<p>
[quote]
Indiana in the US News outranks Wisconsin for Business, but other rankings, including specialities of the US News, gives Wisconsin the edge.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>US News Specialty Rankings:</p>
<p>Accounting<br>
Indiana 7
Wisconsin 18</p>
<p>Entrepreneurship<br>
Indiana 3
Wisconsin Not Ranked</p>
<p>Finance
Indiana 7
Wisconsin 15</p>
<p>Insurance<br>
Indiana 8
Wisconsin 3</p>
<p>International Business<br>
Indiana 15
Wisconsin Not Ranked</p>
<p>Management<br>
Indiana 5
Wisconsin 17</p>
<p>Management Information Systems<br>
Indiana 7
Wisconsin Not Ranked</p>
<p>Marketing<br>
Indiana 7
Wisconsin 8</p>
<p>Production/Operations Management<br>
Indiana 6
Wisconsin Not Ranked</p>
<p>Quantitative Analysis<br>
Indiana 8
Wisconsin Not Ranked</p>
<p>Real Estate
Indiana 2
Wisconsin 7</p>
<p>Supply Chain Management/Logistics<br>
Indiana 10
Wisconsin 18</p>
<p>Business Week Undergraduate Program Rankings:</p>
<p>Indiana 18
Wisconsin 28</p>
<p>
[quote]
There is no I-Banking or Consulting leg up on Wisconsin with new Wisconsin to Wall Street programs
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Restricted:</a> Kelley School of Business: Indiana University Bloomington</p>
<p>
[quote]
Every major study of journalism and communication programs has ranked Wisconsin in the top 10 nationally since the creation of rankings.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Yes, but Indiana outranks it. There hasn't been a Journalism Ranking posted by the US News since 1996, here it is.</p>
<p>=======================================================</p>
<h1>Journalism School Rankings - US News & World Report Rankings (1996)</h1>
<ol>
<li> Univ. of Missouri at Columbia </li>
<li> Columbia University (N.Y.) </li>
<li> Northwestern Univ. (Medill) (Ill.) </li>
<li> Univ. of N.C. at Chapel Hill </li>
<li> Indiana Univ. at Bloomington </li>
<li> University of Florida </li>
<li> Ohio University (Scripps) </li>
<li> Univ. of Wisconsin at Madison </li>
<li> Univ. of California at Berkeley </li>
<li> University of Kansas (White) </li>
<li> Univ. of Md. at College Park </li>
<li> University of Texas at Austin </li>
</ol>
<p>
[quote]
So no, Indiana is not a better choice.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>US News doesn't agree with you.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Indiana frequently functions as a safety school, has never crossed the US News top tier, is never in the top 10 of public universities, is not a top 5 research university, is not the 2nd best public university in having NAS faculty, and doesn't even have half of its class from the top 10% of their graduating HS classes.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>And yet it still offers better Academics than Wisconsin in Journalism, Music, and Business. </p>
<p>
[quote]
Bloomington simply can't compete. Basketball and the Little 500 hundred don't make up for what the best college towns offer.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Sports Illustrated and the majority of America disagrees with you.</p>
<p>SI.com</a> - SI on Campus - Best College Sports Towns - Thursday September 11, 2003 10:59AM</p>
<p>Can't compete? Would ranking in the top 6 in the country according to college towns be considered "competing"? Do you have a ranking you'd like to provide or are you going to continue quoting what you may have seen a commentator someone say on Sportscenter?</p>
<p>
[quote]
42% come from outside the state of Wisconsin. Minnesota residents are about 12% of the school, with the rest (~30%) coming from Illinois, NY, Boston, LA, DC.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>You would think a current student, like yourself, would know their school better.</p>
<p>Geographic Distribution
* Wisconsin Residents 3,378 (60%)
* Minnesota Residents 631 (11%)
* Out-of-State Students (excluding MN) 1,408 (25%)</p>
<p>37 > 25. Those numbers aren't similar.</p>