Robert Knapp
Class: Senior
Hometown: Montrose, PA
Major(s): Math and Computer Science
Favorite Movie(s): Patch Adams or Dead Poets Society
Favorite Music: Anything but rap
Favorite Book(s): I don't read
AOL Screen Name: pub544
Other Clubs or organizations: ΤΚΕ, concert band, concert choir, ACM, AMIS, tour choir
How long have you been a member: 4 years and this will be my fifth
Biography: I was born a desert coyote. I was then abandonded by my parents.I wandered to a small town
in upstate PA called Montrose. There, two generous people brought me in and raised me like their very own. These parents had to create
a birth certificate as to not alarm the authorities of my presence in the human world. I then attended a public school, where I would
occasionally have to hide bodies of kids who found out my true identity. This only lasted a while, until people stopped snooping around.
I then graduated 43 out of 126 and came to central PA to continue my bizarre life as a human. On coming to this institution, I decided
on becoming a math teacher. But shortly after a run in with Stats while pledging a fraternity, I quickly dropped that idea. I also came
across a crazy bunch of kids that lived on the Creative Arts Society floor. They sucked me in, and I haven't been able to leave since. During that
first year at Lycoming, I also started to pick up an Astronomy major. But after my freshman year, I also dropped that. So, continuing on,
I was just a plain old math major, until I had to take a computer science course. Then I added computer science to my major and haven't
looked back from that. During my junior year, I thought about putting a Criminal Justice major in place, but that stopped after one class
of CJ. Upon finally deciding what my major combinations were, I decided to make my life even more enjoyable. I decided to dual major in the two,
so I would have to stay at Lycoming for 5 years. Maybe it's because I love it here, or maybe it's because I'm crazy. That leads us up to today,
where everyone knows who I am.
Last Updated: 3-26-06 Updated by: Robert Knapp