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Berkeley and Stanford have a lot of hot Asian girls. And they're smart too. The Asian girls at Berkeley and Stanford have it all -- they're hot & sexy
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<p>Uhh, NO.</p>
<p>Berkeley may have more - simply b/c it has a much bigger Asian student body than most schools, but I certainly wouldn't say it has "a lot" (it's not like 70-80% of the AFs at UCB are "hot" - but just the same 7-8% of a bigger Asian student body).</p>
<p>For those that have had the opportunity to visit various SEC campuses, you will find that far and away there is nowhere else in the country where such a concentration of attractive individuals are concentrated. Like it or not, this is because the South contains a few different types of people: 1) Well-off to wealthy Southern families that marry each other and produce the same types of kids. 2) Rednecks, usually not very attractive. 3) Northerners. The SEC are flagship Southern schools + Vanderbilt and pretty much dominated by category one from above. Vanderbilt also has category one as well as a huge number of Northern boarding schoolers and then a good number of Affirmative Actions and then other miscellaneous people. Hence why when you compare its demographic to other top 20 schools, nobody even comes close to having so many attractive people.</p>
<p>I'd say Duke, Princeton, and the West Coast schools also have some lookers, but just as many on the opposite side.</p>
<p>If you're a feminist or whatever and this bothers you, that's all right. But the fact remains that every single girl I know at Vanderbilt if I ask them their daily regiment will probably say: classes, run on treadmill or outskirts of campus, study, follow healthy eating habits, go out and party at night. That isn't to say you won't fit in if this isn't you, but it will be tougher.</p>
<p>Using that logic, the fact that the social life is Greek-dominated is irrelevant, because, well, Northwestern has a lot of Greeks and I would have to say that the attractiveness-scale is a little uneven there.</p>
<p>"That is still very disproportionate compared to peer colleges."</p>
<p>True, but considering that two years ago the class was 28% and this year it was 37% female, I'd say we're making some improvements. Historically it's been much worse.</p>
<p>Whatever you guys do, don't set foot on Vassar's campus. Someone is likely to kill you. s In fact, if you can all do it, stay south of the Mason Dixon line. Just a friendly word of caution from a concerned citizen.</p>