Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I walked by this house yesterday, and it's under contract. Did you buy it, OP?
I hadn't looked at this thread since the second page; wow, it really devolved. Sad.
Nope, my brother bought it! They were considering it and it suddenly clicked I had read this thread, so I pulled it up on my phone and showed it to them. They think (most of) you all are crazy- and they didn't read past page 2!
Anonymous wrote:I walked by this house yesterday, and it's under contract. Did you buy it, OP?
I hadn't looked at this thread since the second page; wow, it really devolved. Sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.
Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry.
Q: Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry?
A: Because the purpose of attending college is to be educated, and an education includes non-STEM subjects.
yes we need proper grammar to announce grande skim late with two squirts of chocolate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.
Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry.
Q: Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry?
A: Because the purpose of attending college is to be educated, and an education includes non-STEM subjects.
Anonymous wrote:There is no "wrong side" of Kensington.
Kensington is just Wheaton, everyone get over it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.
Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.
Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.
Why would you pick a liberal arts school to study math or chemistry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like that part of Kensington and if my kids were in private I would absolutely live there. I certainly wouldn't pay a 400K premium for a house on the "right" side of the tracks. That being said, we paid the premium because we use the public system and don't want to be zoned for Einstein.
We love Einstein. My DH is a university professor, I'm a lawyer, we have two high-achieving kids. DD is at a selective liberal arts college after having graduated from Einstein; DS is a junior there. Both have done well. There are many other families like ours at Einstein.
There is no "wrong" side of Kensington.
not sure if touting the choice to do liberal arts over STEM is helping your case
For all you know, PP's kid is majoring in chemistry or math at that SLAC, bitch.