<p>...I don't get it.</p>
<p>It's okay, you can go to XYZ Community College.</p>
<p>Weird .</p>
<p>I'm torn between Penn (preferrably Wharton) ED or MIT/U-Chicago</p>
<p>all excellent schools for business/economics</p>
<p>what's Yale like?</p>
<p>I visited MIT and Harvard this summer. But a lot of things must happen between now and November for me to consider applying to either one.</p>
<p>I've visited Columbia, Johns Hopkins, and Georgetown. Columbia was awesome: great access to resources, awesome campus, great school in general (I love the city). Johns Hopkins' campus was great, but the surrounding atmosphere was horrible. Walk a couple blocks off campus and you're literally in the Baltimore ghetto. Georgetown's environment was perfect; Washington DC is amazing in terms of resources, and nothing beats the social atmosphere or shopping in Georgetown. However, I felt uncomfortable and out-of-place at the school itself. For one thing, Georgetown is 50% Catholic, and although I have nothing against Catholics, that's limited diversity right there. Nonetheless, the Gtown population seemed very politically involved, and without the construction that was going on during my visit, the campus would probably be beautiful.</p>
<p>Over the summer, I'm planning to visit Penn, Harvard, and Princeton.. if I get the chance. I have a lot of friends near Philly, so I can probably make a stop there for Princeton/Penn, but I have no idea how I'm going to get to Boston. =/</p>
<p>The only problem with Columbia is that it has no campus/student life. Everyone goes downtown to party/chill; nobody stays on campus. Plus, it seems to be much more focused on grad than undergrad. It's undergrad program is pretty damn small.</p>
<p>I agree with savoirfaire about JHU. Georgetown too. They actually have an official Jesuit</a> Community that resides on campus. It freaks me out.</p>