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UMBC
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True Grits Dining Hall InteriorThe World > North America > USA |
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Over the last four years, UMBC has renovated the True Grit's Dining Hall, aiming to make dining at UMBC more than just satisfying to the diet, but an entire dining experience. Students are invited to experience dining for three meals a day, including full salad and dessert bars, veegan and ethnic dietary options and more dishes than you can count. Did I mention the lounge seats and flat screens? True Grit's is also the site of Outtakes- our one stop snack shop, open 23.5 hours a day.
Photo by J. Kilgore
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The United States is one of the most diverse countries on earth, jam packed full of amazing sights from St. Patrick's cathedral in New York to Mount Hollywood California.
The Northeast region is where it all started. Thirteen British colonies fought the American Revolution from here and won their independence in the first successful colonial rebellion in history. Take a look at these rolling hills carpeted with foliage along the Hudson river here, north of New York City.
The American south is known for its polite people and slow pace of life. Probably they move slowly because it's so hot. Southerners tend not to trust people from "up north" because they talk too fast. Here's a cemetery in Georgia where you can find graves of soldiers from the Civil War.
The West Coast is sort of like another country that exists to make the east coast jealous. California is full of nothing but grizzly old miners digging for gold, a few gangster rappers, and then actors. That is to say, the West Coast functions as the imagination of the US, like a weird little brother who teases everybody then gets famous for making freaky art.
The central part of the country is flat farmland all the way over to the Rocky Mountains. Up in the northwest corner you can find creative people in places like Portland and Seatle, along with awesome snowboarding and good beer.
Text by Steve Smith.