<p>OK so my friends and I are looking at several of the same schools and we have been arguing about/trying to find out which of them has the hottest girls. Of course it won't be a dealbreaker when chosing a college, but it is kind of a cool thing to know. So guys and girls let me know, which of the following schools have very attractive girls. AND BONUS POINTS FOR SCHOOLS THAT HAVE HOT AND SMART GIRLS WHO CAN HOLD A CONVERSATION. </p>
<p>Also which schools are very lacking in attractive females. Oh and if people want to say which schools have hot guys too that is cool. Might as well be informative to both sexes.</p>
<p>The schools:</p>
<p>UVA
Georgetown
Brown
Amherst
Bucknell
Villanova
Haverford
Boston college
UNC
Duke
U of Delaware
Columbia
Tufts
Wesleyan
Harvard</p>
<p>I think Nova girls tend to be ditzier. Haverford would probably be both attractive and interesting. UDel tend to be ditzier. Can't say I know the rest.</p>
<p>Ditz girls are annoying, I mean sure they may be good looking sometimes but I like um like totally hate like ditz girls who like talk like this...like.</p>
<p>Aanyway, anyone else have some thoughts. I have heard good things about UVA and great things about bucknell... but I don't actually know.</p>
<p>I know I don't. I don't want to go to school outside of the east coast. While I'm sure many attractive girls go to Cali schools I am really just interested in these schools becasue this is my list of possibles to apply to.</p>
<p>That being said I have heard the big state schools in the south and Cali do very well in the category of attractive girrls... though maybe not the smartest girls. Really I have no idea.</p>
<p>duke has pretty girls but a little snooty. the good thing about amherst and haverford is that smith and bryn mawr are next door and would increase your social life even after discounting for the large g4g population</p>
<p>my friend who's a harvard freshman thought so too until he asked one girl out only to learn that she was a law student there, and then she dismissed him like yesterday's briefing. that's the hard thing about universities, you can't tell who is an undergrad and who is not.</p>