<p>harvard
columbia
cornell
umich-ann arbor
u of IL - chicago, and urbana champaign
stanford
johns hopkins
upenn
boston u
wisc-madison
nyu
northwestern</p>
<p>so im looking for a school with an urban setting, that offers good journalism, and business, and premed/prelaw. what is good among my list,and if u have other suggetions, please let me know.</p>
<p>I honestly think Northwestern is the way to go for journalism and business, esp. if you're looking for an urban campus (not in chicago, but on the border). I know kellog is ranked first for business grad. schools, not sure about journalism but it's well known at least in the Chicago area.</p>
<p>UIC isn't a good school, and UIUC has the exact opposite af an urban campus, it is one of the best for business however if not accepted at Northwestern.</p>
<p>Penn is great if you want all of those things at the undergraduate (or graduate level). With 4 undergraduate schools and 12 graduate schools you have access to a lot of different areas of study. And Philly is awesome :)</p>
<p>The University of Minnesota fits all of those requirements. Top 15 Journalism program, top 30 business school. One of the top regional medical & law programs.</p>
<p>Minneapolis is a great city if you don't mind the winters.</p>
<p>Most of the schools on your list--specifically, all but BU, Illinois, Wisconsin, NYU and Northwestern--do not have undergraduate journalism schools. Some may have communications programs, but they're not the same. I'm not sure how you define "urban", since Madison and particularly Champaign wouldn't qualify as urban under most people's definition, but if you're looking for Top 10 jornalism programs located in cities of 1 million plus, you might want to add USC and Miami (Fla.) to your list. If "urban" means over 100,000, add Missouri, Syracuse, and UNC. Not as sure about the rankings of the business schools at these places as I am about the j schools, but I'm sure someone else can help you out in that regard.</p>
<p>Top 10 Ugrad journalism school, #11 business school. As for being urban, well if you live off the main street (state), it is radically different from the more spread out parts of campus. It's more of a college town, however unlike a lot of cities, Madison is not 100% dependent on UW-M for survival (such as maybe ann arbor)</p>
<p>i'm pretty sure that michigan(ann arbor) doesn't have a journalism school. it has one of the best undergrad business programs and good placement for med/law. btw, mike wallace is a michigan grad. </p>
<p>ann arbor is a complete college town: not too big, not too small. i wouldn't call it urban, though.</p>