<p>You don't need a link to know things. Do you have a link to know how many students are in your history class? Or how many janitors work at your school?</p>
<p>During a Cornell visit they told us that Morgan recruiters heavily from Ivy league schools and that for that year there were no interns that were international.</p>
<p>im not a super smart person that dreams of working in a huge firm on wall street...im pretty average and happy with myself...i will never get into an ivy school and i accept that completely...its not even an option for me and i dont resent this at all</p>
<p>cmu is the best i can do and maybe johns hopkins (havent gotten decision yet) so im not really turning down harvard or anything here...lol</p>
<p>VISIT BOTH SCHOOLS. Don't make a decision without it 'cause u may be passing up something good and visiting makes sure you don't have regrets later on.</p>
<p>It is interesting that it is between McGill and CMU and not between McGill and perhaps Cornell. In terms of prestige, going to Cornell would be better for you than McGill provided you were going to live in the US. If you were going to live outside the US, then McGill would be better. However, anyone who knows enough to know that CMU is a great school also knows about McGill and so the prestige level is about the same. One element of prestige is how much the other people know. If the people think that UPenn is a state school, then you can't impress them with going to UPenn.</p>
<p>Yeah, go to McGill! Prestigewise, McGill is much better than CMU; you cannot even compare. These people just want to rank American colleges higher than others. In Europe or in Asia, everyone knows McGill; noone knows CMU (except for Computer Science people).</p>
<p>So go to McGill unless u r interested in computer science.</p>