Again, the day to day school of living in a city (say, GW or BU) feels nothing like the daily experience of living wherever George Mason is (annandale?) or sommerville mass. Not at all the same. |
Only been to Omaha once. From memory, Creighton appeared to be fairly urban campus. |
Somerville, Massachusetts is the most densely populated community in New England. |
| Someone mentioned it earlier, but the University of San Francisco would be a great one to look at. |
Good suggestion! |
Also a good suggestion |
Don’t be silly |
So more people per square mile than downtown Boston? |
I never said it was the same. It just depends if you actually want smack dab in the city or access to the city. And cities have more active/commercial areas and more residential areas. For example - GW vs American. |
| In the other post, someone said Rhodes (sp?) |
+1 Similar for SMU. It’s in the suburbs. |
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Temple
Providence Emerson Holy Cross UT Dallas U San Diego A bunch of the lower UCs are in moderate sized cities Pace University |
It's definitely designed for commuters who already live there, and students who are also working full-time. |
You don’t even know where GMU’s main campus is but feel qualified to bash? GMU has 40m students spread out over Fairfax, Arlington, Manassas (the high tech campus) and Songdo Korea. Shutter buses connect the American campuses |
+1 Striking views of the Golden Gate Bridge and the Bay, within short walking distance of the Panhandle and Golden Gate Park (like 2 to 3 blocks). Located close to the Haight and the Sunset and Richmond districts. And the ocean is about 2 miles away. |