<p>Either you are accepted to AEM or are rejected (they don't consider you for two positions with one being a default) and yes, you can double major.</p>
<p>I am at Penn and am in the College of Arts and Sciences and will be unable to transfer into Wharton. Will I be at a disadvantage being an Econ major or International Relations major and competing against the Wharton kids, who will obviously be more heavily recruited? Would it hurt me to go to another undergrad business school, such as BC's Carroll School of Mgmt, Georgetown's McDonough or NYU Stern?</p>
<p>Penn Econ seems to do fine in getting into Ibanks. Looking at the data, it seems like a good number got in, although nothing like Wharton's 44% going into Ibanks. Dont bother transferring out - Penn Econ will give you better chances than probably any of the above except maybe Stern.</p>
<p>who recruits at stanford?</p>
<p>I'm a freshman at Emory and thinking about transfering to UMich or UNC because their business programs seem much better. Are they highly recruited?</p>
<p>Also, somebody mentioned a hedge fund internship. I'm interested in hedge funds...how hard would it be finding an internship in this area.</p>
<p>Hmm,sports you got 4.11 GPA..........(SHOCKED)</p>
<p>Do you calculate grade point average out of 5 in USA,coz in our country they calculate it out of 4 and, obviously,the highly acheivable GPA is 4.00???????</p>
<p>Waiting for you to hit me back.</p>
<p>cornell gives A+ so the ranking is out of 4.3 instead of 4.0 (because b+ is 3.3, c+ is 2.3, etc.</p>
<p>Could you still get a job at an investment bank from a school like Suffolk University, if you have like close to a 4.0 GPA with good connections?</p>
<p>You should find out from the school's career office if any banks come to campus to recruit. If they do, then you have an excellent chance. Most entry-level ibank jobs are recruited from campus.</p>
<p>The University of Chicago is also a major player in Investment Banking.</p>