I went to George Washington University down in Washington, DC, and while it's a decent school, there is no campus, which at the time was very important to me. I went to Carnegie Mellon out in Pittsburgh, which has a campus, but it was all engineering, and at that time I wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to do. I looked at a couple of schools in New Jersey but I wanted to be farther away from home so I didn't go near them. I think I looked at Rockhurst Rutgers and Drew University, but I also rejected those because they were too close to home.
Then some friends and I decided to go on a road trip to visit schools. One of the schools we ended up at was on my list - Syracuse University. It was a beautiful day in April, sunny and warm, everybody was out on the quad, there was music and it seemed like a great place to be. So, based on the fact that my guidance counselor said it was a decent place to go, and it had a campus, and it was far enough away from home, and I happened to see it on this beautiful, wonderful day, I decided to go to Syracuse University. I later learned that was the only nice day they had that spring, but that was okay. I learned how to deal with the weather when I got there.
Early on, the thing that I found comforting about Syracuse is that there was a community for everybody. No matter what you were interested in, no matter what you wanted to study or play - it seemed like there was always a group of people that you could hook up with who were also interested. Even in my first couple of days there, I met a whole bunch of people from different parts of the campus, and I'm not sure what it was that we had in common, but it was something. This sense of community was a great help in my transition into the university.
That’s how I ended up at Syracuse. It was the right combination of a great school with a beautiful campus whose charm captured me from the first day.
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