Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Code Camp
Message
 
To
06/05/2005 16:34:51
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Conferences & events
Title:
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01008044
Message ID:
01011811
Views:
20
>>>>There is nothing like being exact! :) You might wish to contact the University and tell them to change the word University to College.
>>>>
>>>>http://www.umass.edu/
>>>>
>>>>By the way our daughter attended U Mass (as she and her friends called it), before transfering to UCLA.
>>>
>>>As Steve pointed out, there are two institutions of higher learning in Amherst, Mass. Amherst College (which my son attended) and the main campus of the University of Massachusetts, which is commonly known as UMass-Amherst, but doesn't officially have Amherst in its name, I believe.
>>>
>>>Tamar
>>
>>Tamar;
>>
>>Actually Steve gave a link to Amherst College and to my knowledge that did not refer to the existence of two intuitions of higher education. I may have missed the reference to the University in the link Steve provided.
>>
>>In the link I provided I see “University of Massachusetts Amherst”. In fact that is how I filled out our daughters tuition check. It may have a formal name and a popular name, but worrying about the exactness of something as trivial as this does have its humorous side.
>>
>>Making an absolute statement and expressing your authority on the subject did not convince me that there is no University of Massachusetts Amherst. It is not that I am unwilling to believe what you say but my experience is different.
>>
>
>You're right that this isn't worth the time we're giving it. I misunderstood your original message as referring to Amherst College, not to UMass Amherst, and responded that it was a college, not a university, and off we went.
>
>I think we can agree that both are in Amherst. To the best of my knowledge, both names reflect the town name, not the general's name.
>
>Tamar

Tamar;

It is good to be back on solid earth! :) Anyway, it is interesting how names of individuals are given to towns and other entities regardless of his/her place in history. I am sure that General Amherst is a hero to some but he is “not my cup of tea”.

Here is a link which says there are several towns named after the "good general".

http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=9006164

Thank you for answering my last post. I would hate to leave this subject without both of us understand what was going on! :)

By the way our daughter and my wife loved the Amherst area! I have never been there but would like to visit.

Tom
Previous
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform