<p>ennisthemance, I was not referring to the residence status of the students, but of the location of the universities. East Coast universities attract more finance types than Midwestern schools or West Coast schools. IBanks do not prefer Cornell, Dartmouth, Georgetown or UVa students to Chicago, Michigan, Northwestern or Stanford students, I guarantee it! But there are far, far more students at Georgetown and UVa that apply for jobs in the financial sector than students from Chicago, Michigan, Northwestern or Stanford.</p>
<p>“I agree with your first 2 points but Chicago has less students enrolled by a noticeable amount at Hopkins Med, WashU Med, UVA Law, and Yale Law compared to the Ivies, Duke, Stanford, etc. I’m curious as to what the remaining 85% of Chicago’s student body who don’t go for PhDs do after graduation.”</p>
<p>Yale Law School (currently enrolled)
Brown 22
Chicago 15
Columbia 24
Cornell 7
Dartmouth 20
Northwestern 9
Penn 17</p>
<p>Michigan Law School (currently enrolled)
Brown 20-29
Chicago 20-29
Columbia 10-19
Cornell 20-29
Dartmouth 10-19
Northwestern 20-29
Penn 10-19</p>
<p>Chicago Law School
I cannot seem to find the data, but I know that Chicago is the most highly represented.</p>
<p>Northwestern Law School
Again, I cannot find the data, but I recall that NU was the most represented, closely followed by Chicago</p>
<p>JHU Medical School (currently enrolled)
Brown 10
Chicago 6
Columbia 14
Cornell 16
Dartmouth 9
Northwestern 5
Penn 7</p>
<p>WUSTL Medical School (enrolled between 1998-2013)
Brown 27
Chicago 18
Columbia 13
Cornell 37
Dartmouth 23
Northwestern 46
Penn 37</p>
<p>Considering that most of those peer schools (with the exception of Dartmouth) are larger than Chicago (Michigan five times larger, Cornell almost three times larger, Penn twice larger, Northwestern 60% larger, Columbia 35% larger, Duke 30% larger and Brown 12% larger), I think Chicago holds its own nicely. </p>