<p>"i was in the same damn position you are in last year. i'm from norcal and i alwasy thought i would go to davis since it's a little closer to home. it was a hard choice, and 5 minutes before deadline i chose UCI. best decision of my life."</p>
<p>My story:</p>
<p>i was in the same damn position you are in last year. i'm from socal and i alwasy thought i would go to irvine since it's a little closer to home. it was a hard choice, and 5 minutes before deadline i chose UCD. best decision of my life.</p>
<p>I have only got into UCD so far and not UCI, but if it came down to it I would probably choose UCI over D. I'm from norcal as well and have been to both campuses and I just like the surrounding cities etc around UCI opposed to UCD...where there isn't really much. That's not really a bad thing since Davis seems like a really cool college town but UCI just appeals to me a bit more I think.</p>
<p>
[quote]
8,346 out of 23,458 total undergraduate students at UC Davis are either in a bio-related major or engineering major, so that means 1 out of every 3 Davis students is either a scientist or an engineer.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Since when did all bio-related majors turn into scientists? What is Davis's graduation rate? And how many of those that do graduate actually get a related-major jobs? Please find me a link that says 1/3 of all Davis graduates turn into either a scientist or an engineer.</p>