<p>Hi eliana, :)</p>
<p>Pretty much all schools have wireless on the whole campus. Chicago does, and it has ctv where you can get TV through the hard wired internet connection-- there are cable tv hookups, but you don’t need an actual tv to get tv programming.</p>
<p>check out CAPS career advising and planning services. They’re the ones that keep sending you mail. From what I’ve heard (and read on their site), they are excellent in placing people in internships and fellowships, and amazing at grad school applications, but are somewhat lackluster when it comes to actually finding a specific job. They just tell you to use monster, etc. to find potential jobs, and they’ll help with the resume and interview. No special connections other than for paid and unpaid internships, and fellowships. Check out this amazingness: <a href=“Home | CareerAdv”>Home | CareerAdv;
<p>Just look around the site. Since you want to do grad school, CAPS should be a help. They also help set up shadowing experiences for freshmen and sophomores, and I’ll definitely be taking advantage of that. Other colleges have similar career advising places. I went to a ton of college rep visits, and they all claim that their program is unique, but it’s really not. However, you’ll find that the top ten schools have more funding and can give out more grants for internships and study abroad, whereas places like JHU or Duke have less smaller awards (around 1k-8k) and a couple of larger, more competitive awards. JHU has one $10k competition for funding, and little else if you want a paid internship (like a UROP), whereas Chicago has lots of smaller grants in addition to larger fellowships.</p>