<p>lol @loquatical Princeton Law School :D</p>
<p>@loquatical. I must have read your post so quickly…did not notice the sarcasm tag at the bottom. I thought you were the same poster who recently posted wanting to attend Princeton law, medical, business school on another thread…no probs
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<p>Penn Wharton, because I eventually want to manage a hedge fund.</p>
<p>Vassar - liberal, amazing theatre opportunities. support for internships in NYC without having to be in the city itself, gorgeous library, English department is amazing, med/ren studies major, open curriculum, offers Old English as a foreign language, gorgeous campus, two Shakespeare troupes… I could go on…</p>
<p>Penn (CAS) because I stepped onto campus for my tour and felt like I was at home.</p>
<p>UCLA </p>
<p>The Majors, the Sports, The PEOPLE!!!</p>
<p>
Well “Silicon Valley” also recruits aggressively at many other universities. The “top” list includes several state flagships (University of Texas Austin, University of Illinois, University of Wisconsin, Georgia Tech, and so on), private universities (in addition to Stanford and the Ivies, most of the top USNews and World Reports top 30-50). Some high tech companies have a much broader net, and universities such as Cal Poly, San Jose State and equivalent are very much on their radar.</p>
<p>For these same companies what happens in practice is that after two or three years on the job it no longer matters where you got your degree but what you’ve done in that first job. So indeed a Stanford graduate who has done mediocre work is less likely than a San Jose State graduate who has done stellar work in landing that prime second job.</p>
<p>Notre Dame. Awesome campus, great athletic pride, best catholic school in the country, felt like a great community when I visited.</p>
<p>Vassar College(^-^)/</p>
<p>HYPSM because they have great professors and smart students… like 100s of other universities, wait! they have cool campuses, um, and, they are great places… no, I can’t name the cities where they are… MIT and Harvard are in Boston, right? No? And Yale is near. No, I can’t name any profs who teach there. But they are my dream schools!!! And I want to go to Law School at Princeton… what? They don’t have one? It is still my dream graduate school. Dream, dream, dream!!!</p>
<p>Drexel University!
It has scholarship for international students that cover tuition.</p>
<p>Co op program!</p>
<p>City life</p>
<p>Not too far from NYC!</p>
<p>UChicago, for its extremely intellectual and academic atmosphere where everyone there is really interested in learning for its own sake. Its Math and Physics departments are amazing, especially in the theoretical areas, though they do have sufficient preparation for the experimental areas of the subjects.</p>
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<p>Silicon Valley companies will hire a good programmer regardless of the school.</p>
<p>Definitely Vanderbilt. It just got rated number 1 for happiest students. The girls are hot. There is an awesome work hard play hard balance. The campus is amazing. Oh yeah, it’s in Nashville! It’s the perfect size. I could go on</p>
<p>American University. Great location, amazing study abroad and internship opportunities, has a five year MPH program, and I can potentially earn for merit based scholarship there.</p>
<p>My top choice right now is probably University of South Carolina. When I visited, I felt at home on the campus. Academically, I’d like to go to Columbia, but I haven’t visited yet, and I’m not sure my scores would get me in…</p>