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OLD American Century / White Rose Society message boards > Political Discussion forums > Politics In General
BinaBecker
Thursday, 9 December 2004, 10:14 pm
QUOTE
BENNINGTON, Vermont (Reuters) -- Students occasionally parading buck
naked around Vermont's Bennington College campus has been a tolerated,
if peculiar, part of the university's student culture here since the 1960s.

Now Robert Graves, hired this year as Bennington's dean of students, has
embarked on a crusade against public nudity -- one that has run afoul of
the school's free-spirited students.

Students have long enjoyed an informal policy allowing them to go naked
on campus. Whether it was as a topless sunbather lounging on the lawn or
students running naked at an annual bonfire party, college officials
turned a blind eye.

But when a student strolled around campus naked this summer during an
orientation session when parents were visiting campus, the new dean
reprimanded him.


More than 200 students, a few of them naked, marched across campus in
October to protest against what they saw as a crackdown by the
administration on freedom of expression. While the impending onset of
the New England winter has put a temporary pause to the dispute,
students are preparing for a springtime assault.

Lindsey Gage, a Bennington senior leading the fight to preserve what she
concedes is an unwritten policy, said she has grown accustomed to public
nudity since enrolling here.

"It is never lewd but a natural sight," she said.

American liberal arts colleges do not get much more liberal than
Bennington. Nestled in Vermont's Green Mountains, the school has a
nontraditional approach to education in which students draw up their own
curricula.

"Bennington does not expect students to conform, but to transform," the
college's Web site proclaims.

But Graves has drawn the line at being naked.

"Bennington College is not a clothing-optional campus and we don't live
in a clothing-optional society," Graves told Reuters, adding he realized
he had "ruffled some feathers" by going after unclothed campus denizens.

"There is not a nudity policy and we don't condone this behavior. We are
a public campus," he said. "There has to be a level of respect here."

Respect has nothing to do with it, countered sophomore Allison Zoll. As
someone who has taken part in events with the college's nude activities
club, which hosts clothing-optional picnics and outdoor games, Zoll was
adamant that there was nothing wrong with going bare.

"It's not hurting anyone," she said.


Bennington students are not alone in their undress. Streaking -- that
is, running naked -- has long been a staple of American campus life.

Recently, students at Hamilton College in New York turned the pastime
into a sport by forming a varsity streaking team and traveling to rival
schools to cavort in the buff.
laugh.gif

The Hamilton team streaked a dozen colleges in the Northeast earlier
this fall and posted results on its Web site.

Despite being banned from Wellesley College, an all-women's school near
Boston, and escorted off the grounds of Connecticut College, team
members declared the tour a "massive success."

Back across the border in Vermont, there's nothing competitive about
nudity at Bennington. Students are too busy trying to preserve what they
think is a right, and that suits some local residents just fine.

"Oh to be in college again," sniffed Stuart Hurd, Bennington's town
manager. "More power to them. We are too uptight about public nudity in
this country."


Oh to have again the body I had in my university days. I'd have been less of a prude about nudity if I could transplant my present attitude into my past figure... dry.gif

'Bina.
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