Anonymous wrote:Do you have a creative for a kid? Then you MUST take a serious look at Belmont University. The musical talent concentrated in one small school is bananas, particularly the commercial musical talent.
You'll also find the kids who design the merch and design the sets for shows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your Fox link:
On Thursday, several university employees showed up outside their dorm room to take down the two flags, one of which was the American flag with the Gadsden "Don't Tread on Me" graphic superimposed on it and the other was a "Thin Line" flag - a black and white American flag with blue, green and red stripes, representing police, military and federal agents, and firefighters, respectively.
These are not official American flags and have become MAGA symbols associated with the insurrection.
But keep on with your bs
Covered by the Daily Mail. check the internet next time you slam people here. and cut the political venom or take it to politics. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11391249/amp/Trinity-College-students-slam-CT-university-removing-Blue-Green-Red-Line-Gadsden-flags.html
Anonymous wrote:Besides being annoying, think the expression "Hidden Gem" is losing validity with social media. I mean some posters are plugging 4+ schools as "hidden". Silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From your Fox link:
On Thursday, several university employees showed up outside their dorm room to take down the two flags, one of which was the American flag with the Gadsden "Don't Tread on Me" graphic superimposed on it and the other was a "Thin Line" flag - a black and white American flag with blue, green and red stripes, representing police, military and federal agents, and firefighters, respectively.
These are not official American flags and have become MAGA symbols associated with the insurrection.
But keep on with your bs
Covered by the Daily Mail. check the internet next time you slam people here. and cut the political venom or take it to politics. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11391249/amp/Trinity-College-students-slam-CT-university-removing-Blue-Green-Red-Line-Gadsden-flags.html
Anonymous wrote:From your Fox link:
On Thursday, several university employees showed up outside their dorm room to take down the two flags, one of which was the American flag with the Gadsden "Don't Tread on Me" graphic superimposed on it and the other was a "Thin Line" flag - a black and white American flag with blue, green and red stripes, representing police, military and federal agents, and firefighters, respectively.
These are not official American flags and have become MAGA symbols associated with the insurrection.
But keep on with your bs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trinity University. Super well resourced school with merit to give. For kids who are open to going South, tempted by Alabama money, but want a SLAC .. here's your school. Intellectually rigorous, no athletic scholarships at all. Great new buildings, fantastic dorms. Engineering, accounting, Chinese (one of the best in the country) .. they deliver the goods. And San Antonio is a gem.
Couldn't talk my dd into looking and I don't blame here, but it's a great option
ON paper, maybe. The reality is that the student body is really, really native Texan and a shockingly high number of students go home on the weekends. To their homes in Houston and Dallas particularly.
I don't understand it, but that is the culture currently.
Strange.
We happened across it on our way to try to go to the zoo (we aborted mission because it cost an arm and a leg) with my MIL who lives north of SA.
Are they driving home? Those aren’t close. And TX isn’t known for public transport options
I am told that they fly, and tickets are cheap enough on SWA if you plan ahead. El Paso was another city where kids go home on the weekend.
Again, I don't know why. But with a relatively small student body, I am to understand it feels very desolate on campus Fri nite - Sunday nite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trinity University. Super well resourced school with merit to give. For kids who are open to going South, tempted by Alabama money, but want a SLAC .. here's your school. Intellectually rigorous, no athletic scholarships at all. Great new buildings, fantastic dorms. Engineering, accounting, Chinese (one of the best in the country) .. they deliver the goods. And San Antonio is a gem.
Couldn't talk my dd into looking and I don't blame here, but it's a great option
ON paper, maybe. The reality is that the student body is really, really native Texan and a shockingly high number of students go home on the weekends. To their homes in Houston and Dallas particularly.
I don't understand it, but that is the culture currently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can confirm, Scranton, St. Joe's, Dayton, all Jesuit (or maybe Catholic) schools that have happy kids and very solid academics. My kids go to Catholic school and these are popular picks. So is Fairfield, but that is a little more selective.
Dayton is Marianist, not Jesuit.
But I can confirm it's a gem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trinity University. Super well resourced school with merit to give. For kids who are open to going South, tempted by Alabama money, but want a SLAC .. here's your school. Intellectually rigorous, no athletic scholarships at all. Great new buildings, fantastic dorms. Engineering, accounting, Chinese (one of the best in the country) .. they deliver the goods. And San Antonio is a gem.
Couldn't talk my dd into looking and I don't blame here, but it's a great option
ON paper, maybe. The reality is that the student body is really, really native Texan and a shockingly high number of students go home on the weekends. To their homes in Houston and Dallas particularly.
I don't understand it, but that is the culture currently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All UC schools ranked below UCLA and Cal.
Really? UC Santa Barbara, San Diego, and Davis would be a "safety" for an out of state student?
I suppose there’s some self-selection, but 90% of kids who apply to Davis from our east coast high school get in. UCSB and UCSD are somewhat harder, but much easier than Cal/UCLA. I think everyone gets into UCSC. They’re all far away and expensive, as state schools go, and they don’t have football and you don’t get an answer until March. But if you don’t mind all that, they’re highly ranked and the weather is gorgeous.
SD and Davis do---Div. 1 FCS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trinity University. Super well resourced school with merit to give. For kids who are open to going South, tempted by Alabama money, but want a SLAC .. here's your school. Intellectually rigorous, no athletic scholarships at all. Great new buildings, fantastic dorms. Engineering, accounting, Chinese (one of the best in the country) .. they deliver the goods. And San Antonio is a gem.
Couldn't talk my dd into looking and I don't blame here, but it's a great option
ON paper, maybe. The reality is that the student body is really, really native Texan and a shockingly high number of students go home on the weekends. To their homes in Houston and Dallas particularly.
I don't understand it, but that is the culture currently.
Strange.
We happened across it on our way to try to go to the zoo (we aborted mission because it cost an arm and a leg) with my MIL who lives north of SA.
Are they driving home? Those aren’t close. And TX isn’t known for public transport options
I am told that they fly, and tickets are cheap enough on SWA if you plan ahead. El Paso was another city where kids go home on the weekend.
Again, I don't know why. But with a relatively small student body, I am to understand it feels very desolate on campus Fri nite - Sunday nite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trinity University. Super well resourced school with merit to give. For kids who are open to going South, tempted by Alabama money, but want a SLAC .. here's your school. Intellectually rigorous, no athletic scholarships at all. Great new buildings, fantastic dorms. Engineering, accounting, Chinese (one of the best in the country) .. they deliver the goods. And San Antonio is a gem.
Couldn't talk my dd into looking and I don't blame here, but it's a great option
ON paper, maybe. The reality is that the student body is really, really native Texan and a shockingly high number of students go home on the weekends. To their homes in Houston and Dallas particularly.
I don't understand it, but that is the culture currently.
Strange.
We happened across it on our way to try to go to the zoo (we aborted mission because it cost an arm and a leg) with my MIL who lives north of SA.
Are they driving home? Those aren’t close. And TX isn’t known for public transport options
I am told that they fly, and tickets are cheap enough on SWA if you plan ahead. El Paso was another city where kids go home on the weekend.
Again, I don't know why. But with a relatively small student body, I am to understand it feels very desolate on campus Fri nite - Sunday nite.