| February 2003
Freshman Week
It has been Freshman Week at the Methodist University, and the
ritual hazing has been going on, on a big scale. There are shaved
heads and painted faces. The hair that has been cut off from Freshman
heads is under foot on the sidewalks, waiting for a rain to wash
it into the storm sewer system. Streamers of toilet paper are
visible here and there, fulfilling some function that the undergraduates
understand. At nearby traffic lights, some shaved and painted
freshmen are approaching stopped cars and asking for money (It's
called pedágio, and it's really quite traditional). Large
numbers of young people seem to be involved.
I have been told that the ritual fulfills an important function.
For many, it's the only time students are really together, except
for the classroom itself. That may change, as the Methodist University
is now building a Student Union, something this campus has never
had.
Another sign of the ritual's importance is a billboard that went
up a few months ago, advertising one of São Paulo's more
commercial universities. It shows the face of a shaved and painted
freshman, grinning from ear to ear, and the words underneath it
say, "You, too, can go to college."
Yours,
Arch Woodruff
|