<p>Actually, the white-glove firms recruit predominately liberal arts graduates (B.A.) from top tier schools (Williams, Amherst, Harvard, etc.) rather than folks with undergraduate business degrees.</p>
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<li>Are you serious? Look back your idiotic post #17. </li>
<li>Wow. Are we in preschool? Seems like it. To say it takes no genius to be good at these majors is plain ignorance and very childish.</li>
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<p>What activities (football, newspaper, service, fraternities, etc.) look best for an investment banking or other high-level finance job applicant?</p>
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<li>Don’t pick a fight that’s beyond your intellectual league. Please. Mistaking political correctness for truth is such a rookie mistake.</li>
<li>No, we’re not in preschool; you are.</li>
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<p>^</p>
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<li>haha. And what league are you in? If you’re in the Princeton League then you do it injustice. You confuse your own intellectualism (if you have any) with stupidity. Don’t be a hypocrite now.<br></li>
<li>tsk tsk.</li>
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<p>Both of you are making Princeton look bad.</p>
<p>You should be warned that regardless of whether or not you’re majoring in a “BS” major or whatever, your childishness will ensure no firm of repute will be interested in you. Time to grow up.</p>
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<p>None, really. Obviously having something business-y is good, but even Career Services will tell you that it’s based on grades/leadership (in whatever you want)/personality. </p>
<p>Please, for the love of all that is holy, do activities you actually like. Otherwise I guarantee that you will be absolutely miserable with no upside whatsoever as the “fun” part of your day becomes yet more work.</p>
<p>Okay. I’m sorry I made you cry, blue147.</p>