<p>Yes, lol. 9 more days left. I've been swinging back and forth between UCLA, UCSD (they accepted me for ee major now), and UCB. It's so crazy, how do people decide? I think I'm leaning towards UCLA since I will graduate sooner from there than at UCSD or UCB.</p>
<p>Go to UCLA. Better school, cuter girls (in case you are a guy).</p>
<p>ucla has bangin babes.</p>
<p>I visited UCLA a few days ago and I realize why everyone says the girls are hotter there.</p>
<p>UCLA has perpetually good weather conducive to shorts and T-shirts. Also I saw more athletes (both women and men) per square foot than any other college campus I've been to so far.</p>
<p>There are way more people walking around UCLA than UCSD, UCR, UCD, USC, and SDSU. Not only students (I think UCLA has the largest number of undergraduates in the UC system) but the rich people that jog around the campus and the bustling city at the foot of the campus make it seem as if there is an endless stream of people to talk to and things to do. Anther city that never sleeps.</p>
<p>Traffic is horrible. The 405 might as well be a parking lot and the 5 is too small to be called a freeway. What should have been an hour drive from riverside to LA took 3 hours.</p>
<p>There are homeless people at UCLA, but not as many as people say. This is mostly because UCLA sits between a rich residential area to the north (Bel Air) and a business district to it's south. The police are always going back and forth.</p>
<p>Brick buildings and walkways everywhere. Very clean campus. Construction everywhere. The buildings have this byzantine maybe Moorish, sort of Spanish mission style architecture. Not the traditional greco-roman or colonial architecture. Very hilly, most students I saw and talked to drove, very few bikes relatively.</p>
<p>
[quote]
I'm terrified. It's absolutely possible to have a 4.0 at Drexel, but at Columbia SEAS, a 4.0 is a myth. I'm so nervous, because I'm an ultra-perfectionist.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>You will lose the perfectionism after your first semester, believe me!!!</p>
<p>Guys, there is no doubt that the work is going to be tough; however, if you work hard, getting at least a B+ is nearly assured (at least in the humanities).</p>
<p>What is even better, however, is that after a semester, you learn to loosen up on your grades because you become so excited about what you are learning.</p>
<p>nspeds, you are the MAN!!</p>
<p>the perfectionist in me is a little scared of harvard
my interviewer told me it was harder to get in than it was to graduate, but i still feel unprepared/nervous</p>
<p>I heard it's hard to fail a class there. I think the rumor is you get dropped from the class before you get the chance to fail.</p>
<p>Although I'm sure that failing is way down on the list of concerns.</p>