Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is starting to look and is interested in a school a little bigger than the 1500-2000 student SLACs and not geographically isolated. (So many of them are.) Holy Cross seems a good possibility but we don't know that much about it in terms of feel, etc.
My impression is that it has ultra-loyal alumni who will make sure alumni have jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
+1. I’d rather be in an isolated location than that hellhole.
I visited Holy Cross as a high school senior, along with a friend whose Catholic parents made visiting Holy Cross a condition of allowing us to drive to Penn and MIT. It didn’t leave a great impression - Worcester was indeed a pit, the locals called the school “The Cross,” the campus was kind of dull, and the students mostly seemed to be Catholic school kids from New England.
Anonymous wrote:DD is starting to look and is interested in a school a little bigger than the 1500-2000 student SLACs and not geographically isolated. (So many of them are.) Holy Cross seems a good possibility but we don't know that much about it in terms of feel, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
+1. I’d rather be in an isolated location than that hellhole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
+1. I’d rather be in an isolated location than that hellhole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Worcester is the armpit of New England. Awful, ugly city.
Anonymous wrote:The College of the Holy Cross is an excellent, academically strong, liberal arts school. It is very traditional in terms of campus feel and vibe. The students are friendly and generally service oriented. It is a Catholic Jesuit school and holds close to those values. It is located about an hour away from Boston in Worcester, MA. Many students are from New England, but there are a good number from the DMV. Most of those who attend from this area went to a Catholic high school. A visit would give your daughter a better feel for the place. It is a great school!
Anonymous wrote:They offer a full-ride scholarship every year to a student majoring in classics. My daughter, who loves Latin, is interested.