<p>wow Chanfest...
I didn't mean to ask EA and RD in that way... of course I know the difference I applied Yale SCEA...</p>
<p>I meant why do people react differently: is EA people more easygoing bc they are done with their initial app and RD pple still stressed and tense (*cough, Prospeak..)</p>
<p>thanks for the explanation though
and sorry for the misunderstanding :)</p>
<p>Guys, thanks for all your opinions and facts</p>
<p>And Miller, thank you for being civil whlie criticizing my vague mumbling up there :)
Yeah, I just tried to raise up some question as to why H forum is more uptight...
and almost instantly a certain someone comes up and proves my point.
"Alright" enough of me bickering about ProSpeaker.</p>
<p>Although I do like Yale forum more as of rite now, that will change to either hate or love after Dec. 15th. Haha</p>
<p>Understandable. Btw, prospeaker gots 15 or 16 posts. i was the same way when i was a noob too (no offense). I would argue EA dudes are more uptight (I am I believe. I wanna know my decisions now and not later). Goodluck for Yale SCEA!</p>
<p>Since this thread comes up every year and I am a Yale student, I will be very clear:</p>
<p>1)Harvard is the most prestigious university in the world. NOT Yale. NOT Oxford. NOT Cambridge.</p>
<p>If you care only about prestige, go to Harvard. Although the gap is narrowing for a variety of reasons, Harvard will most impress a random uneducated foreigner. Goldman Sachs and other employers will see no distinction though between Harvard and Yale nor will almost all educated people.</p>
<p>2)Yale is a better undergraduate experience.</p>
<p>It is not just the fact that the residential college system is superior to the house system, that our endowment managers are better, that our President is respectable, and our facilities are newer and nicer. Rather, it is that Yale commits itself to providing the best experience for its students. Harvard students too often feel lucky to be there, but they don't demand the most from their college experiences nor enjoy it the most.</p>
<p>Yes I'm biased. But spending time with my Harvard friends was really depressing on the weekend of the "Harvard-Yale" game. I'm not just trashing the lame suites (no good common rooms and cable?) and bad schedule (school before Thanksgiving?) at Harvard. What seriously concerned me is that my friends seemed to be missing so much of what can be an excellent college experience; they seemed to be missing a real community and admitted they were rather glum.</p>
<p>The coolest thing about Harvard is the Lampoon building but college is not a joke. Choose somewhere where you'll not just get a name but also receive an education. Choose somewhere where you'll not just get a campus but also get a community. Choose Yale.</p>
<p>Main Entry: al·right<br>
Pronunciation: (ˌ)ȯl-ˈrīt, ˈȯl-ˌ\
Function: adverb or adjective
Date: 1887
: all right
usage The one-word spelling alright appeared some 75 years after all right itself had reappeared from a 400-year-long absence. Since the early 20th century some critics have insisted alright is wrong, but it has its defenders and its users. It is less frequent than all right but remains in common use especially in journalistic and business publications. It is quite common in fictional dialogue, and is used occasionally in other writing <the first="" two="" years="" of="" medical="" school="" were="" alright="" ="" gertrude="" stein="">.</the></p>
<p>Hi quite a good forum we have here. You guys are remarkable! ProSpeaker and Spiedyunlimiteds sense of humors (# 3-7) made me laugh. Quite witty, you! :-)</p>