<p>Yes, I will be a senior... I don't know if it's my Asian-ness kicking in, but I really can't drive =P</p>
<p>bump 10char!</p>
<p>oh hehe i counted down, starting at christmas (my birthday was in june) the days till i could get my license.</p>
<p>all my friends had there's, but nobody had a car, and i did, so it just killed me not to be able to drive =]</p>
<p>=(... I feel that way right now. Maybe I can freeload off my rich friends at Haverford or whatever school I land at next year.</p>
<p>i dont think im bringing my car to college, cause then ill be THAT KID with the car who has to drive everybody everywhere. at least not freshman year - theyre not allowed at hford your first year</p>
<p>radionowhere, that would be a GREAT way to cover up my lack of driving skills.</p>
<p>Where else are you applying next year? You seem to have some similar interests.</p>
<p>Okay.. so far I have Grinnell, Bryn Mawr, Pitzer, and Scripps.</p>
<p>Try the three Maine schools: Colby, Bowdoin, Bates.</p>
<p>Love your name, radionowhere. Good to see a fellow Bruce fan around here.</p>
<p>2-iron, thanks. Do any of them have a really extensive core curriculum?</p>
<p>@radionowhere</p>
<p>Yes, I am talking about high school students. There's definitely a lot of uber-expensive prep schools in the area. Don't worry, within a five minute drive you'll be on the other side of the tracks (where normal people like I live, haha). </p>
<p>I remember going to AAA driving school near the campus when I first got my learner's permit. My dad would pick me up in his truck. Meanwhile, literally, other people had their family's nannys pick them up in Range Rovers and stuff. That's the other thing about hopeful Haverfords. There's one of the biggest concentrations of au pairs in the Haverford area in all of America. Often they get to know eachother and go out together. Don't be surprised if you wander into a coffee shop on a week night and find 20 - 30 European girls chatting in half a dozen languages. It's definitely an interesting environment to live around.</p>
<p>hellojan, your insight helped me a lot. Thanks a bunch!</p>
<p>bump one last time</p>
<p>My daughter is goingto Pitzer next fall...they don't have much of a core curriculum requirement. You can walk into the village of Claremont pretty easily (she doesn't have a license either). And you won't freeze there. Pomona might be within your reach.
By the way, what does bump 10char mean?</p>
<p>sarsfield, thanks for your input.</p>
<p>You "bump" a thread, because a new post will bump the thread to the top of the discussion board. 10char is short for 10 characters because you need to type in 10 characters minimum for each post. "bump" alone doesn't meet the 10 characters requirement so you add in "10char" to bump.</p>
<p>I think Brandeis and Rochester could be your match. They are both < 6000 students.</p>
<p>Hope this will help :)</p>
<p>Thank you =)</p>
<p>Pitzer, New College of Florida both have suburban campuses, small population, light core requirements.</p>
<p>What are your EC's/other interests like in general?</p>
<p>Sorry they're not in convenient bullet proof but you can find more detailed stats and my ec's here. Thanks for asking.</p>