Anonymous wrote:I think there would be no problem in New Orleans (Tulane) and no major issue at Duke, Emory or Vanderbilt. I'd avoid Wake, SMU, Rice or UNC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Tulane - high Jewish population - there we be no issues being Catholic.
Non-sequitur - anti-Catholicism is different from anti-Semitism
New Orleans is a pretty Catholic city though.
LSU is full of Catholics as well.
I was just about to point that out! NO is more catholic than Brooklyn, for Heaven's sake.
New Orleans yes, 50 miles outside of New Orleans not so much. 100 miles from New Orleans - fugedabouit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Tulane - high Jewish population - there we be no issues being Catholic.
Non-sequitur - anti-Catholicism is different from anti-Semitism
New Orleans is a pretty Catholic city though.
LSU is full of Catholics as well.
I was just about to point that out! NO is more catholic than Brooklyn, for Heaven's sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Tulane - high Jewish population - there we be no issues being Catholic.
Non-sequitur - anti-Catholicism is different from anti-Semitism
New Orleans is a pretty Catholic city though.
LSU is full of Catholics as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory, Tulane - high Jewish population - there we be no issues being Catholic.
Non-sequitur - anti-Catholicism is different from anti-Semitism
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC grew up in this area and has expressed an interest in attending school in a warmer climate (i.e., south of here). My family experienced anti-Catholic prejudice from Southerners in the past and I’m wary the claims of new found tolerance. Does anyone have recent experience regarding the willingness of traditional Southern colleges (so-called “Southern Ivies” such as Duke, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Emory, Rice, SMU and Wake Forrest) to welcome practicing Catholics? I wouldn’t want DC to have to hide their faith to be accepted by peers.
These schools have a healthy dose of students from other parts of the country.
Most aren't Catholic. A practicing Catholic wont fee comfortable in Winston-Salem, NC.
Anonymous wrote:Emory, Tulane - high Jewish population - there we be no issues being Catholic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC grew up in this area and has expressed an interest in attending school in a warmer climate (i.e., south of here). My family experienced anti-Catholic prejudice from Southerners in the past and I’m wary the claims of new found tolerance. Does anyone have recent experience regarding the willingness of traditional Southern colleges (so-called “Southern Ivies” such as Duke, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Emory, Rice, SMU and Wake Forrest) to welcome practicing Catholics? I wouldn’t want DC to have to hide their faith to be accepted by peers.
These schools have a healthy dose of students from other parts of the country.
Anonymous wrote:DC grew up in this area and has expressed an interest in attending school in a warmer climate (i.e., south of here). My family experienced anti-Catholic prejudice from Southerners in the past and I’m wary the claims of new found tolerance. Does anyone have recent experience regarding the willingness of traditional Southern colleges (so-called “Southern Ivies” such as Duke, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Emory, Rice, SMU and Wake Forrest) to welcome practicing Catholics? I wouldn’t want DC to have to hide their faith to be accepted by peers.