<p>what a wonderful question! or, at the very least, what a wonderful question for me to address!</p>
<p>for those who are relatively new, some background: i graduated from bucknell in may of 2006 with a double major in mathematics and economics and am now pursuing a phd in the former. i used to post here frequently; then i got busy.</p>
<p>so, a senior? not quite. a nerd? oh heck yes.</p>
<p>is the 'typical' bucknell student one of the popular kids from high school? i guess... though in a very, very good way. by that i mean this: he is an outgoing, athletic, fun, intelligent kid who was nice to everyone in high school and everybody actually liked. the kid who was actually popular, in other words. not the rich, snotty kid who was only 'popular' when the word was surrounded by quotes.</p>
<p>as has been mentioned, the schools large engineering college and a growing arts presence marginalizes even the positive stereotype portrayed above. there is definitely a critical mass of duct tape/video game/anime kids, just as there is a critical mass of hipsters and, yes, 'popular' kids who are a little too concerned with how theyre seen relative to who they are. almost everyone, though, is NICE. even the two kids on my freshman hall i grew to absolutely abhor (they were definitely 'popular' with quotes) were nice. its almost scary, really.</p>
<p>the only 'negative' thing i will say is that a 'nerd' or whatever else may not find himself immediately surrounded by other 'nerds' on his hall. well, at least not sufficiently nerdy nerds (most everyone at bucknell is smart enough to be at least a little quirky). however, after a few weeks in classes and a couple meetings of club x, y or z, all of that will take care of itself. until (and well after) that time? oh, there will be plenty of really outgoing people on every hall knocking on doors, inviting everyone to every dinner and concert they can.</p>
<p>all those former student council presidents need something to do, after all.</p>