Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BC is fratty, bratty, suburban (not in Boston), grade inflation, white, not-LGBT friendly, Catholic, sports, beautiful campus.
BU is nerdy, urban (actually in Boston), grade deflation, diverse, LGBT-friendly, non-denominational, no real sport except hockey, sprawling campus, close to Fenway
BC does not have frats and grades are not inflated, trust me.
Also half IN Boston.
Which part?
NP. To clarify, the Boston city line cuts between middle and lower campus. All of lower campus is in Boston, including the football stadium and almost all dorms for upperclassmen.
You mean the Brighton and Brookline campuses?
While Lower Campus (with the football stadium and dorms) is in Brighton (which is a neighborhood in the city of Boston), "Brighton Campus" is the new addition that is separate from Lower, on the north side of Comm Ave. That includes a museum and Jesuit residences; not sure what else is over there.
Lower Campus is not in Brookline. There is no "Brookline Campus." BC owns some stray real estate in Brookline, such as some houses on the other side of Beacon as well as the recent purchase of the Pine Manor College campus, over a mile away.
BC has a 2 year residential college called Messina College. It’s new so it’s not crazy u don’t know about it.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, you saw something in a movie? Ok, THAT settles it. If it’s in a movie, it must be true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BC is small and traditionally Catholic (tho not overtly so any more)
BU is large
Both are places people go to when they don't get into Harvard but still want the Boston experience and to rub shoulders with the Harvard kids. I am not joking.
I don’t know where you got the idea that BC & BU kids are actively trying to rub shoulders (or any other body parts) with Harvard people
Oh just having grown up nearby and seen it with my own eyes, decade after decade....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one who is from Massachusetts regards BC as being actually IN BOSTON. We all know it's in Chestnut Hill, an uber-wealthy suburb, and at the very end of the green line T.
Idiot, Chestnut Hill isn’t a “suburb.” Look it up.
LOL!!! Why are you so angry?
It's technically a village in the suburb of Newton.
No one calls Chestnut Hill a Neighborhood.
Why don't you drop in on South Station and ask people if they know where the Chestnut Hill Neighborhood is, LOL.
Now go eat your gummies and chase it with some herbal tea and Xanax
Oh, so the test of the truth of anything is ask some drunk panhandling near South Station?
“Hey Murph, where’s Chestnut Hill?”
Murph: “Bleh, I gotta take a wicked dump.”
Ok, that clears things up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a private high school in New Jersey. The way I remember it was the Catholics applied to BC, the Jewish classmates applied to BU, and the WASPS applied to Tufts if they wanted to go to a Boston school.
This was in the 80s. I was Korean, so I did the stereotypical thing for Koreans, and applied to Harvard and MIT and didn't get in to either.
Bu would have loved to have u, BC not so much.
Because BC is only 11% Asian vs BU 19%?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one who is from Massachusetts regards BC as being actually IN BOSTON. We all know it's in Chestnut Hill, an uber-wealthy suburb, and at the very end of the green line T.
Idiot, Chestnut Hill isn’t a “suburb.” Look it up.
LOL!!! Why are you so angry?
It's technically a village in the suburb of Newton.
No one calls Chestnut Hill a Neighborhood.
Why don't you drop in on South Station and ask people if they know where the Chestnut Hill Neighborhood is, LOL.
Now go eat your gummies and chase it with some herbal tea and Xanax
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to a private high school in New Jersey. The way I remember it was the Catholics applied to BC, the Jewish classmates applied to BU, and the WASPS applied to Tufts if they wanted to go to a Boston school.
This was in the 80s. I was Korean, so I did the stereotypical thing for Koreans, and applied to Harvard and MIT and didn't get in to either.
Bu would have loved to have u, BC not so much.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a private high school in New Jersey. The way I remember it was the Catholics applied to BC, the Jewish classmates applied to BU, and the WASPS applied to Tufts if they wanted to go to a Boston school.
This was in the 80s. I was Korean, so I did the stereotypical thing for Koreans, and applied to Harvard and MIT and didn't get in to either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BC is fratty, bratty, suburban (not in Boston), grade inflation, white, not-LGBT friendly, Catholic, sports, beautiful campus.
BU is nerdy, urban (actually in Boston), grade deflation, diverse, LGBT-friendly, non-denominational, no real sport except hockey, sprawling campus, close to Fenway
BC does not have frats and grades are not inflated, trust me.
Also half IN Boston.
Which part?
NP. To clarify, the Boston city line cuts between middle and lower campus. All of lower campus is in Boston, including the football stadium and almost all dorms for upperclassmen.
You mean the Brighton and Brookline campuses?
While Lower Campus (with the football stadium and dorms) is in Brighton (which is a neighborhood in the city of Boston), "Brighton Campus" is the new addition that is separate from Lower, on the north side of Comm Ave. That includes a museum and Jesuit residences; not sure what else is over there.
Lower Campus is not in Brookline. There is no "Brookline Campus." BC owns some stray real estate in Brookline, such as some houses on the other side of Beacon as well as the recent purchase of the Pine Manor College campus, over a mile away.
Anonymous wrote:Boston neighborhood map for Allston Brighton, from the city's very slow loading website https://www.bostonplans.org/getattachment/cf373a1d-0f2b-4267-a571-50c39e9b4909/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one who is from Massachusetts regards BC as being actually IN BOSTON. We all know it's in Chestnut Hill, an uber-wealthy suburb, and at the very end of the green line T.
Idiot, Chestnut Hill isn’t a “suburb.” Look it up.
LOL!!! Why are you so angry?
It's technically a village in the suburb of Newton.
No one calls Chestnut Hill a Neighborhood.
Why don't you drop in on South Station and ask people if they know where the Chestnut Hill Neighborhood is, LOL.
Now go eat your gummies and chase it with some herbal tea and Xanax
Like all Massachusetts villages, Chestnut Hill is not an incorporated municipal entity. It is located partially in Brookline in Norfolk County; partially in the city of Boston in Suffolk County, and partially in the city of Newton in Middlesex County.