<p>Weather so far has been good, actually quite good now that I think about it. Fingers crossed. It gets cold in the winter from what I hear, but I haven’t experianced the infamous Rochester winter yet, so I can’t quite comment.</p>
<p>Ohh the campus is very very green. Lots of places to sit and study, or if you’re like me toss a frisbee around. Most people are either in front of the library in the academic quad relaxing and studying, or at the res quad, or by sue b.</p>
<p>Dining is eh, not Rochester’s forte. I am getting to the point where I am sick of campus food, but that’s only because I am vegetarian and my options are pretty limited to repetitive food. The food is ok, not great not bad, but there are many places on campus to dine.</p>
<p>School Spirit is there, though our football team sucks. We have pride for our college, especially in the academic areas.</p>
<p>Can’t speak for all professors, but the ones I’ve had so far, yes. They are amazing, very accesible and very helpful. I was amazed that one of the Philosphy professors I met briefly, remembered my name and what we talked about. All my professors and even ones that don’t teach me know me by name, so it says something.</p>
<p>I’ll explain the cluster thing in the another post, a little complicated.</p>
<p>The interview is awesome, very informal and laid back. Go in with questions, relax, and think of it as a conversation. My went on for a good hour, and we talked about everything from music to poetry. So it was fun.</p>
<p>Unique individuals that can contrbrute to school’s diversity. Really there is no one perfect applicant, or one perfect card you can play like race or high test scorer to get in. Its about what you have to offer, are you diverse, active, passionate about something, research, music, or anything, and can you bring that passion to Rochester. They want strong students, but that doesn’t always mean book smart.</p>