I didn’t think it was possible to enjoy college without alcohol until I went to grad school on a dry campus. Are undergrads learning that the only way to have fun is when we're drunk?
Source: Tkaick, Christina. "I Didn’t Think It Was Possible to Enjoy College without Alcohol until I Went to Grad School on a Dry Campus." Washington Post. The Washington Post, 22 May 2015. Web. 18 Nov. 2015.
Summary: Originally going to school at University of Virginia, Christina was used to seeing and living the party life. When she finished though, she realized she had a serious alcohol problem. After getting cleaned up she moved to Beirut to begin her masters at the American University of Beirut. What she didn’t realize at the time was that this University has a dry campus. She says she was happily surprised “...that there’s also plenty of people here who don’t drink much, or at all.” (Tkacik). After getting herself sober she says that she was once out with friends and “ suddenly realized, it was the first time since high school I’d had this much fun without being drunk or high. I didn’t even remember it was possible.”
Being a social person she attends school events and says she braced herself "for chaos, pushing, shoving, the general tomfoolery I’ve always associated with outdoor university events. Instead, I saw people eating and having fun, listening attentively to comedy routines and live music — all, apparently, without the influence of alcohol. There were no drunken frat guys whooping. Not one coed could be seen vomiting in the bushes, her mascara smeared down to her chin. No one was defacing school property, or using the recycling bin as a urinal. What was happening?" (Tkacik). This was a scene she had not seen before at previous events she had attended.
Quality: This article was written by someone who was a former binge drinker that has cleaned themselves up and is now sober. In her article she states her opinion on how nice a dry campus is. She is a social person and attends events around and outside of the school therefore seeing the difference between events she was used to attending and the sober events on her new campus.
Issues: This article puts most of its weight on a dry campus she lived on in another country that may be very different from a dry campus in the US. Christina even states "A few restaurants in my West Beirut neighborhood don’t even serve alcohol — some of them no doubt out of respect to their Muslim clientele, who are generally less likely to drink. " (Tkacik) showing a big cultural difference in the two areas she has been. One where there is probably at least one bar in the area and most restaurants sell alcohol on a regular basis and the other where part of the clientele doesn't normally drink. Also she only had the experience of living on one campus that did allow drinking. Who's to say that other "wet" campuses are the same. Some may not be as bad as the University of VA was or it may have just been that particular class of students at the University.
Keywords:
Drinking
Dry Campus
Graduate Student
Binge-Drinking
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