<p>Whitman's food sounds awesome!</p>
<p>Post #12: Whitman (WA) and Lewis and Clark (OR) use the same catering company, which the students lovingly called "The Bone" during our visits. The food was actually edible!</p>
<p>Best college food during our tour of the West: Scripps (CA)! D went for seconds, and we saw a bunch of guys eating there, that's how we learned that Claremont colleges share resources. Pomona's food was OK. Occidental had very creative leftover dishes which D did not care for.</p>
<p>BB.</p>
<p>William and Mary was good.</p>
<p>UC Berkeley states on their website that they serve fresh organic produce. I've never eaten it myself but I'm just putting it out there.</p>
<p>does it really matter????</p>
<p>Well, if you're the son of a world-renowned chef, I'm sure it might factor into the decision...</p>
<p>Hell yeah it matters.</p>
<p>I heard Pomona College has great food.</p>
<p>A vote for Middlebury - the college-run dining service is amazing, and very responsive to student input.</p>
<p>Food at California Baptist University is suppose to be excellent and some of its food is catered by Market Broiler restaurants. Have only been told this information. Heard that people go there on the weekend to eat at their buffets.</p>
<p>From Princeton Review:</p>
<p>"Best Campus Food"</p>
<p>1 Virginia Tech<br>
2 Bowdoin College
3 Wheaton College (IL)<br>
4 Bryn Mawr College<br>
5 James Madison University
6 Colby College<br>
7 Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering<br>
8 Saint Olaf College<br>
9 Cornell University<br>
10 Washington University in St. Louis
11 University of Notre Dame
12 Scripps College<br>
13 Middlebury College
14 Miami University<br>
15 University of Georgia<br>
16 Claremont McKenna College
17 College of the Atlantic
18 Bates College
19 Macalester College
20 Gustavus Adolphus College </p>
<p>I would second Scripps (#13). It has a sushi night every week, and anyone from the Claremont Colleges can eat there (Scripps, Pomona, Claremont McKenna, Harvey Mudd, and Pitzer).</p>
<p>I imagine the ivies have the best because they really need to feed and pamper their genius and superior students well</p>
<p>Harvard may not have the best food, but it must surely have the best dining hall. How often do you get to eat surrounded by Tiffany glass with visions of Hogwarts dancing through your head.</p>
<p>
[Quote]
The Frist Campus center
[/QUOTE]
</p>
<p>At Princeton? Hmmm...I wonder whom THAT'S named after...</p>
<p>Sorry, I don't know the answer, just pointing that out.</p>
<p>I don't understand that sardonic quip, the Center's namesake is pretty obvious proletariat. The former senator, his family, and his extended family have had strong connections to the school for generations. Dr. Bill Frist is also teaching at the Woodrow Wilson School now.</p>
<p>bobmallet1, why would they need to? They always will get a continuous flow of students even if they start to serve gruel every day.</p>
<p>^^In theory, yes, but not quite in practice yet, not while I'm there. Haha.</p>
<p>aisgzdavinci: "does it really matter????"</p>
<p>Well, it does to my DD (that is why I started the thread).</p>
<p>Texas A&M (10)</p>
<p>University of Notre Dame-South Dining Hall. Not only do you have the Harry Potter atmosphere, you also have an abundance of choices. Good, tasty, healthy choices! Best food in South Bend, IN!!!</p>
<p>Just posting to keep this conversation going...I'm a high school senior who loveees good (and reasonably healthy) food. How I'm going to miss my mom's cooking!</p>