Redefining Wellness at Dartmouth
The "work hard, play hard" formula of living practiced by Dartmouth students leaves little room for hugs.
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The "work hard, play hard" formula of living practiced by Dartmouth students leaves little room for hugs.
To the Editor:
Every year, around 1,000 students choose to attend Dartmouth over other schools. For that reason alone, why is it not obvious that they might actually like it here? Unfortunately, a cabal of alumni -- and their student lackeys -- hold the misguided notion that a majority of students currently at Dartmouth are dissatisfied with the state of the College.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
Now that I am at Dartmouth, I have begun to learn what being gay actually means. But I had no idea how my sexual identity was inextricably linked to a wider, ineffaceable context of history, culture, society and politics. In high school, I was out and proud when I began talking about my sexual experiences, but I did not have the intellectual or academic resources available at Dartmouth. I have a radical suggestion: we need more activism in the classroom, and by this I mean speaking what is on your mind and from your own experience among your fellow classmates.
To the Editor:
I agree with Brent Clayton's assertion that "the men of Dartmouth are gone" ("Why No One Rages Anymore," July 12). Like Clayton, I don't very much care for this "new population of males either." Some of them are just too effeminate for my tastes. Where are all the masculine men?
There is a generation gap in the gay rights movement and it is getting wider every day. This is because of the gay rights movement's increasingly single-minded focus on marriage equality.