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Priligy online buy now Chantaburi: The world's best chantry (P1,900,000) Nepal: The world's best chantry Sri Lanka: The best chantry in world "When I started here, didn't know any better. As soon I said 'I am gay," a former co-worker said, "there was no question from them." "I am a very good person," said former roommate of three years. "I like to help, I help people out." In February, as California becomes the fifth state to allow gay marriage, more than half of the country's top-rated religious colleges are showing signs of change, according to a survey of more than 1,200 religious school presidents by the New York Post. At the time of 2009 survey, more than two-thirds of colleges reported having no gay students. In May, that number had fallen to a third of year later — though there were still some large institutions that declined to respond. And just four months after the most recent post-marriage survey, percentage of conservative evangelical colleges with gay students fell to just more than 10 percent. "They're in the process of changing," said Jonathan Merritt, director of the School Higher Education at Vanderbilt University. "A year ago, a group of 30 or so them were willing to stand and say they wanted to be 'committed inclusion.' And now, that number is down to nine or 10. That's really impressive." The new generation of leaders may be less religious and more "open-minded" to people who don't fit the norm, Merritt said, but there has been change at many schools that simply don't want to talk about it. Among elite schools, which are mostly Christian, "there is much more acceptance and less opposition," Merritt said. In fact, almost all the colleges he surveyed said they would welcome openly gay alumni and students, would welcome them to participate on campus. But the new wave of leaders may be more willing to stand up their own institutions, as the national conversation on gay civil marriage seems to have c