<p>Princeton and Northwestern also have all of the advantages, without the disadvantages, of an urban campus due to on-campus access to speedy public transportation to NY and Chicago. Emory and Georgia Tech are two other top tier universities that are in an urban setting with excellent public transportation.</p>
<p>Definitely Northeastern.</p>
<p>TourGuide: Can you share any and all thoughts on Clark University in Worcester?</p>
<p>the economist in London ranked the UW in Seattle as one of the top 20 universities internationally
( US news puts UW tied at 45th in national and 12th for public universities)</p>
<p>Seattle also has Seattle Pacific University- Seattle University and Cornish COllege of the Arts</p>
<p>Portland has Portland State, University of Portland- Lewis and Clark as well as Reed-
Willamette in Oregon is in the state capitol- University of Oregon is in Eugene- really there are lots of schools especially universities in cities</p>
<p>Also The Evergreen State College in Olympia.</p>
<p>Clark: fascinating very small university (more like a liberal arts college, but it does have a significant grad school--about 2000 undergrads and 600 grad students). Very good in the social sciences, especially psychology and geography. Compact self-contained campus in a multicultural neighborhood. Liberal, artsy student body. For its academic quality, it's fairly easy to get into. Sort of like Brown : Wesleyan as Wesleyan : Clark.</p>
<p>which of these are most similar to harvard? in location, campus, etc?</p>