2013년 11월 26일 화요일

About 'top colleges with high acceptance rates'|College Acceptance Rates & Early Action







About 'top colleges with high acceptance rates'|College Acceptance Rates & Early Action








The               road               to               riches               runs               straight               through               Wall               Street,               financial               capital               of               the               universe.

The               world's               top               lawyers               work               here,               starting               at               $160K,               raking               in               $250K               and               up               after               only               three               years               on               the               job.
               Small               potatoes,               you               say?

That's               just               the               beginning.

Those               who               make               partner               six               or               seven               years               later               hit               the               jackpot,               their               incomes               soaring               to               seven               figures.

Even               here               in               New               York,               the               financial               capital               of               the               universe,               that               kind               of               money               says               WOW!
               Yes,               but               there               are               lawyers,               and               there               are               lawyers.

A               mere               address               on               this               international               financial               highway               is               not               enough               to               convey               Wall               Street               stardom.

You               need               an               office               in               a               top               ranked               law               firm.

You               want               the               million               dollar               view.

You               want               to               be               the               big               fish               in               the               big               pond.
               Congratulations!

Your               timing               is               perfect.

Competition               these               days               for               that               corner               office               is               getting               scarcer               by               the               minute.
               For               one               thing,               law               school               applicant               numbers               are               dwindling.

The               number               of               people               taking               the               LSAT               -               the               law               school               admissions               test               -               is               the               lowest               in               10               years.

Those               who               do               take               the               test               tend               to               be               ho-hum               types               with               average               scores               -               not               the               cream               of               the               crop.
               Do               you               hear               what               I'm               saying?

Score               high               on               your               LSAT               and               your               odds               soar               for               a               coveted               spot               in               one               of               those               designer               law               schools               you               need               to               graduate               from               to               hit               the               big               time.
               As               Above               The               Law               put               it               recently:               "Fewer               high               scorers               are               taking               the               LSAT,               while               the               number               of               people               who               can't               even               break               145               remains               strong."               Yes,               Virginia,               it               looks               like               your               dream               job               is               just               an               LSAT               away.
               Let               me               guess:               You               have               no               idea               what               I'm               talking               about.

That,               my               friend,               is               why               the               rich               stay               rich               and               the               poor               stay               poor.

Unless               you               had               an               uncle               in               the               business,               you               would               never               know               how               to               get               there               from               here.
               Until               now.
               Like               they               say               in               the               stock               market,               timing               is               everything.

Herewith,               your               map               on               the               road               to               legal               riches:               

               1.

The               college               of               your               choice.

You               don't               have               to               go               to               a               fancy               college.

Pick               a               school               where               you               can               thrive.

Community               college               is               the               perfect               stepping               stone,               especially               if               you're               one               of               those               people               who               has               to               work               for               a               living.
               2.

Go               to               the               head               of               the               class.

Ace               every               class               you               take.

Never               take               the               Pass-Fail               option.

This               will               kill               your               chances               of               entering,               say,               Harvard               Law               School.

And               be               strategic               --               this               is               not               the               time               to               prove               you               are               the               first               amazing               "A"               some               nutty               professor               has               ever               dished               out.

Avoid               at               all               cost:               (a)               all               online               colleges;               (b)               all               non-accredited               schools;               (c)               all               for-profit               schools.

Sure,               they               have               great               ads.

Just               don't               waste               your               money.
               3.

Major               in               money.

You               don't               have               to               be               "pre-law."               2011               summer               associates               at               one               BigLaw               firm               I               know               held               degrees               in               molecular               biology               (from               UC               Berkeley),               broadcasting               (Northwest               Missouri),               nursing               (Univ.

of               Rochester),               psychology               (N.Y.U.)               and               chemical               engineering               (Princeton).

Only               one               in               five               majored               in               political               science,               the               traditional               "pre-law"               concentration.
               4.

Volunteer.

School               clubs               with               services               for               the               underprivileged               are               probably               most               convenient.

Don't               dabble.

Commitment               is               what               counts.

The               dates               on               your               curriculum               vitae               should               be               counted               in               years,               not               months.

Better               to               volunteer               once               a               month               for               5               years               than               once               a               day               for               5               months.

If               it's               legal,               even               better.
               5.

Work,               work,               work.

Yes,               the               cream               rises               to               the               top;               the               99%               sweat               it               out.

Intimidated?

Afraid               you               won't               measure               up               around               those               white-shoe               country               club               trust               fund               babies?

Can't               tell               the               salad               fork               from               the               dessert               spoon?

Listen,               the               Financial               District               is               littered               with               lazy               rich               kids               who               graduated               from               Ivy               League               schools               and               now               follow               their               parents'               footsteps               down               The               Street.

Not               all               CEOs               are               enamored               of               spoiled               brats.

Somebody               has               to               do               the               heavy               lifting!

Seriously,               employers               always               need               young,               hungry               candidates               who               relish               the               opportunity               to               work               like               a               dog.

This               means               you!

Work               your               way               through               college,               even               if               it               takes               you               5               years.

When               you're               done,               anyone               who               reads               your               resume               will               hear               what               you're               saying               in               an               instant:               No               one               has               handed               me               anything.

Trust               me,               you               do               not               need               that               silver               spoon.
               6.

Target               your               law               school               references.

Your               law               school               application               is               going               to               require               letters               of               recommendation.

Identify               three               very               important               people               in               your               life               who               can't               say               enough               great               things               about               you.

Then               spend               every               waking               moment               reinforcing               their               admiration.

You               don't               have               to               ask               for               their               endorsement               yet.

Just               don't               ever               stop               thinking               about               those               recommendations.

I               know               a               Wall               Street               partner               who               scored               a               rec               from               the               college               dean               by               working               in               the               financial               aid               office               at               Queens               College.

He               insists               today               that               this               is               what               put               him               over               the               top               into               NYU               Law               (#6               on               the               2011               US               News               rankings).
               7.

Ace               the               LSATs.

This               gets               easier               every               day.

Fewer               test-takers               are               signing               up;               more               test-takers               are               doing               badly.

Some               22,000               people               suffered               through               LSAT               sessions               this               past               February               2012,               said               to               be               the               lowest               acitvity               since               2001,               according               to               data               from               the               Law               School               Admission               Council.

Sign               up               for               a               Kaplan               course               and               do               all               the               homework.

Trust               me,               everyone               else               will.

The               LSAT               blog               ponts               out               that               in               2010,               there               were               about               4,052               170+               scoring               applicants.

Your               LSAT               score               will               catapult               you               to               a               top-tier,               high-paying               summer               associate               position               which               by               the               way               amounts               to               a               job               offer.

There's               an               LSAT               blog               to               obsess               over               that               while               you're               waiting               for               the               big               day               with               columns               like               "               7               Sage               LSAT               tips               to               improve               your               score               ."
               8.

Go               to               Harvard.

Someone               has               to               get               in.

May               as               well               be               you.

Life               is               too               short               to               be               second-rate.

Look               at               it               this               way:               If               you               go               to               a               top               law               school,               Wall               Street               firms               recruit               you,               instead               of               you               applying               to               them.

By               the               way:               Forget               Yale.

Few               of               those               eggheads               practice               law;               they               do               things               like               become               televangelists,               or               run               for               President.

Not               sure               about               Harvard?

OK               -               put               applications               in               for               the               entire               T14               --               that's               law               school               shorthand               for               "Top               14"               on               the               US               News               rankings               (in               contrast               with               "TTT"               and               "TTTT"               law               schools,               which               you               must               avoid               like               the               plague.

No               one               wants               to               hire               these               people).

Warning:               High               GPAs               get               unsolicited               scholarships               from               TTT               and               TTTT               law               schools.

Do               not               compromise.

Go               for               the               golden               ring.
               9.

Aim               for               BigLaw.

Getting               a               high-paying               BigLaw               job               on               Wall               Street               is               quite               simply               not               as               hard               as               it               used               to               be.

Law               school               admissions               are               down,               which               means               the               competition               is               less               fierce.

The               Top               Law               Schools               website               provides               guidance               on               personal               statements               to               people               like               you.

Don't               apply               to               anything               below               the               top               15               on               their               list.

To               get               into               Yale,               you               need               to               score               between               170               and               177               on               the               LSAT.

(But               like               I               said,               forget               Yale,               unless               you               want               to               represent               rice               pickers               in               some               Bolivian               village.)
               10.

Make               Law               Review.

This               can               be               something               of               a               mystery               on               law               school               campuses.

Selection               takes               place               at               the               end               of               your               first               year.

Whether               you               do               or               do               not               "make               law               review"               defines               pretty               much               the               rest               of               your               legal               career.

At               Harvard,               44               students               are               invited               to               join               the               Harvard               Law               Review               each               year.

Acceptance               is               mostly               based               on               a               writing               competition,               plus               first               year               grades,               plus               sometimes               other               criteria.

Wes               Henricksen,               author               of               the               popular               Making               Law               Review:               The               Expert's               Guide               to               Mastering               the               Write-On               Competition               ,               interviewed               law               review               members               at               several               competitive               law               schools               to               find               out               how               they               handled               the               writing               competition.

It               would               not               hurt               to               read               up               on               Henricksen.
               11.

Take               the               Summer               Associate               Offer.

Top               tier               law               schools               are               good               for               one               thing:               You               get               offers.

And               you               don't               even               have               to               graduate               first.

Those               offers               roll               in               at               the               end               of               your               second               year,               when               Wall               Street               law               firms               are               looking               for               their               next               wave               of               new               lawyers.

These               Summer               Associate               jobs               pay               very,               very               well               -               as               well               as               a               permanent               job               offer,               right               out               of               the               gate.

This               is               where               most               Wall               Street               legal               job               offers               come               from.

Note,               though,               that               unless               your               daddy               is               a               ceo               or               board               bigwig,               you               must               be               on               Law               Review               to               be               taken               seriously.
               Decisions,               decisions.

If               you               cross               the               t's               and               dot               the               i's,               you               too               will               someday               be               contemplating               your               future               career               on               Wall               Street.

The               mind               reels.
               Hey,               you               don't               have               to               wait               this               long               to               study               the               two               annual               lists               put               out               by               American               Lawyer               Magazine:               The               AmLaw               100               and               the               AmLaw               A-List.

These               rankings               are               like               maps               of               buried               treasure,               the               legal               version               of               the               Fortune               500               (which               happens               to               make               up               a               lot               of               the               client               base               of               the               AmLaw               100).

You're               looking               for               firms               that               have               high               billing               rates               and               pay               their               lawyers               a               ridiculous               amount               of               money.
               Look               at               it               this               way.

The               1               percent               has               been               skating               for               generations.

The               99               percent               were               locked               out               of               their               private               club.

For               most               of               history,               the               only               way               work               on               Wall               Street               was               to               be               born               there.

And               you               had               to               be               male.

Today,               anyone               can               play               in               the               sandbox.
               The               late               Joseph               H.

Flom,               name               partner               at               Skadden               Arps               who               was               editor               of               law               review               at               Harvard,               was               the               wrong               religion.

His               son               points               out               that               when               Flom               graduated,               "he               couldn't               get               a               job               at               a               'good'               firm               -               they               didn't               hire               Jews."
               Baritone               Paul               Robeson,               the               former               NFL               pro               -               Columbia               Law               grad,               never               got               to               practice               law.

He               had               to               settle               for               becoming               became               a               famous               singing               actor               after               a               secretary               at               the               Wall               Street               law               firm               that               hired               him               refused               to               take               orders               from               a               black               man.
               And               when               Sheila               L.

Birnbaum,               a               litigator               so               legendary               she               has               a               nickname               --               "Queen               of               Torts"               --graduated               from               NYU               Law               School               in               1965,               she               couldn't               let               anyone               know               she               could               type               or               "they               would               start               using               me               as               a               secretary."
               Almost               seems               like               yesterday.
               Remember,               living               well               is               the               best               revenge.

Cha-ching               Cha-ching!






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