<p>Yale!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!</p>
<p>MIT, Stanford, Northwestern McCormick in that order</p>
<p>Brown because of the open curriculum and the S/NC system. Sadly my stats are to low to even consider it but I can dream right? :(</p>
<p>BROWN because it rocks:)</p>
<p>A lot of people seem to love Brown. I'll continue the trend. </p>
<p>Brown..... but I guess I could live with Yale :)</p>
<p>Princeton or Harvard</p>
<p>brown, yale or stanford</p>
<p>Yale or Princeton undergrad, Columbia grad.</p>
<p>I'm already planning on Columbia for grad work but Yale and Princeton, they just sound good. :D</p>
<p>Given the choice all over again, I'd choose Dartmouth all over again.
Princeton is the only school that may make a convincing argument.
The rest, you could not give me the world to attend over D.</p>
<p>Princeton by far, luck me</p>
<p>Harvard, Princeton, or Chicago, to meet Mankiw, Krugman, or Levitt.</p>
<p>Stanford. <3</p>
<p>Haha. I actually visit Harvard and watched Professor Mankiw and Mron in a economics debate in Annenberg hall.</p>
<p>Mankiw is a marginal libertarian whose answers to every issue ranging from prostitution, anti-discrimination bill, seat belt law, dwarf throwing, and etc... is "if you don't like it, then move" lol</p>
<p>I'd be interested to watch a debate on dwarf throwing.</p>
<p>Yale, no stigmas attached to it.</p>
<p>brown hands down</p>
<p>
[quote]
Yale, no stigmas attached to it.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I'll presume that was ironic.</p>
<p>If not, please reference:
Bush, George W.
Kerry, John F.</p>
<p>Williams, of course</p>
<p>purely for academics i'd go for harvard first. After that maybe Columbia for the location, and Cornell third.</p>
<p>full ride to wharton undergrad</p>