Anonymous wrote:All 4 are elite however Vandy is the most confusing as its a mystery as to what their actually good at. But Duke is Harvard,
Vandy is Yale, Emory is Columbia, and Rice is Princeton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a break. You’re being too literal. This phrase was once used to talk about the development of elite academic institutions in the South that approximated the Ivies. At one point, there was even talk of a league of elite Southern schools playing the Ivy schools in sports. However, that was nixed by the Harvard president who thought they would lose.
That said, Duke and Vanderbilt are probably more like the Ivies than Emory or Rice. Emory doesn’t have the stats, ranking or prestige and Rice is too one-sided with tech, though they offer other majors.
Everyone forgets this now, but the Ivies were once regional schools. In fact, even today, most schools - even the best - have a strong regional bias both in student demographics and post-graduation jobs.
Could you not be more try hard. Emory is T25
AND uva IS t24.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better question.
Is Harvard the UVA of the North? I say maybe,although without Thomas Jefferson!!!!!!
Dude, we know you’re a troll. A tireless troll. You always show up on these threads to create a false notion of boosterism. And, you constantly claim that TJ and UVA are racist. We know your tireless and clumsy shtick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think any of those schools really want or care about being Harvard of the South, they’re all well respected in their own ways. But if we’re talking about the best school in the South, it’s Duke full-stop. Not particularly close.
Sports is the only reason, otherwise not any better or worse than Rice or Vandy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Give it a break. You’re being too literal. This phrase was once used to talk about the development of elite academic institutions in the South that approximated the Ivies. At one point, there was even talk of a league of elite Southern schools playing the Ivy schools in sports. However, that was nixed by the Harvard president who thought they would lose.
That said, Duke and Vanderbilt are probably more like the Ivies than Emory or Rice. Emory doesn’t have the stats, ranking or prestige and Rice is too one-sided with tech, though they offer other majors.
Everyone forgets this now, but the Ivies were once regional schools. In fact, even today, most schools - even the best - have a strong regional bias both in student demographics and post-graduation jobs.
Could you not be more try hard. Emory is T25
Anonymous wrote:Give it a break. You’re being too literal. This phrase was once used to talk about the development of elite academic institutions in the South that approximated the Ivies. At one point, there was even talk of a league of elite Southern schools playing the Ivy schools in sports. However, that was nixed by the Harvard president who thought they would lose.
That said, Duke and Vanderbilt are probably more like the Ivies than Emory or Rice. Emory doesn’t have the stats, ranking or prestige and Rice is too one-sided with tech, though they offer other majors.
Everyone forgets this now, but the Ivies were once regional schools. In fact, even today, most schools - even the best - have a strong regional bias both in student demographics and post-graduation jobs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have encountered many people claiming that Emory, Duke, Vanderbilt or Rice owns the title of Harvard of South in different occasions. In your opinion, especially for those from the South, which school is HOS?
There is no such thing as Harvard of south or Stanford of East. All of these school are superb and doesn't need to mimic anyone. Harvard is Harvard because of its endowment, alumni and marketing, move them to south, lower their endowment $ and enrollment numbers and stop marketing then we'll see how they stack against Vanderbilt or Rice.
Anonymous wrote:Better question.
Is Harvard the UVA of the North? I say maybe,although without Thomas Jefferson!!!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Vandy
Anonymous wrote:Give it a break. You’re being too literal. This phrase was once used to talk about the development of elite academic institutions in the South that approximated the Ivies. At one point, there was even talk of a league of elite Southern schools playing the Ivy schools in sports. However, that was nixed by the Harvard president who thought they would lose.
That said, Duke and Vanderbilt are probably more like the Ivies than Emory or Rice. Emory doesn’t have the stats, ranking or prestige and Rice is too one-sided with tech, though they offer other majors.
Everyone forgets this now, but the Ivies were once regional schools. In fact, even today, most schools - even the best - have a strong regional bias both in student demographics and post-graduation jobs.