But students are studying a more titillating subject between the sheets of the school newspaper: sex. Sex columns have become mainstays in several college newspapers, dispensing advice on everything from relationship issues to that troublesome bump you've had "down there" for a week. And just as much as they're taken for granted on campuses, they've got others hot under the collar. Yet institutions such as New York University, the University of Kansas and Yale University all include student-written columns that range from the clinical to the raunchy. Bainum's columns tend to be on the sensational side of the spectrum.
Reading Between the Lines: The sexpert | Kansas College Newspapers
Natalie Krinsky dares to go public on a topic most of her college classmates keep between friends — sex in the Elm City, otherwise known as New Haven, Conn. The year-old junior is the resident "sexpert" at Yale University's student newspaper, one of a small but growing number of college publications with writers who detail the trials and tribulations of a favorite college pastime. Now she's back for more this semester. As her fellow columnists often do, Krinsky uses a mix of wisecracks, raw language and unvarnished advice to make her points. The body is beautiful, of course, but the things we do with our bodies in the sack are plain weird," she observed in one her column's tamer moments.
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia. A sex columnist is a writer of a newspaper or magazine column about sex. Sex advice columns may take the form of essays or, more frequently, answers to questions posed by readers.
It wasn't Natalie Krinsky's idea. She was funny. But most of all, she was not easily embarrassed. Now, a year later, Ms.