<p>Yeah, I mean when hanging out /studying/partying/
different races mingling with each other…</p>
<p>I know it all depends on an each individual,
but atmosphere is really important as well</p>
<p>So what do you think?</p>
<p>Yeah, I mean when hanging out /studying/partying/
different races mingling with each other…</p>
<p>I know it all depends on an each individual,
but atmosphere is really important as well</p>
<p>So what do you think?</p>
<p>I really liked Du Bois when I was there. Even though it was the African American Culture dorm, it was only like 30% black, so there was lots of diversity.</p>
<p>I've heard DuBois is like, 99% black.</p>
<p>I definitely did not like how that woman at Penn Previews kept selling it as the dorm for black kids. That really seemed to encourage diversity :rolleyes:.</p>
<p>i would think hill, just because it's the most social of the dorms (mingling-wise) in that people are always out in the hallways talking or doing something; therefore, if your suite / hall is diverse, your dorm interactions will be necessarily diverse.</p>
<p>Dubois is generally supposed to be the most diverse dorm by far. I've never hung out there, so I can't say for sure. Conversely, the quad is supposed to be the least diverse.</p>
<p>Kings Court has a zillion Indians and Asians</p>
<p>from my experience, definitely hill...my suite (of about 20 ppl) this year had people who spoke swedish, japanese, mandarin, burmese, french, spanish, arabic, malayalam, telugu, gujarati, hindi, and, of course, english! we had people from about 7-8 different countries and all over the US...what an experience!</p>
<p>I would say there isn't one single place, and that, as you said, it's based on individual intiative. My suite was fine, but it wasn't terribly diverse...there were maybe 5 non-Jewish people. But that's cool. I just trekked out of my suite for diversity :D</p>