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<p>But see, that’s an inaccurate statement. </p>
<p>Not all schools have business schools, so that would account for a smaller number of business kids at top law schools. But schools like UPenn, UMich, UCB, MIT, UCB, Cornell have very well regarded business programs that would probably produce students quite capable to handle the load for law school.</p>
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<p>I don’t know about this. History’s a nice major and all but I think certain business degrees would be appropriate for law school, especially if you’re eager to work in corporate law or transactional services at an i-bank. Finance would be pretty good and account is good for individuals who wish to get a specialization in tax law.</p>
<p>Also, I’ve talked to science and engineering majors who find law school to be a piece of cake because they’re used taxing workloads already.</p>
<p>In the end though, I think you should major in what you think is right for you and go to the best school you can go to. You shouldn’t pick a less presitigious undergrad b-school over an economics program at a more prestigious university. And because law school and working at the firm will teach you what you need to know, your undergrad major wont matter as much.</p>