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You tried to call me a UT reject just because I don't particularly care for their admission policies
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<p>I said your entire post, indeed your entire collection of posts regarding McCombs' admission policy, sounds more as if it comes from a bitter reject than one that was admitted. If you have been admitted and did attend, congratulations. We are on equal footing. </p>
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Attacking every school that I know of? What, is there a perfect school out there that doesn't have any flaws at all?
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<p>I've seen you discuss three schools: Tech, UT, and A&M. You and I agree on the negative aspects of A&M, you bring up negative aspects that can be attributed to practically any large school about UT, and you constantly roam the Tech boards putting down the school and its students. It's one thing to be informative: it's another to constantly be negative.</p>
<p>As for your constant references to my age and my educational background, it shows nothing more than your inability to carry on a civilized discussion without trying to attack the other person. Your persistence of focusing on my character, to the extent that you would search out and read my old posts, is a testament to this. You may be an alum of McCombs, but we've both been through the same admissions process, meaning you are no more authoritative on the subject than I.</p>
<p>Let us be clear on one thing: you and I disagree in this thread about the difficulty of transferring into McCombs. You may have some stigma because McCombs required you to have a year of foreign language in college and a year of Calculus but, were your ambitions any higher and had you applied to similarly ranked schools (Wharton, Stern, Ross, etc.) you would realize that the demands are similar and often higher from McCombs' peers. </p>
<p>I'm tired of arguing with you on so many threads. I look forward to your leave, and I'm sure many Tech alums and prospective students feel the same way.</p>