Please help with selecting and catagorizing

<p>A smaller school that offers aerospace engineering and you can double major in economics. Hmmm. </p>

<p>Case Western, Syracuse, Notre Dame, UVA are about the right size.</p>

<p>The question of how you can double major across "colleges," between the College of Engineering and the College of Arts and Sciences (or whatever they are called at the place you are applying to), is something to investigate early on.</p>

<p>btw, I didn't mean starting the year on multivariable, I meant if you finish the BC material way before the test, then going on to multivariable stuff.</p>

<p>also, IIRC some schools do have AB one year and BC the next as their normal course sequence so it may be perfectly reaosnable, I was just asking as I took BC last year and the material in it that was different than AB didn't seem like nearly enough for a whole year unless you went much deeper into each concept than the ap test requires. Some of those concepts are pretty tricky though. Grr I hate integrating intersections between polar curves.</p>

<p>Oh, I see. Thanks for the advice.</p>

<p>So I am formulating a list of safeties, reaches, and matches.</p>

<p>Currently, from the help in the thread and my own research, I have:</p>

<p>Reaches:</p>

<p>Stanford (probably SCEA)
Princeton (like the setting much more than other Ivies; I can tolerate arrogance)
Harvey Mudd</p>

<p>Matches/High Matches:</p>

<p>CMU
(blank)
(blank)</p>

<p>Safeties:</p>

<p>UO
(something in UC, maybe; ideally, I won't be attending a safety)</p>

<p>Syracuse, although promising, is still too big.
Case Western's Cleveland location is something that precludes it from consideration.</p>

<p>I should add that more input would be greatly appreciated. I lost my other account; I am the OP.</p>