Mental scrunchers lack common sense
A week ago today something was wrong. I was consistently receiving strange looks from the people who passed me by. Did I smell? Was I dressed like a Nazi? No, I had done the fold instead of the scrunch.
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A week ago today something was wrong. I was consistently receiving strange looks from the people who passed me by. Did I smell? Was I dressed like a Nazi? No, I had done the fold instead of the scrunch.
Here at Dartmouth, home of the free, land of the stereotype it can be hard to keep up with all of the categorizations. If you were to confuse a few Greek letters you might think the football players were lesbians. This is not to leave out the ever popular prejudices based on race, creed, country of origin, etc.
My never-ending search for truth led me this week to McNutt Hall. Home to the admissions office, McNutt is also the starting point for the official Dartmouth College Campus Tour. Now that I have spent a good amount of time at the College I was curious to find out how closely the tour relates to reality.
A bold prediction: the battle lines in at least one campus controversy will be drawn on the basis of race. In other words at least one issue will be seen as a confrontation between blacks and whites.
Oh my, what have they done to my school?
Today's issue of The Dartmouth reports that a clay mugs and toast ceremony will replace the old clay pipe smashing ceremony at Class Day.
The passing of Green Key is a symbol that summer is just around the corner.
They are packing them in at the new Dirt Cowboy Cafe. Every time I have stopped into the new coffee shop on Main Street it has been crowded. While this means cash in the pockets of the owners it also has a deeper meaning for the College. The success of this new cafe sheds light on the large portion of the student body that is often masked by the extremes.
The Dartmouth, on Monday, reported an assault that occurred in Psi Upsilon early Saturday morning. Thatcher Wine '94, the president of Psi U declined to comment because the incident "did not involve the fraternity."