<p>title............</p>
<p>dude, you are ridiculous. you posted this same topic like a day ago.</p>
<p>i hope you DON'T get into columbia, i dont want to be around pyschos like you.</p>
<p>seriously, and we even answered you.</p>
<p>how about NO, happy, lol.</p>
<p>I really want to go to Columbia and I don't really want to see score-obsessed people. I will admit that I am sometimes like that but it's a temporary thing. Hope it isn't permanent for you. If it is I will simply answer No and find another college to go to.</p>
<p>man you guys didn't just have to even click on the post....</p>
<p>There is absolutely no reason for any of you guys to answer his/her question in the manner that you did. Just who exactly do you all think you are? I bet none of you would have the balls to talk to anyone like that in person, so dont hide behind your fictitious identities and try to pull a pit-bull attitude.</p>
<p>A simple NO would've sufficed. This more than convinces me that this site is just loaded with immature a-holes who need to get a life and learn a little something about respect for others. You all may be bright, but youre not special.</p>
<p>HAHA!</p>
<p>thanks for the cyber-lecture</p>
<p>thanks amilkita - exactly what I wanted to say</p>
<p>To be fair, a new thread was pretty unnecessary; all this could have been avoided with a simple "bump" of the previous thread. Plenty of non-URM/athletes get into Columbia with less-than-desirable scores. I've said this before and I believe it to be true: if you get rejected by Columbia with a 670, the decision wouldn't have been any different if you had a 700 or something instead. Admissions is a lot more holistic than that (at least I hope it is). Given that assumption, I wouldn't sweat it.</p>
<p>k thanks blah1111</p>
<p>i agree, but in real-life i am very outspoken and i have a lot of friends, and that is my best quality, and they always tell me about it.</p>
<p>bump...............</p>
<p>well, see, what you do is. . . you go to the collegeboard website and see that the MIDDLE 50% of math SAT scores represented at Columbia is roughly 660-760. . . and since 660 is below 670. . . Now this is something a person with below a 670 on the SAT math section can figure out Go to it, ivyleague99!</p>