Hangouts through the years

Cornell student hangouts are the places where lifelong friendships are forged. Some gathering places have spanned decades, while others came and went in a blaze of glory. 

Here five alumni and a member of the Class of 2024 tell the stories of their special space. Sit back and time travel to that place you knew, or wish you had.

Three students chat in the chairs in Thomas Commons lobbyThomas Commons lobby alive with students
b
y Ken Roden ’24

As the sun rises to meet the top of the hill in Mount Vernon, you can expect to find students already making their way to the cornerstone of Cornell College: the Thomas Commons.

 

 

Pauley Lounge Folk during their annual Christmas celebration: Shawna Anderson ’09 (front), Erin Casey ’09, Autumn Allen ’09, and Desiree Clark ’09 (back, left to right).The Pauley Lounge Folk
b
y Erin Casey ’09

But the lounge wasn’t just for fun and games; it was a place where we broke out of our shells and looked past differences to get to know one another.

 

 

3 belly dancers perform on the Orange CarpetMeet me at the Orange Carpet
by
Christy Hamilton ’01

We bobbed and throbbed with Sir Mix-a-Lot on the Orange Carpet. The orange was barely visible under the press of sweaty students crowding for a spot near the rap star. 

 

 

Jim Ellison stands behind the bar of the General TavernThe General Tavern: Karmic ’70s gathering place
b
y Bruce Millard ’76

Smack dab into the middle of Main Street U.S.A., seemingly dropped from some karmic tornado that had gathered every piece of exotic ’60s cultural debris in its long and winding path, plopped The General Tavern.

 

Three Class of '66 women classmates kick up their feet in their Pfeiffer dorm room

Dorm life gave sense of belonging
b
y Susan Schwab Donovan ’66

Later, a little colony of procrastinators would gather in the lounge, pulling all-nighters to cram for an exam or to finish (or start) a paper due the next day. By the wee hours, the smoky air was thick with tension and irritability.

 

George and Alice Brown ran Cornell’s first Cole Bin, which opened in 1945. A new Cole Bin opened on campus in 1947, and the Browns ran George’s Grill from 1949–1952 just off campus The Cole Bin: Dating in the ’50s
by
Duane Carlson ’55

Dating on the Hilltop in the ’50s centered on the ramshackle, shedlike building known as the Cole Bin, with its aptly named Furnace Room.