, I was sitting alone at the side of the blacktop while everyone else got picked for the dodgeball team. Suddenly, I was lying in the Iowa snow, getting my ribs kicked by five guys who thought I'd stolen their football. I had no escape.

And that's when I decided to go to Carolina. I had never seen the place, had never heard of Chapel Hill and I picked Hinton James because it had a laundry room. After a while I grew used to the town- I didn't get lost behind the water tower; I learned where Gardner Hall was; and I began to enjoy the company of my suitemate, despite his spittle collection. I also developed a taste for basketball, and during the games I noticed that we had certain heated rivalries- whenever we played one of those teams, I got tense and dug holes in the seat.

Now I realize that school spirit is a pretty goofy thing to some people, but I'll tell you something: I hate Duke with an infernal passion undying. I hate every leaf of every tree on that sickening campus. I hate every fake cherub Gothic piece of crap that litters the buildings like hemorrhoidal testiments to imagined superiority. When I see those Dookie boneheads shoe-polishing their faces navy blue on television, squadering their parents' money with their fratty elitist bad sportsmanship antics and Saab stories, I want to puke all over Durham.

So this is my request, boys of basketball: Tonight, I not only want you to win, I want Krzyzewski calling home to his mother with tears in his eyes. I want Alaa Abdelnaby to throw up brick after brick. I want Rick Fox to take Christian Laettner to the hoop so many times that poor Christian will be dazed on the bench with an Etch-a-Sketch and a box of Crayola crayons. I want Bobby Hurley to trip on his shoelaces and fly into a fat alumnus from Wilimington. Send Thad and Lorna home with their blue tails between their legs.

God bless them Tar Heel boys!

Editor's note: Ian Willaims, a 1990 UNC alumnus, was a columnist for The Daily Tar Heel in the spring 1990 semester. The DTH management felt that its thematic content remains relevant as a wonderful reminder of why we hate Duke. The column ran Jan 17, 1990- that night, the Tar Heels stomped the Blue Devils by 19.

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This is fantastic! I had a

This is fantastic! I had a very similar experience when I visited Dook my junior year in high school-- I got a very general and distinct impression of snobbiness. After that, it was down to UNC or UVA, and thank goodness I had enough sense to become a Tar Heel!!

I'm sorry, but I'm a student

I'm sorry, but I'm a student at Duke and just wanted to comment because this guy is completely making stuff up about us.

First of, I haven't met someone nearly as cocky as the fictional person you made up at the school over the whole year I have been here (i am a freshman).

Secondly, you can shut up about saying we all pay 50,000 dollars to go here. Most people at Duke are on financial aid, and some people are on heavy financial aid like myself (I go for free because I am so poor).

Thirdly, Duke students are for the most part really nice. I'm glad that you are making stuff up about us that you hear on TV, but please actually visit the school in real life before you completely slander the school.

I'm from North Carolina, got into UNC, and considered going. I was cheering for you guys for a while. I stopped when I realized how much you guys hate us. It's almost like some of you guys have some fantasy about us that only includes white people (only 50 percent of the student body is white), rich people (more than half of the people here are on financial aid), or elitist snobs (I guarantee you many people here got rejected from other schools, so they are far from elitist).

Anyway man, UNC is a great school. I was close to going there--very close actually, especially because of their great journalism department which is shown very nicely by the Daily Tar Heel. Just please stop spreading lies about us.

Please.

For real, the amount of disinformation about Duke is disgusting.

Good luck against NC State on Saturday guys.

--An Evil, Undoubtedly Elitist, White, Rich, and Snobbish student from that Devilish school called Duke (for this is how the writer undoubtedly sees me)

Alas poor Ian, you left out

Alas poor Ian, you left out the part about your Duke Admission application being rejected. Hatred is one of mankind's most basic maladaptive coping mechanisms, although you probably figured that out for yourself at the Walmart register.

I was in school and working

I was in school and working at the DTH when Ian wrote this. It couldn't have been more perfect then, or now, or anytime really. Thanks for republishing this historical artifact in UNC history. Wonder which New Jersey Walmart has the pleasure of employing Lorna today? Go Heels!

Two thoughts...first thnaks

Two thoughts...first thnaks for posting this column...I believe its awfully ironic to read such a piece of rubbish the day after the Blue Devils forever tarnished Hansblows jersey retirement.

Lorna may be a store manager at a Wal Mart, but I am sure the in-bred roommate of the original column writer is working in the hunting department of the Greenville Wal-Mart reporting to an East Carolina grad.

*thnaks I am trying to

*thnaks

I am trying to understand how this represents irony. It is not "witty language used to convey insults or scorn," nor is it "incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs" that you read an article that had a purpose of showing hatred towards Dook after you had seen a game in which Dook happened to win.

Thank you for correcting my

Thank you for correcting my typing error. That is a good catch and I am sure comes up frequently in your day to day position as an administrative assistant (working under a, as you call us so affectionately, Dookie????).

The irony in this one is that the article was originally published in 1990 and that same day/night you all had a big win, but now this article was published before the most recent game and you all got to watch us dismantle your team at the end of the game....in front of Hansblow nonetheless.

*I am sure comes up

*I am sure comes up frequently...

I believe you have missed that I was being ironic in my previous statement. I was merely feigning ignorance in order to show that you have an incorrect idea as to what irony is. I first want to give you a little history lesson about the two teams in question. The article was first ran the year before Dook had back to back national titles, and UNC took the national title the following year. At this time either team could win at any time. It was great that UNC won on January 17th of that year, but there is no irony here. Now, I believe that your argument is that the irony is in Dook winning Wednesday night of this year. I can see how this may be comical to you, but that does not equate irony. If this were truly ironic, you would have had more hopes than most Carolina fans. We know that anything can happen in the UNC-Dook rivalry, but the expected result was not a UNC win. It was the hoped for result. I do admit that I thought my team could win this game, but tragically the expected result was a loss. This brings me back to the definition of irony. It is when the expected result does not occur. Obviously the expected result did occur and there was no irony in the situation. If you still choose to believe that this was ironic, an emphatic thank you is warranted from all Carolina fans across the globe.

HateCarolina, go away.

HateCarolina, go away. Everyone knows you go to NC State and couldn't get into either UNC or Dook.