<p>ewho, so he meant “Stanford” when he posted “Harvard”?</p>
<p>and you know this - why?</p>
<p>and what did he mean when he posted UC Santa Monica?</p>
<p>ewho, so he meant “Stanford” when he posted “Harvard”?</p>
<p>and you know this - why?</p>
<p>and what did he mean when he posted UC Santa Monica?</p>
<p>I think he was referring to metro Santa Monica…which is technically a separate city from Los Angeles, but is really just part of the contiguous LA megalopolis.</p>
<p>
I was kidding, and obviously you were not. </p>
<p>Coolbreeze tried to say that just look for the metro areas or cities you would find schools you want to find, like University of California - Oakland ( did I miss by 2 miles? that was as far as I went) :), University of New Jersey - Princeton, etc.</p>
<p>OP might want to check out the College of Charleston. While it is not right on the beach it is just blocks from the water and not far from a number of barrier islands with nice beach resorts. And being down in SC, the beaches are viable for more of the school year than at a school up north.</p>
<p>“University of California, Harvard” and “University of California, Stanford” are equally bad.</p>
<p>Lulz maybe he did think Stanford is part of the UC system ;p</p>
<p>I second College of Charleston. Seems like a perfect fit for the OP’s criteria, it’s a very social school and the campus is gorgeousssss.</p>
<p>UNC Chapel Hill sounds like it would be great for you.</p>
<p>the best all around university has a different definition for everyone. For me, it’s Clemson, that’s where I feel at home. For others, its UNC or Duke or the ivy leagues or your dream school that you didn’t get into.</p>
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<p>Sure it does. It’s ranked right behind UC Oxnard and just ahead of UC Azusa.</p>
<p>ha!</p>
<p>actually there is a Santa Monica City College, among the better JC’s around</p>
<p>Otherwise the closest to Santa Monica would be Loyola Marymount, UCLA and Pepperdine.</p>
<p>There’s an area in Santa Monica where the streets follow an academic theme. Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Berkeley.</p>
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Also Amherst, Wellesley, Colby, Beloit, Purdue, and I think others.</p>
<p>
I didn’t mean Santa Monica, I am talking about Santa Barbara.
UCSF does have undergraduate students:[College</a> Search - University of San Francisco - USF - At a Glance](<a href=“College Search - BigFuture | College Board”>College Search - BigFuture | College Board)
Harvard is not in California, nor other schools located in Boston. I only stated those schools due to it’s easy access to the ocean.</p>
<p>Stanford and San Diego State University are also other options.</p>
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<p>Notice how the link you pasted has the acronym USF and not UCSF. And notice how it’s named University of San Francisco, and not University of California at San Francisco. And notice how the profile says “Type of School: Private.”</p>
<p>haha :)</p>
<p>Well it is a private school: Roman Catholic just like University of San Diego. Perhaps OP can look at San Francisco State University:[College</a> Search - San Francisco State University - SF State - At a Glance](<a href=“College Search - BigFuture | College Board”>College Search - BigFuture | College Board)
In the past when using collegeboard I could type University of California San Francisco and USF would appear.</p>
<p>^ Coolbrezze, please do all of us a favor and not post in this thread anymore. You are too confusing with your endless mistakes.</p>
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<p>Yeah, it’s a private school, which automatically disqualifies it from being a UC school because all UC schools are public.</p>
<p>USD is also a private school, but USD is not UCSD. I live in San Diego.</p>
<p>^
Yeah I know USD and UCSD are different schools I was just still giving OP ideals.</p>
<p>I’d look into your local community college. It’s probably pretty sweet.</p>