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Suck it LA and NY, Seattle named most liked city in the US. (pg. 12)
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| Vector A |
| quote: | | Originally posted by Jake Benson |
It wouldn't be unusual for kindergarten enrollment to be highest sometime in the 1960s, since the late '30s and early '40s children (the initial peak of the "baby boom") started having their kids around 1960 and birth rates nationwide dropped dramatically shortly after. I doubt Seattle is unique in this.
As far as average age, Washington is in the middle : US Census puts median at 37.3, national average is 37.2
I don't see any reason why Seattle itself would be older than the rest of the state (and in general urban areas tend to be younger anyway).
If you really want a place with lots of young people, move to Texas.
:thepirate |
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| Lagrangian |
| Texas is too conservative. |
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| Lagrangian |
| There's always Craigslist! |
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| Joss Weatherby |
| Seattle was the warmest city in the country yesterday! |
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| citric_acid |
| quote: | Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Seattle was the warmest city in the country yesterday! |
its been 82 here yesterday and today yay sunshine. snow expected this weekend though |
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| Joss Weatherby |
| quote: | Originally posted by citric_acid
its been 82 here yesterday and today yay sunshine. snow expected this weekend though |
Manic-depressive weather. Nice. Stay sane. :stongue: |
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| Quazar |
| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
ing hell. Never visit the UK. |
I visited the UK in the summer of 06 and it didn't rain once while I was there (about 1.5 weeks)... but it was apparently during a heatwave and that + lack of air conditioning was difficult, but I still had a blast. I guess growing up in the US South prepared me for the heat. :P
London was disappointing, though, as others have said. I LOVED Oxford, however. Such a fun town. And driving through the English countryside between Oxford and Stonehenge was breathtaking.
I just got back from a week-long trip back home to Atlanta for a friend's wedding, and it rained the entire time I was there. The sun came out for a few hours on Sunday, and that was it. It was great to see all the green trees, though. SO MANY TREES. |
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| Lagrangian |
London pre-Olympics or London Post Olympics?
Ah-Ha |
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| Lagrangian |
| quote: | Originally posted by Quazar
I visited the UK in the summer of 06 and it didn't rain once while I was there (about 1.5 weeks)... but it was apparently during a heatwave and that + lack of air conditioning was difficult, but I still had a blast. I guess growing up in the US South prepared me for the heat. :P
London was disappointing, though, as others have said. I LOVED Oxford, however. Such a fun town. And driving through the English countryside between Oxford and Stonehenge was breathtaking.
I just got back from a week-long trip back home to Atlanta for a friend's wedding, and it rained the entire time I was there. The sun came out for a few hours on Sunday, and that was it. It was great to see all the green trees, though. SO MANY TREES. |
I wanna go so bad!! For me, having Europe at your doorstep is more than ideal! |
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| Lews |
For the most part, the UK and Seattle have extremely similar weather patterns, except, I'd say, it rains harder in the UK.
You should walk through the fields around Oxford while it's pouring rain, if you go back. It's a blast. No sarcasm. Beautiful city, wish I was still there.
I get confused by people disliking London, but to each their own, I suppose.
Also, on Monday, it was warmer in Seattle than any other city in America. Just an FYI to the haters. |
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| zGoogleman |
| People dislike London cause its filled with English mother******s. |
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