<p>Ever since I was little, I loved Princeton in everyway. Its academics, location, everything. Recently, I've been thinking and I feel like I want to be some sort of international businessman when I grow up. I love languages, traveling, money, and just meeting to people and cultures. I know that Princeton only has an Economics major (which is top notch, I know) that many students go into business afterwards in. Anyways, I've found out that UPenn has a prestigious Huntsman Program that deals SPECIFICALLY with international business. I also know that it is TOP NOTCH in the world and people graduating from there are all some of the richest, most powerful leaders in the world. So I was wondering which college/program I should apply Early Action for, Princeton (Economics) or UPenn (Huntsman Program). In my opinion, here are some pros to going to Princeton: Economics is a great major, Princeton is way more well known than UPenn (and it seems like nobody knows about Huntsman except for people in the field of business), Princeton probably will have a more well-rounded education, it might be a tiny bit easier to get in, if I by chance want to change my career path Economics is VERY versatile, etc. Cons: Huntsman is specifically tied in with international business, I would DEFINITELY be successful in it, I would get 2 degrees, etc. Anyways, I know both are EXTREMELY EXTREMELY hard to get in, so I might not get into either. In any case, I would like to know which one you think I should apply SCEA for. By the way, especially for the Huntsman Program, I'm pretty sure I would have a ZERO percent chance of getting in Regular Decision...</p>
<p>UPenn is early decision, not SCEA. So if you are accepted, you must attend. Only apply to Penn if that is your first choice.</p>
<p>Princeton is great in economics (ties to Wall Street) and Woody Woo is fantastic for politics/international relations. With those two in mind, you can’t go wrong. Huntsman is kind of very specialized and, yes, you’d have to commit. keep in mind princeton scea is pretty comparable to Huntsman admissions wise (maybe a little bit less selective but that’s because one is far more specific than the other)</p>
<p>FWIW, I listened to an admissions presentation by someone from the Huntsman program this summer. One student asked about admissions statistics, and the response was something like “We don’t make those public because they would probably discourage students.”</p>