That may have been true 30 years ago, but not so much today. There has been a lot of separation between the top universities and the SLACs in recent decades. |
NP - is this your opinion or are there facts to support your claim? |
I am very confident that you are basing this comment solely on your ignorance rather than any real world objective criteria. |
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lol! |
Williams, Amherst, Swarthmore, and Pomona COMBINED get fewer applicants than Vanderbilt or Brown or Rice or Northwestern or Penn does. And schools like Berkeley and Michigan get ten times the number of apps that any WASP does. It's a very small subset of students that apply to Williams. So it's not a great indicator of where smart students go today. The numbers are too tiny to be significant. |
And all of the schools you listed get fewer applications than BU ... what's your point? |
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But they loved Williams. I was jealous because I was not in love with my college. |
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Sondheim makes it forever relevant.
Mayor of NY - Bowdoin. Transition team - 80% LAC grads, including Lina! |
I don't know what you're on about. Only 2 of the people on the team went to a liberal arts college-Lina Khan, Williams and Melanie Hartzog, Eckerd. I also don't know anyone who associated Sondheim with Williams college; he, frankly, had much more interesting affiliations and work done that has little connection with Williams college. |
+1 |
I def associate Sondheim with williams. Who wouldn't? He started Williams as a Math major and credited the place with his move to music. He wrote at least one musical while there. |
| I didn’t choose Williams for its famous people. I chose it because it was so warm, friendly and nurturing. And the Berkshires setting is beautiful. This was several decades ago. I guess times have changed and people are looking at different things. |