Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's such a DC mentality to fear "isolated" areas.
Some of us grew up in isolated areas and we know that there's lot more drinking and stupid stuff that goes on.
There's also a lot more of a need for self-reliance, introspection, and maybe even studying!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's such a DC mentality to fear "isolated" areas.
Some of us grew up in isolated areas and we know that there's lot more drinking and stupid stuff that goes on.
Anonymous wrote:It's such a DC mentality to fear "isolated" areas.
That fall, he enrolled at Dartmouth, where he had wanted to go for as long as he could remember. His late grandfather, Austin Lohse, had played football and lacrosse for Big Green, and both Andrew and his older brother, Jon, a Dartmouth junior, idolized him as the embodiment of the high-achieving, hard-drinking, fraternal ethos of the Dartmouth Man, or what Lohse calls a "true bro." A Dartmouth Man is a specific type of creature, and when I ask Lohse what constitutes true bro-ness, he provides an idealized portrait of white-male privilege: "good-looking, preppy, charismatic, excellent at cocktail parties, masculine, intelligent, wealthy (or soon to become so), a little bit rough around the edges" – not, in other words, a "douchey, superpolished Yalie."
Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/confessions-of-an-ivy-league-frat-boy-inside-dartmouths-hazing-abuses-20120328#ixzz2bx307E9S
Anonymous wrote:I'm not an expert, but it does seem campuses with long winters, not much else going on nearby and a strong Greek influence pretty much has the trifecta for being at risk of serious alcohol issues.
Anonymous wrote:Syracuse grad here. Class of '90. I was in a sorority. I was happy to see that Huffington Post named Syracuse the #5 "party school!" Greek life is part of the college experience. It does not mean that academics will automatically suffer from joining a fraternity/sorority. In fact, most (if not all) of them have requirements of a certain GPA to remain a member, be initiated, etc. Mandatory study sessions, etc. I am not dismissing the partying & "antics," too...BUT this is all part of many campuses, and many students can/do handle the academic/social balance.