No, just smart kids like at any other highly-ranked SLAC. So you experienced racism in your travels to Richmond? Please share. |
Cute and lively to a point, but definitely not a college town. |
| William and Mary is not a SLAC but it’s close enough. |
I went to one of the smallest private colleges in the country to one of the largest public, and two in between. It's always a trade off. You are not going to find a perfect college. If you can't be happy at places like Pomona, Vassar, Kenyon, Swarthmore, Amherst, Wesleyan, Oberlin, Smith... you are not going to be even if you get to heaven. No Starbucks there. No college town. No sports, bars, Disneyland, McDonalds... |
Wellesley is 30 minutes from Harvard Square and from downtown Boston, and is surrounded by many, many colleges and universities (e.g., MIT, Harvard, BC, BU, Northeastern, Tufts, Brandeis). Wellesley has a robust academic exchange program with MIT. Hardly the middle of nowhere. |
http://www.sacbee.com/entertainment/living/travel/article4033433.html |
Do you have any experience? Because that is grossly untrue. Claremont Village is very lively (esp. on weekends), and the whole metro area is one that you could get to malls, shopping, restaurants, etc. readily with a car or Uber less than 3 miles away. SoCal is so densely packed with cities/towns/villages that calling it middle of nowhere is absurd- almost 15 million people live in the greater LA area, and Claremont borders cities with populations of 150,000 and 80,000. Train station on Pomona's campus which runs every day early morning to late night and drops you off in Downtown LA. I think it's easy to not want to get out because the colleges alone have so much activity, but that option to leave is 100% there if a student desires. Wellesley is also definitely not in the middle of nowhere. Wellesley Square has a great shopping/dining complex, and it is easy to get to Boston. Both Wellesley and Claremont are frequented by out of town folks looking for a weekend get away. |
| I think what posters are referring to is that those two towns are sleepy. You could go to Berkely, Ann Arbor, and Ithaca at 2 AM and see plenty of late night places where students are hanging out. There are night clubs. Big sports culture puts a certain energy that you just will never see on a game night. Both Wellesley and Claremont close completely after midnight. But to be fair, are any LAC settings in those traditional college towns? The only one I can think of is Amherst MA, supported by the neighboring UMass Amherst. |
Barnard? |
| Drew University in Madison, NJ |
St. John's College, Annapolis, MD |
|
37 Liberal Arts Colleges In or Near Cities: http://www.thecollegesolution.com/33-liberal-arts-colleges-in-or-near-cities/ |
There’s college nightlife in Annapolis? It’s a cute town but not a traditional college town. While the presence of the Academy is great, those kids are maybe going out for ice cream on a big night out. And Annapolis is not a suburb of either DC or Baltimore. |
OP asked for “not so rural.” Annapolis qualifies. |
| The town of Oberlin is ridiculously small. The lack of public transportation to Cleveland makes it very inconvenient but fortunately they are talking about starting some kind of shuttle this coming year. There is a tremendous amount to do on campus, more than at many larger schools. My DC wanted the same thing as your's -- SLAC in area accessible to a big city, but fell in love with Oberlin. |