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lol .
Is he really serious ??</p>
<p>
lol .
Is he really serious ??</p>
<p>Yep. According to several different selectivity rankings, Penn is just after HYP. Very close to Stanford, actually, and in some rankings, above it. The Atlantic Monthly, Princeton Review, Huffington Post, and US News all rank schools in terms of selectivity (in addition to US News’s overall ranking system), and Penn does very well.</p>
<p>Why, gugupo? Do you have any real data? Or are you just going smile and smear **** on yourself, like the deranged child you’ve demonstrated yourself to be?</p>
<p>
??
LOL
WOW
You somehow convinced yourself that Penn is close to S ?? </p>
<p>Now I can see that you have a serious inferiority complex with very painful experince of getting rejected from HYPSMCBD…</p>
<p>i dont know who gugupo is, but do u realize that there are tons of people who turned down dartmouth/brown/columbia to go to penn cas, and tons of wharton students who turned down harvard, not to mention princeton, yale, stanford and mit to attend wharton, right?</p>
<p>there were even 2 kids in my freshman hall who had turned down stanford (omg!!!). im pretty sure i love bagels did, also.</p>
<p>and yes, i turned down dartmouth and columbia for penn. can you believe it?!?!</p>
<p>edit = im assuming that by cbd you mean columbia brown and dartmouth… craziness. ive never seen that before.</p>
<p>People, what part of question you don’t understand? it only asks “I chose Wharton over…”. Please get on target.</p>
<p>its because this loser gugupo guy doesnt have anything else to do but ■■■■■ around Penn’s forum to try and bring penn down only becuase he got rejected. What a ******bag</p>
<p>Penn is generally considered “better” (for lack of a better term) than Dartmouth and Brown, and at least on par with Columbia. I personally turned down Brown and Columbia for Penn (CAS), and muerteapablo is correct in his assertion about the rankings with regard to Stanford. Stanford is still considered a “better” school than Penn among the general population, but realistically the differences in education are minimal, if existant at all. People attend Penn over HYPSM all the time (although I will admit the the reverse is the more frequent scenario).</p>
<p>DogTag2010, cool your jets.</p>
<p>I think its ridiculous to say that Penn is better than Dartmouth and Brown. Dartmouth does better or as good in every single sign of placement possible - from wall street to law school placement. Neither is Columbi,a Brown, or Dartmouth more selective than Penn. They’re all about the same. I think its meaningless to find differences amongst equally good schools.</p>
<p>agree with slipper. Stop compare.</p>
<p>If they are all the same, then Cornell UPenn NYU should all be the same.</p>
<p>Those are not the same.</p>
<p>haha. Gotta admire gugupo’s sheer tenacity.</p>
<p>Also, slipper’s right: for Penn/Columbia/Dartmouth/Brown, while there are many reasons to choose one over the other for undergrad, none is really superior to the others. Penn and Columbia are large research universities, Brown and Dartmouth provide a more intimate college experience… but all provide parable placement for business/law/med/academia, and there’s no reason to trumpet your preference of one over the others as evidence to your college’s superiority. To further evidence of this: they all have the same average LSAT score. 163. We’re not so different, you and I…</p>
<p>It’s all happening just like before.</p>
<p>Well, not exactly…</p>
<p>GPA, SAT scores for UPenn Cornell NYU Georgetown are about the same.</p>
<p>What an i d i o t!!! Hahahahahahahaha you are so lame!!!</p>
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</p>
<p>Interesting. By the same logic, Penn has the highest average SAT averages in the world (2400). Which is to say, I make up information at will.</p>
<p>gugupo, can you back up this info? I’m interested to hear your thoughts.</p>
<p>what you idiots seem not to know about Wharton that 40% of your classes you take must be in the " liberal arts".</p>
<p>Source: [Penn:</a> University of Pennsylvania](<a href=“http://www.upenn.edu%5DPenn:”>http://www.upenn.edu)</p>