Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell? It's a LAC with D1 sports, business, engineering, and, most important to this post, a pipeline to the Street. It's shocking that it's not more popular among the LAC crowd, as it takes some of the best features from a state school and puts them in a smaller, less scary package. Think of it as a Big Ten school but just one-tenth the size.Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell.
Ok, I'll bite. Describe the so-called pipeline please. In detail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell? It's a LAC with D1 sports, business, engineering, and, most important to this post, a pipeline to the Street. It's shocking that it's not more popular among the LAC crowd, as it takes some of the best features from a state school and puts them in a smaller, less scary package. Think of it as a Big Ten school but just one-tenth the size.Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell.
Ok, I'll bite. Describe the so-called pipeline please. In detail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is a rising high school senior with dreams of working for one of the big Wall Street banks (Goldman, JPM, etc.) after college. His older cousin went that route out of Harvard, and after making it through two years of hell in the form of 80-90 hour weeks, he's living the good life and making bank. DS doesn't have Ivy stats like his cousin, but he's a strong student with a 3.8UW/4.3W at a respectable public, 1480/33, and well-rounded ECs including varsity sports, student government, piano, volunteering, etc. He wants to stay in the eastern half of the country but otherwise is geographically open. What schools should be on his list?
Maybe he could use City University of New York as a safety. My guess is that, for many fields, you get the roughly equally talented spouses of the NYU and Columbia professors for a quarter of the cost.
Anonymous wrote:Kenyon has excellent economics dept and connected alumni
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell? It's a LAC with D1 sports, business, engineering, and, most important to this post, a pipeline to the Street. It's shocking that it's not more popular among the LAC crowd, as it takes some of the best features from a state school and puts them in a smaller, less scary package. Think of it as a Big Ten school but just one-tenth the size.Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell.
Anonymous wrote:My son has similar goals and is just finishing up his first year at NYU-Stern. Let me know I you have any specific questions. His stats were quite similar to your child’s.
Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell? It's a LAC with D1 sports, business, engineering, and, most important to this post, a pipeline to the Street. It's shocking that it's not more popular among the LAC crowd, as it takes some of the best features from a state school and puts them in a smaller, less scary package. Think of it as a Big Ten school but just one-tenth the size.Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell.
Anonymous wrote:What does kid look like? Did he play sports?
I interviewed at several Wall Street firms after my MBA and most guys were six foot two inch to six foot four inch good looking guys to played Lacrosse
Anonymous wrote:DS is a rising high school senior with dreams of working for one of the big Wall Street banks (Goldman, JPM, etc.) after college. His older cousin went that route out of Harvard, and after making it through two years of hell in the form of 80-90 hour weeks, he's living the good life and making bank. DS doesn't have Ivy stats like his cousin, but he's a strong student with a 3.8UW/4.3W at a respectable public, 1480/33, and well-rounded ECs including varsity sports, student government, piano, volunteering, etc. He wants to stay in the eastern half of the country but otherwise is geographically open. What schools should be on his list?
Never heard of Bucknell? It's a LAC with D1 sports, business, engineering, and, most important to this post, a pipeline to the Street. It's shocking that it's not more popular among the LAC crowd, as it takes some of the best features from a state school and puts them in a smaller, less scary package. Think of it as a Big Ten school but just one-tenth the size.Anonymous wrote:Never heard of Bucknell.