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None taken. ;)
In one respect, you are right...Seattle is a very liberal city with tons and tons of opportunity, however, liberal is not what I'm looking for. I have always been intrigued by Southern culture and for years it has been my goal to go to college in the South and stay down there. Whether I decide to work or get married and raise a family, I know that that's where I want to be. It is quite a different culture from Seattle, and I have spent some time down there. I'll admit my time has been limited but I loved the time I spent down there. And why Ole Miss specifically? I have read that they have a pretty good Southern Studies program, which is one of my planned majors. It is in the really deep south, which is what I want, as well. I grew up out in the country on a farm, so I was raised not necessarily more "in-tune" with Southern culture, but just less-so with the liberal culture of the city. I don't have aspirations to become a high powered exec somewhere...I just want to go to college and enjoy living in the South. :) |
A lot of older girls are there during the summer. Techically the girls aren't suppose to have any formal contact with pnms, but if you met one in class, around campus, ect... it will certainly benefit you. The more people you know the better chance you have of getting placed.
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but could it be a detriment to her to come in to recruitment as a second semester junior, if she enrolls in classes at ole miss in the summer?
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Well, I'm not sure exactly what career a Southern Studies degree would be useful in, but I'm a "career scholar" type if there ever was one. :)
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Southern Studies alumni have gone on to work for institutions such as the Mississippi Department of Archives and History; Teach for American; CNN; Southern Living magazine; the New Orleans Museum of Art; the Southern Poverty Law Center; the National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta; the Valentine Museum in Richmond; Jazz Fest in New Orleans; the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University; the Illinois Humanities Council; and the National Endowment for the Arts. Others have entered law school, business school, and graduate programs in the humanities at such institutions as the University of Texas, Emory University, the University of Georgia, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the College of William and Mary, and Brown University. |
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I think that you can do anything with a Southern Studies degree that you could do with straight up English, history, or political science. So, I think teach, go to law school, go to grad school, or any sales position for which a company wants you to have a college degree but will train you on the product line are on the short list. |
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Really, it's a compliment; you're right there with graduate school at UGA. ;) |
So have you been to campus yet?
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