Karissa Ng’s University of Virginia experience began with a familiar story: arriving to Grounds in an overstuffed vehicle in mid-summer and anxiously settling into a residence hall.
On the ride to Charlottesville from her Virginia Beach home, Ng recalled, a rolled-up rug for the dorm room pressed her head close to the window of her grandmother’s minivan. By the time she and her parents, with the help of UVA’s famed move-in Greeters and others, had hauled everything into Page-Emmet House on McCormick Road, the truth was evident.
“I definitely overpacked that day,” Ng laughed in a recent interview sandwiched between studying for midterm exams and a class the week before Spring Break.
UVA first-year students, of course, are required to live on Grounds, and more than 4,000 of them participate in the move-in ritual each August. After that initial year, the majority clear out their dorm rooms and opt to live in apartments or other housing off-Grounds.
But not Ng, who will graduate in May with a degree in biology and anthropology, with a concentration in medical anthropology, ethics and care.
She has lived on Grounds in UVA housing all four years. The full experience. Even during some summers.
Something about that first semester in Page-Emmet ended up being very appealing. It went back to the first day, with all the activity, the newness, the nervous energy, encountering people she didn’t know, but would become friends with for the years ahead.
“I remember the thrill and excitement of finding my roommate, Shannon, and designing the room together, organizing and unpacking our things,” she said. “It was very chaotic, because you enter the hall and many residents are with their parents and they have their luggage and everything, coming into their room and unpacking, and everyone’s doors are propped open.”