<p>Look, Baller -- I think your Q has been answered. </p>
<p>If you do very well throughout the rest of your academic career, and do very well on the LSAT, then you have a chance to attend a top school.</p>
<p>So if that's really what you want to do, strive for all A's for here on out. If you get mostly A's/A-'s, with maybe a few B's/B+'s, then you should have a shot. (Focus on your grade trend in an addendum to your application.) </p>
<p>Also, if you have anything else that makes you distinctive (URM status, etc.), that will also help.</p>
<p>(A 3.2 JC gpa with a 3.8 UC GPA should give you around a 3.6, which will be fine for Columbia Law, provided you get the right LSAT score.)</p>