Yale Exotic Erotic | Erotic Exotic – I Can Give You What You Need 상위 62개 답변

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EROTIC EXOTIC I Can Give You What You Need…
Written By AL Perez, Mario Gil, Eric Tallman,
Gus Caveda, John Aguilo….

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Yale Exotic Erotic – **Open to Yale Students 21+ and their …

Live event information for Yale Exotic Erotic – **Open to Yale Students 21+ and their guests** tickets, presale info and more | Box Office …

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Date Published: 4/29/2022

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Does partying like THIS ever happen here? – Yale University

Well Yale does host one of the best college parties every year… exotic erotic. so at least you can count on a fun night once a year.

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Source: talk.collegeconfidential.com

Date Published: 9/17/2021

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How Yale became a sexual cesspool – New York Post

Yale dorms have hosted risqué dances like “Exotic Erotic” (the less you wear, the less you pay) and a “Drag Ball” at the culmination of Trans …

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Source: nypost.com

Date Published: 6/13/2021

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The Cult of Yale, Part II – The Harvard Crimson

Yale’s annual Safety Dance, hosted by Silliman College, however, … Exotic Erotic, a theme party boasting the motto, “the less you wear, …

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Source: www.thecrimson.com

Date Published: 3/13/2021

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Horny Meals for the Low Libido-ed – The Yale Herald

These erotic, often exotic, foods have a storied history. The ancient Indian Sanskrit text Kama Sutra, one of the earliest documents …

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Date Published: 9/29/2021

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Chloe Does Yale by Natalie Krinsky | Hachette Books

EXOTIC EROTIC IS YALE’S answer to Hugh Hefner’s Valentine’s Day party. Granted, EE, as it is called, takes place in September, while Hugh’s bash appropriately …

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Date Published: 12/2/2021

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Sex With Strangers: David Rakoff on the Exotic Erotic Ball – SPIN

Three women from the audience volunteer. One is a Yale scholar in bioethics, another is a botanist studying the raply disappearing Belizean …

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EROTIC EXOTIC - I Can Give You What You Need
EROTIC EXOTIC – I Can Give You What You Need

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  • Author: Al Perez
  • Views: 조회수 4,784회
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  • Date Published: 2016. 7. 22.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9aYVz1XAyJk

Does partying like THIS ever happen here?

Does it happen? Sure. Does it happen as often as Penn? Probably not. Penn is known as the social Ivy, after all.

How Yale became a sexual cesspool

Yale University suddenly finds itself the center of a p.r. fiasco and a federal investigation on that most perilous of topics: sex.

A group of 16 students and alumni has filed a complaint with the Education Department’s Civil Rights Office, claiming that Yale’s failure to respond to several incidents of alleged sexual harassment violated Title IX, which prohibits universities that get federal funding from discriminating on the basis of sex. Last week, the office announced a “climate check” at Yale to see how hostile the campus really is to co-eds.

Drawing the loudest outcry are a 2006 episode in which frat pledges chanted, “No means yes! Yes means anal!” in front of the Yale Women’s Center (a refrain they reprised in 2009), and a 2008 stunt in which frat members posed for a photo in front of the center with a sign proclaiming “We love Yale sluts.”

But before you shed a tear for Yale or its feminists, consider the role that both have played in saturating the campus with vulgar sexuality. In an effort to foster “dialogue” and “acceptance” of every possible sexual choice or act, they’ve drenched students, faculty and administrators in images and vocabulary of graphic sexuality.

The Women’s Center has hosted screenings of lesbian pornography, workshops on drag and talks about “sex toys and how to get the most out of them.” In 2006, the event “Who’s on Top” was intended to address lack of “discussion about the act of penetrative sex itself” and to explore feminist Andrea Dworkin’s theory “that intercourse and patriarchy are inseparable.” The center even throws naked parties to boost Yale women’s sense of body image.

These are the shrinking violets shocked that a bunch of frat guys would gather around their front door crassly chanting about sex.

Those chants were disgusting, of course. But when every taboo around sex is systematically eradicated, aren’t cries of “We Love Yale Sluts” inevitable?

You can pin much of this idiocy — the Women’s Center’s no less than the frat guys’ — on the eternal foolishness of youth. The real blame falls on those who should have known better: the adults of Yale officialdom.

But they’ve largely stood silent — or participated — as Yale’s “climate” has grown thicker with sexual exhibitionism.

Yale dorms have hosted risqué dances like “Exotic Erotic” (the less you wear, the less you pay) and a “Drag Ball” at the culmination of Trans Awareness Week. Freshmen are welcomed to the university with mandatory orientation seminars that include discussions of flavored lubricants and a demonstration on how to put a condom on a wooden phallus.

And classrooms are opened each spring to “Sex Week,” which has included talks by porn stars, advice on masturbation, discussions of “erotic piercing” and a “fetish fashion show.”

Indeed, the people who truly must suffer in Yale’s climate are those who disagree with the Women’s Center’s agenda. Women’s Center p.r. chief Sally Walstrom doesn’t buy that, saying: “Disagreement with our political point of view is not an excuse for any form of sexual misconduct, harassment or violence; any attempt to validate or dismiss hostility on the grounds of disagreement with our point of view is a victim-blaming mindset.”

Yet, the same day it carried stories of the Title IX case, the Yale Daily News also reported a flap over the visit of a Christian pastor who preaches adherence to the Bible’s teachings about homosexuality.

Originally slated to speak at Dwight Hall, Yale’s social-justice center, the pastor was asked to change venues because his message is “one of bigotry and hatred,” according to Dwight Hall co-coordinator Alexandra Brodsky — a Yale junior and one of the 16 Title IX complainants.

Yale’s Title IX woes are only the most public — and certainly not the last: Vice President Joe Biden announced Monday that the administration will intensify scrutiny under Title IX.

So, can school administrators find the spine to stand up to the agitators on their campuses and impose some standards of sexual decency? They’ll face charges of censorship, especially at public schools, but they don’t have to grant official imprimatur to hypersexual groups and activities or let them use college facilities. They needn’t be puritans, just insist on the basic norms that govern life outside the academic bubble.

University administrators have a choice to make: Go toe-to-toe with the feminists in their student bodies and faculties — or with the feds’ inquisition squads.

Maybe we should feel sorry for Yale after all.

Meghan Clyne is managing editor of National Affairs.

The Harvard Crimson

The Leverett 80’s dance is a highlight of the Harvard social calendar for students wishing to break out their legwarmers and blue eyeshadow. Yale’s annual Safety Dance, hosted by Silliman College, however, is the multi-platinum Madonna to Leverett’s Tiffany, the one-hit wonder.

Yale’s social calendar is brimming with an extensive offering of residential college-sponsored theme parties: Liquor Treats (an alcoholic rendition of Trick or Treating taking students from college to college), Morse and Ezra Stiles Colleges’ Casino Night and Jonathan Edwards College’s Spider Ball. Exotic Erotic, a theme party boasting the motto, “the less you wear, the less you pay,” and Inferno, a sizzling Halloween costume party, were both recently canceled by the masters of Timothy Dwight College and Pierson College, respectively, because they got too hot to handle.

Yale’s wide array of on-campus social events is due in no small part to the strong support of the administration. “On issues of student social life, [the Yale administration] takes its lead from the students,” says Betty Trachtenberg, Dean of Student Affairs at Yale. Through Yale’s residential college system, the Yale administration serves a large role in financing student social life. According to the Yale Herald, the administration provides each of its residential colleges with $8,000 specifically for parties and other student events. This amount can be augmented up to $30,000 from each college’s private endowment at the discretion of the college master.

These sizeable party funds help to promote the hosting of open parties by removing some of the financial burden from individual students. Students organizing room parties appeal directly to their college council for funding. “If you have a decent proposal, you have a good chance of getting several hundred dollars,” says junior Eliott C. Mogul, president of Yale’s College Council.

Beyond normal dorm room parties, most colleges have designated party suites, much like the Pfoho “Bell Tower” or the Currier “Ten Man.” Unlike the party suites at Harvard, Yale provides specific party budgets to these suites through its colleges. In exchange for the financial support of the Branford College Council, the residents of the “God Quad” party suite are expected “to put on a good party at least once a month,” says Steven Smith, a professor of political science and Branford’s master.

Yale also recognizes that the party doesn’t really get started until you work up a good buzz. Enforcement of underage drinking on campus is lax—the residential colleges and the administration see alcohol consumption primarily as a safety issue, not a disciplinary one. “I’m not a policeman,” says Smith.

William H. Sledge, a psychiatry professor and master of Calhoun College, echoes Smith’s sentiments. “I don’t go looking for [alcohol],” says Sledge. Sledge says he will, when necessary, “gently remind” students who pose risks to themselves and others of Connecticut’s liquor laws.

The Yale administration’s tolerance extends through the gates of Old Campus, which is home to most of Yale’s freshmen. First-year Yalies not only have the opportunity to reap the benefits of residential college parties, but they can party in their rooms without much fear of being busted by a proctor or having to report to their freshman dean.

Though Yale’s official alcohol policy is consistent with state law, many students claim its unofficial policy is not. In terms of official policy, the Yale Administration “[does not] permit parties of over 20 students in freshman dorms” according to Trachtenberg. Many freshmen who spoke to FM weren’t even aware that alcohol is technically banned from Yale’s Old Campus. One freshman recounted the alcohol policy on Old Campus as only banning kegs for “fear of explosions.”

If it’s a cold keg that a Yale freshman wants, there are plenty of opportunities just off campus within Yale’s Greek system. Unlike Harvard, Yale’s fraternities can be officially recognized by the university and thus are eligible to receive funding from the Yale College Council. “[Fraternities] play a limited, but a really good role in campus social life,” says Mogul. According to Mogul, this is primarily due to the fact that “their events last later into the night.” Ultimately, the Yale administration’s recognition of campus fraternities helps to foster a popular addition to Yale’s social scene.

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“Socially, [the administration] is very supportive,” says Mogul. The administration’s broad support of student life has enabled the College Council to pursue an ambitious agenda. Each year with the backing of the administration, the Council hosts Spring Fling, attracting big-name bands such as Wilco, Nappy Roots, Ben Harper and Wyclef Jean.

While the Yale administration takes a proxy approach to the promotion of social life, its involvement is a vastly important one. Specifically, their financial support of student life within the residential colleges shows a firm commitment to student happiness.

Timothy Dwight’s Exotic Erotic dance may have worn through the last of its g-strings, but that isn’t stopping Yale students from having a good time. Parties at Yale are alive and well-supported by the administration. And for Yalies who really want to shed their thong at a party, there’s always the option of downing another shot.

Buzzkill on the Charles

At first glance, it seems that improving social life is hardly a priority for Harvard administrators. University President Lawrence H. Summers, whose MIT undergraduate experience was defined by scholarly pursuits, has announced his commitment to placing greater emphasis on life within the classroom. Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby offered a united front with Summers when he told a group of Harvard students last September, “You are here to work, and your business here is to learn.”

While Massachusetts Hall may be sending one message to the public, administrators closer to undergraduate life claim to have different priorities, more in line with student demands. “Student activity and social life is absolutely a priority of mine,” says Dean of the College Benedict H. Gross ’71. “I want people to have exciting courses and I want them to have exciting things to do outside the classroom.”

In the early days of his tenure, Gross seems to be making good on his commitment. Since assuming the reins of the College administration in July, Gross has presided over a number of new student social life initiatives. Two weeks ago, Associate Dean of the College Judith H. Kidd changed the rules governing the College’s $25,000 Student Activities Fund. By restricting the funds to use in larger proposals, the College expects fewer applicants and more money for house dances and campus-wide events.

Dean Gross has also been considering a number of policies meant to address the lack of social space. Developing late-night coffee shops, reexamining the uses of Loker Commons and configuring space in the renovated Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) have all been offered as long-term solutions to the dearth of campus social options. However, at the top of Gross’s to-do list is the conversion of Hilles Library’s upper floors for use as a student center. “We have this great opportunity in Hilles to develop new student social space,” Gross says. “We’re looking to see if Hilles can be used as a combination of athletic space, social space and study space.”

Nevertheless, it is precisely proposals such as the Hilles initiative that raise undergraduates’ doubts about how strong the administration’s commitments to the quality of student life truly are. Many view a student center in the Quad, well-removed from the true center of campus, as a half-hearted solution to a serious campus-wide problem, aimed more at cost-efficiency than improving student life. As UC President Rohit Chopra ’04 told FM earlier in the year, “the Quad…lacks the critical mass to make space efficient.”

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Aside from concerns over the College’s commitment to social life issues, the College administration has been criticized for its bureaucracy. As head of the UC Campus Life committee, Jack P. McCambridge ’06 has found the administration to be extremely decentralized, a sentiment shared by many other campus leaders. “As opposed to trying to help in the planning process,” explains McCambridge, “[the administration] just creates an unnecessary number of hurdles.” As a result, the UC has to devote a considerable amount of time to getting permits and submitting proposals to numerous branches of the University administration. “We don’t have a full time staff of people who can run around and get permitting done,” says McCambridge.

However, just as the College has taken strides to address student space concerns, Gross has not been entirely blind to the problem of excessive bureaucracy. The College has hired an Assistant Dean of Student Life to develop a more efficient, web-based application process for student events. Vesting a single entity with the power to approve event proposals might offer an even more effective resolution. “In an ideal system,” says McCambridge, “you would have an office of student activities. If you submit a plan, it goes to that office, everything gets done and you get word back.” Though centralization might be the most effective way of getting rid of the bureaucratic morass, it may also be the least feasible precisely because it removes control from certain areas of the administration eager to maintain their oversight.

While the College has paid lip service to concerns over both student space and bureaucracy, the recurring issue of late-night party curfews remains largely unexamined. “We recognize that students at 1 o’clock probably feel that they’re not ready to give it up and go home,” says Associate Dean of the College Thomas A. Dingman ’67, “but… I don’t know that we’re headed anywhere.” Although Gross has made overtures to the Cambridge City Council to extend party hours, development plans in the Riverside neighborhood remain tangled up in the city zoning board, and he seems careful to press the issue. With regard to Hilles, Gross expressed similar reservations. “Of course, we have to respect the concerns of the neighborhood as we design this.”

Though Gross has thus far offered up a decidedly mixed bag of fresh initiatives and classic administrative inertia, there is just cause for future concern. No matter how well conceived or implemented, any effort that Gross undertakes to improve social life stands to be undermined by the revolutionary shifts in academic culture being proposed in Mass. Hall. A state-of-the-art student center in Hilles, a streamlined event approval process and an end to party curfews would add little value to student life if increased academic burdens keep students from making use of them.

Despite the seeming trade-offs between improving student life and boosting academic commitments, Dean Gross has been charged by Mass. Hall with doing both. How Gross chooses to balance his competing duties will largely determine the fate of the Harvard social scene. It is perhaps revealing that Gross regards the ongoing curricular review, spearheaded by President Summers and Dean Kirby, as his “top priority.” For better or worse, Gross appears to be the life of the party, now it all depends on how late he’s willing to call it a night.

It was a Yalie of sorts, Montgomery C. Burns, who argued that his fellow Elis should just “let Harvard keep its football and academics [because] Yale will always be first in gentlemanly club life.” Could it be true? Might there be some ground, on any issue, that Harvard should cede to Yale in the debate over which is the greater university? In all fairness, there are some ways in which Yale has it easy. With affordable local real estate and an accomodating city police force, students have a natural supplement to the on-campus social scene. Harvard’s high-end neighborhood with its high-priced real estate, however, seems all the more reason for Harvard to invest in on-campus social options for its students.

Some might even say that Yale is forced to make such social concessions to give itself a competitive advantage that can help close the gap in the admissions game with its arch-rival. Whatever its motivation for so doing, Yale places a priority on supporting its college system, and social life more broadly, and students are better off because of it. Harvard, on the other hand, seems all too aware of just how many quality of life sacrifices students are willing to accept in order to get their Harvard diploma.

The flip-side to this argument is, of course, that Harvard students will be rewarded for their hard time in Cambridge with the singular Harvard diploma. Would it be asking too much to not only be able to love the name on your diploma but the experiences behind it? The administration seems to think so. But isn’t wanting it all part of what makes us Harvard students?

Horny Meals for the Low Libido-ed

Since ancient times, the human desire for sex has been coupled with an equally deep anxiety about our abilities to satiate this need satisfactorily. In any kind of partnership, the greatest danger lies in an inequality of passions or capabilities, and sex is no exception. To quench our droughts of sexual desire, we have long sought strange and sometimes dubious solutions, perhaps most whimsically in the sensual and succulent foods that we eat for love: aphrodisiacs.

These erotic, often exotic, foods have a storied history. The ancient Indian Sanskrit text Kama Sutra, one of the earliest documents referencing aphrodisiacs, suggests milk, saffron, and racemosus asparagus as methods for increasing one’s libido. The ancient world saw procreation as a deeply spiritual and moral concern; when insufficiently nutritious food caused rampant vitamin deficiencies that diminished fertility, aphrodisiacs became crucial to living a religiously upright life.

What, then, makes a food stimulatingly sexy? For many traditional aphrodisiacs, it is enough to simply look or feel seductive. Suggestive innuendos abound, as any food bearing even a vague resemblance to genitalia is fair game. Figs, celery, ginseng, bananas, and artichokes all fall into this category, while delectably bulbous foods like fennel and cherries are also apparently imbued with mystical sexual power. The silky flesh of a raw oyster slips down our throats in a way that recalls the sinfulness of a late-night sexual tryst. Better yet, why eat foods that look like dicks when you can just have the real deal? Perhaps this was the logic of the Asian cultures that lauded the tiger’s penis as an effective remedy for erectile dysfunction, carefully stewing the feline appendage to make a virile tiger penis soup. Yum!

Yet, though we might forgive pre-modern cultures for wholeheartedly believing in these dry-spell cure-alls, the efficacy of these aphrodisiacs is far more dubious in our contemporary context, veering dangerously towards the realm of pseudoscience. Can the scientific method save any of these sought-after aphrodisiacs from condemnation?

As it appears, some of these sultry snacks do have some grounding in modern-day science. Oysters, for example, are high in zinc, a nutrient essential for testosterone metabolism that nearly 17% of the world lacks in sufficient quantities. Other aphrodisiacs work by enhancing the body’s natural processes. The bark of the Yohimbe tree (an evergreen native to the African subcontinent) stimulates nerve centers in the spine to increase blood flow and nerve impulses to the penis or vagina, and has been embraced by love gurus and swindling pharmacists alike as a popular supplement sold in drugstores.

Even Spanish fly, the colloquial name for cantharidin, a chemical stimulant extracted from blister beetles, has been proven to inhibit certain enzyme activities in our cells, inducing vascular inflammation and blood flow to the genitalia. Indeed, artificial aphrodisiacs like Viagra work in a similar way, relaxing the muscles and arteries inside the penis to promote increased blood flow. At the same time, these potent panaceas for sexual pleasure can lead to less-than-sexy side effects. Spanish fly can irritate your urogenital tract too much, causing urinary infections and urethral scarring, while synthesized drugs like Viagra risk side effects like nausea and vomiting. Seen this way, eating for love appears less desirable than we initially perceive.

Still, aphrodisiacs retain an undeniable, mystical allure that our current social world cannot shake off. The relationship between sex and the sensuality of delectably suggestive foods persists. The fruity eroticism of Timothée Chalamet jerking off in a peach in Call Me by Your Name arguably belongs to the same tradition that prompted Sappho, in her Fragment 105A, to liken an aroused female labia to a “sweetapple redden[ing] on a high branch.” The next time you and a partner think about getting it on in a seductive midnight jaunt, perhaps some of these enduring aphrodisiacs—grounded in science or not—will help you have a good time.

Chloe Does Yale

Description

A sparkling first novel by Natalie Krinsky, the witty, provocative sex columnist for the Yale Daily News. Chloe Carrington is a typical Yale student, except that along with toiling through the usual grind of coursework, she pens a notorious and much-dished-over sex column for the campus newspaper. This touch of fame has wrought havoc on her social and love life, turning it literally into an open book. Chloe doesn’t help matters much; she likes to share and can’t resist divulging the gory details of her most recent date (or lack thereof) in her column, baring her soul for all to see. Like her friends, she dreams of hooking up with Mr. Right, at least for a little while–but that proves even more arduous than participating in Yale’s notorious “shopping” session (a two-week period in which students are encouraged to take as many classes as possible, in order to decide what courses to enroll in for that semester). As Chloe probes the campus hot spots, we get a peek at just what goes on behind the Ivy League’s dormitory doors–from drinking at Toad’s to “Exotic Erotic” (Yale’s answer to a Hugh Hefner’style Playboy party, complete with coeds in skimpy bikinis). Teeming with exuberance and late-night shenanigans, Natalie Krinsky’s novel is filled with humor and candor about typical college situations both inside and outside the dorm room.

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