![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/230226040327-3172a6aadb526ee2bf7e47de1fd562f7/v1/0be236c835fc6e441cd9a9d83f121a6c.jpeg?width=720&quality=85%2C50)
1 minute read
party: Walsh
benefit, for lack of a better word, is that you’re forced to plan your own fun, and so you can be much more intentional.”
For Walsh, this means exploring the Cambridge/ Allston/Boston bar scene, as well as throwing parties himself.
For example, Walsh and his suitemates banded with a few other rooms on the sixth floor of New Quincy to throw a party after Crimson Jam last year. The party started in his common room, which was packed with around 50 people.
Then they moved down the hall to a neighboring suite and started dancing to music from Walsh’s “huge” speaker set.
“I got on the table with one of my friends and we were just dancing for, I don’t know, 30, 45 minutes,” he says. “It was the type of party where it’s like, the windows get steamy.”
The party was a way to establish that Walsh and his neighbors know how to have fun. “If anyone on our floor needs to have a good time, come to us,” he says. “We can make it happen.”