Anonymous wrote:I was at Penn in the 1980s (graduated in 1990) - never saw nor heard about cocaine use except as a stereotype about Wharton graduates on Wall Street. It certainly wasn't prevalent on campus then, and I'm skeptical that this is the case now.
Fwiw the article linked is from the student newspaper's weekly magazine, which has always been run by upper middle class white kids desperate to make themselves edgy and hip. This article is a job application by an aspiring Rolling Stone journalist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was at Penn in the 1980s (graduated in 1990) - never saw nor heard about cocaine use except as a stereotype about Wharton graduates on Wall Street. It certainly wasn't prevalent on campus then, and I'm skeptical that this is the case now.
Fwiw the article linked is from the student newspaper's weekly magazine, which has always been run by upper middle class white kids desperate to make themselves edgy and hip. This article is a job application by an aspiring Rolling Stone journalist.
I graduated a few years before you. Plenty of coke at Castle and St A’s.
I graduated in the late 90s. Lots of coke at Tabard Castle and ZBT parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was at Penn in the 1980s (graduated in 1990) - never saw nor heard about cocaine use except as a stereotype about Wharton graduates on Wall Street. It certainly wasn't prevalent on campus then, and I'm skeptical that this is the case now.
Fwiw the article linked is from the student newspaper's weekly magazine, which has always been run by upper middle class white kids desperate to make themselves edgy and hip. This article is a job application by an aspiring Rolling Stone journalist.
I graduated a few years before you. Plenty of coke at Castle and St A’s.
Anonymous wrote:I was at Penn in the 1980s (graduated in 1990) - never saw nor heard about cocaine use except as a stereotype about Wharton graduates on Wall Street. It certainly wasn't prevalent on campus then, and I'm skeptical that this is the case now.
Fwiw the article linked is from the student newspaper's weekly magazine, which has always been run by upper middle class white kids desperate to make themselves edgy and hip. This article is a job application by an aspiring Rolling Stone journalist.
Anonymous wrote:http://34stfeatures.github.io/the-dividing-line/
Cocaine use rampant at penn in the article above to the stress penn kids have that's causing mental health issues and suicides - what's up with Penn these days?