Cornell and how long it takes them to process transfer apps.

<p>just got my rejection letter to me, for which I waited until past mid june.</p>

<p>Are you kidding me? This, coming from a school that is barely hanging on to "Ivy League" branding.</p>

<p>you’re dumb</p>

<p>Your rejected opinion doesn’t matter.</p>

<p>^ Ditto.</p>

<p>This is a kid who goes to Rutgers and got rejected from U Penn a handful of times. Attitude issues.</p>

<p>yeah well guess what, I’ll be going to Ross school at u.mich next semester so you, and cornell can suck it.</p>

<p>cry… please…</p>

<p>Not to start a riot here or anything, but I think Cornell took a long time to make decisions also. I got accepted to U of Maryland- College Park, NYU and Stony Brook by April and didn’t get my rejection letter from Cornell ( my only rejection) until the end of May. Come on, have some class and consideration- if there is no way I am getting in, send the damn letter immediately. I called May 15th to hear I wasn’t getting into Cornell- the letter shows up May 29th??? I take that as an insult. As time goes on you think you are getting in since what is it to reject somebody and send out the letter letting them know? I just am thankful I didn’t ASSUME anything and sent money to hold my spot elsewhere so I wasn’t screwed. I wanted to go to Cornell and I didn’t want to send all this money to be lost holding my spot “just-incase” to other schools but now I am SO glad I did. Anyway- good luck Wharton11, I know exactly how you feel!!!</p>

<p>Most undergrad business programs are a joke, including Cornell AEM.</p>

<p>I agree that Cornell should definitely expedite applications faster. I understand what Pitbull went through since I received all my other acceptance letters, requesting deposits by a time that Cornell said they wouldn’t release decisions… Cornell is a phenomenal University, but from my experience, their admissions department is another story :)</p>