<p>which one???</p>
<p>thats depends on whether you choose manure processing or flower picking as your major.
Dude...mention ur major!!!</p>
<p>Dude, according to ur own posts, u got waitlisted at dartmouth</p>
<p>first off i think it's pretty creepy that you actually memorize who got in where</p>
<p>second off, i'm asking this question so that if i do commit to the dartmouth waitlist, i will go there for sure...which is what you're supposed to do</p>
<p>um, actually, i was reading on the dart thread, and i saw u posted this there too, and saw ur name right below that, saying u were waitlisted</p>
<p>CC is my procrastination</p>
<p>Cornell > Dartmouth</p>
<p>dartmouth by alot</p>
<p>^ for interning as a janitor, right?</p>
<p>right.. or for selectivity and grad school placement</p>
<p>Arjun, just because you are proud to be in Cornell's entering class doesn't mean you can make attacks on other schools.</p>
<p>fae, I appologize for him. He's just an overexcited prefrosh.</p>
<p>That said, I am a student at Cornell, and would highly recommend it, but I wouldn't recommend it to everyone.</p>
<p>I really like Cornell because it has a small city environment, but at the same time there are lots of people to meet (13,000 undergrads), which also creates a very vibrant campus and social life. The scale of the school creates lots of opportunities, tons of academic programs. . .lots of great resources. Cornell is broken down into many smaller colleges, and although all the students live together I really feel like it makes the campus feel smaller. There will be a certain area of campus that you will go to regularly, and you will have a lot of classes with people in your majors, so you see a lot of familiar faces. </p>
<p>My dad's coworker just received her phd from Cornell in chemistry and attended dartmouth for undergrad. His daughter told him that if she knew about Cornell when she applied for undergrad, and its great chem department, she would have liked to have done her undergrad here.</p>
<p>I'm sure you already know, if you're really set on an urban campus, neither school would be ideal.</p>
<p>If you're really set on a smaller environment, go with dartmouth, you really can't go wrong either way. However, if you're looking at engineering or the sciences, (hotel admin., architecture, or if you're interested in being pre-vet), then take a look at Cornell.</p>
<p>Neither school will have you interning as a janitor.</p>
<p>I'm just going to say Cornell just because Dartmouth rejected me, hahah. See you there?</p>
<p>darthmouth is not for everybody unless you are leaning torwards a more small liberals art type</p>
<p>Cornell is much better IMO for meeting new people and opportunities just because it is generally a little more well known and has much lrger student population and resources. It has a little bit of everything</p>
<p>funny...i always thought it was dartmouth not darthmouth.</p>