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Northwestern: Duke
Northwestern: UChicago |
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Duke:Northwestern
Georgetown:Johns Hopkins Notre Dame: Stands alone like in football |
Agree. |
| Baylor:TCU |
| 😄 |
| Yale stands alone. |
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Wake Forest:Colgate
Wake has bigger sports presence, but stand on quads of both and walk around when students are there and they are similar. Both proud of their liberal arts education. Aside from weather and that Wake is 5500 versus Colgate 3000. |
| Pomona: Rice is a bit off for both. The defining trait of Rice is its residential college system, tradition, and friendly culture. Pomona's defining traits are the consortium, laid-back culture, and identity as a west coast LAC. It seems kinda backwards but the closest college to Pomona is Swarthmore- the students are very very similar. For Rice, honestly Yale seems very similar. |
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Kenyon: Grinnell
Oberlin: Bard/Reed (depending on which way you view Oberlin )
Dartmouth: Middlebury Vanderbilt: Duke |
| Emory: WashU |
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I'd change a few things. Harvard: Stanford Vanderbilt: Northwestern Notre Dame: Boston College Yale: Rice Dartmouth: Williams Princeton: Duke GWU: American Pomona: Swarthmore Georgetown is my oddball. Urban, Jesuit, no sports, IR, Business, no STEM, rich kids. Drawing a blank. |
I agree with all of these, though Harvard:Stanford gave me questions. I was wondering where the comparison comes from other than opposite coasts. |
| Tufts: Emory |
Just want to point out that Georgetown is a R1 institution, so there’s definitely STEM. Also good men’s and women’s soccer, track, and men’s basketball may finally be nearing the light at the end of the tunnel. But there are absolutely plenty of rich kids. |
Congrats on Emory. Just get your ED results? |