Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
Doesn't matter if you have a hoard of gun toting morons chasing you down at the women's health clinic.
If you're not from Texas, you have no reason to get any medical procedures done there. And you can offer any friends who might need such procedures a weekend visiting your pro-choice parents.
If you don't want to be in Houston, where the average temperature is "Steam," fine. But privileged White kids flapping their hands and saying, "Ooooh, no, I'm too liberal for Texas!" are making Molly Ivins spin in her grave.
I am the PP whose daughter is no longer interested in Rice. We aren’t white. Not sure why you assumed we are??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
Doesn't matter if you have a hoard of gun toting morons chasing you down at the women's health clinic.
If you're not from Texas, you have no reason to get any medical procedures done there. And you can offer any friends who might need such procedures a weekend visiting your pro-choice parents.
If you don't want to be in Houston, where the average temperature is "Steam," fine. But privileged White kids flapping their hands and saying, "Ooooh, no, I'm too liberal for Texas!" are making Molly Ivins spin in her grave.
Anonymous wrote:So, only liberal arts colleges??
Anonymous wrote:Not Rice. Isn’t elite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
But who wants to do anything in Texas? If you want to work on either Coast, Texas is not helpful on your resume.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
Doesn't matter if you have a hoard of gun toting morons chasing you down at the women's health clinic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tufts
No. This actually made me LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Houston and Rice Village/Med Center in particular is a pretty liberal area...
Anonymous wrote:My kid was interested in Rice but no longer — Texas has taken a sharp turn in the wrong direction and she is no longer interested in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, only liberal arts colleges??
Maybe not only liberal arts colleges, but it stands to reason that with their smaller sizes, they might be able to select for a particular ethos in the student body and then attract new students on that basis. So if 80% of students at a 2000-person school are down-to-earth, that's pretty pervasive in the student body, even if it's only 1,6000 people. As someone else said, you can no doubt find many down-to-earth students at large universities as well. If 10% of students at a 40,000-person university are down-to-earth, that's a larger number. But do they pervade the school? Probably less likely.