<p>Being in the RC does not entail being an RC major. You can be a regular run of the mill LSA student and still be in the RC. You are required to take and RC writing seminar (most of which are cool...some of which are not), and you are required to take x amount of RC courses. But I can tell you this, RC courses are really cool; esp. the RC natural science since they count for NatSci distributive, but they aren't like super hard courses like Orgo...gah!</p>
<p>dragon I haven't seen or talked to you outside orientation lol...and I barely, if not at all, talked to you at orientation cause I didn't know who you are, haha</p>
<p>Anyways, I think we should all meet up somewhere one day, in the future, in the next 4 yrs haha</p>
<p>yes lets meet in year 2008 or 2009 in Dudestadt center or somewhere else.</p>
<p>dudestadt, is that real? lol</p>
<p>One thing to keep in mind about RC is the language requirement. For my daughter - that was a deal-breaker. She was a latin student, RC doesn't offer latin and she didn't want to continue with it anyway - but there's a requirement that you take a language seminar. So she figured she'd have to take 2 years of language, which she didn't want to do. So if you're not interested in/good at languages, think twice about RC.</p>
<p>theres a lang req anyways in LSA...u need 4th yr proficiency, but you can also test out if you know enough for the placement exam</p>