<p>Good point, I thought he was still choosing. All right then, congrats and good luck at yale. Yales a great school and I’m sure that it will do wonders for you</p>
<p>Come to Wharton. It’s a much broader range of classes between the 4 undergraduate schools.</p>
<p>And New Haven sucks as much as West Philly, but without the rest of Philadelphia to redeem it</p>
<p>Philadelphia has had 115 murders so far this year. New Haven has had 0 (zero). Also, the area around Yale has about 10 times as many things for students to do as the area around UPenn. Hope that helps.</p>
<p>Also see:
<a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showpost.php?p=3998177&postcount=30[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showpost.php?p=3998177&postcount=30</a></p>
<p>A crime rate is certainly a lot easier to fix than terminal insignificance.</p>
<p>NYC, Q.E.D.</p>
<p>That makes no sense. As the link above shows, both NYC and Philly have a very long way to go. They also have much lower average salaries and much lower education levels than any of the major metropolitan areas in New England (such as Hartford, Stamford, New Haven and Boston). The rich and powerful in the United States always move to nice places, where they can live comfortably and not be run over by subways – places like the Connecticut shoreline, Cape Cod, North Shore of Boston, Naples Florida, or Napa Valley, not to the slums of a humid, sticky and subpar city with 400+ murders per year like Philadelphia.</p>
<p>wait… so all the executives live in new haven and none of them in Philly or New York. Yeah i’m sure that’s true. ome on we all know that large cities are the center of business</p>
<p>As a native New Yorker and now resident of the Philly suburbs who once lived in Boston and now vacations on Cape Cod…posterX, come on. Methinks you do protest too much. :)</p>
<p>Regardless of whether or not Wharton would prepare me for Wall Street more than Yale would, I want to enjoy the next 4 years of my life. And I dont think that Wharton’s ultra-competitive atmosphere would allow me to do that.</p>
<p>it’s extremely overrated in the running of the bulls book. I met a lot of people from wharton and they all seem to really be enjoying it, don’t seem overstressed and even pointed out how “running of the bull” is completely out of it.</p>
<p>I’m in the same position as OP…I’m pretty sure my head wants me to go to one and my heart wants the other, but I can’t figure out which is which. Point being, keep the advice coming! Thanks!</p>