<p>Size 14 shoes, we do a lot of ordering over the web. The transition from large, to xx-large, to xxl has been expensive but we have provided lots of clothes in great shape for Goodwill, etc. Now, I get his handmedowns in little-worn sweatshirts / tee shirts he grew out of. Airplane seats are torture for him, so we are trying to avoid flying small panes to Walla Walla. My brother lives in Seattle, so S will probably hitch a ride west for Thanksgiving break, and only fly home over Christmas. If healthy and playing well, we are hoping he will be playing with teammates over spring break, but who knows.</p>
<p>Our relatively small car is okay when he leans the seat way back. The rest of us can’t reach the steering wheel without readjusting the driver’s seat after him. The scary thing is that his growth plates are still open - though the doctor’s estimate is that he is near topping out (I hope).</p>
<p>We have about a 15 hour drive to Walla Walla in an old minivan (our big car) with about 170k miles on it to deliver him to Whitman, and are going to spread it out into a three day leisurely father / son road trip north. Assuming that the van holds up, I’m looking forward to that, just not the trip back</p>
<p>Whitman’s isolation is its strength and its weakness. Presumably, students do not go there unless they really want to, because closer options abound for nearly everyone - even in the Pacific Northwest with Reed being a superb college, Lewis and Clark a good one, Evergreen College an interesting alternative and good state universities and Catholic Schools closer to major populations. Certainly, the Claremont Colleges and Occidental are very good LACs an easy plane flight from where we live in NorCal, plus all of the U.C.s for lower cost alternatives. </p>
<p>I am guessing that the students, faculty, and administration have to make the college the center of their intellectual, cultural, and social experience because it is a trek to the big cities in the Northwest, doable but not easily. I suspect that if it clicks for a student, it can be fantastic. Here’s hoping that it clicks for all of the freshpersons heading there!</p>
<p>The amount of respect Whitman is getting in the various publications is heartening, and somewhat surprising. I had never heard of it when I was applying to colleges back in the stone ages, but am glad that Lauren Pope took a liking to it and got the name out. The campus is beautiful and the facilities are amazing - especially the spanking new athletic facilities. Anyway, my significant other and I hope to get involved in the Whitman community over the next four years, and perhaps meet some interesting parents of interesting kids over the years. Good luck to all embarking on this adventure!</p>