<p>does anyone have these numbers?</p>
<p>You can't be serious. (And I say this as a lawyer.)</p>
<p>Please tell me this isn't the criteria you are using to pick your school...</p>
<p>Perhaps it's just a simple curiosity? (Why do people have to question others' motives so much on this site?)</p>
<p>I'd assume both are near 99%. Rather do you mean placement at places like Harvard, Yale, and Stanford law?</p>
<p>why is everyone flipping out?</p>
<p>lol?</p>
<p>just a question =)</p>
<p>i saw a link of</p>
<p>Pre-Law</a> Information Menu - Office of Career Services</p>
<p>and got scared</p>
<p>Law school admission is very much dependent on LSAT score and GPA. Factors such as where you go to undergrad school. ECs etc are not nearly as important. Therefore, your question is hard to answer. Besides that, you are probably more interested in WHERE the Dartmouth and Princeton grads go to law school.</p>
<p>That link is VERY interesting. I know that Yale is considered to be the best law school in the country and is one (if not the) hardest law schools to get into, but less than ten percent of Princeton's applicants got in. 8.4%? Very interesting. I think this goes to show that where you go for undergrad doesn't matter too much...it's all about LSAT and GPA.</p>
<p>Righto.</p>
<p>Now to get into HLS from Community College.... ;)</p>
<p>You can do it! If you started out at a CC and eventually got into HLS, you definitley won't be the first and you definitely won't be the last!</p>
<p>Haha, I'm going to NYU, but I was under the impression you needed an undergrad school, even if you did go to CC.</p>
<p>Yeah, I think you'd have to start out at a CC and transfer to a four-year university.</p>