Very Weird Question......

<p>Is this possible:</p>

<p>Going to Berkeley (or any other respectable univ) for undergrad. Majoring in something law related and biology. Taking both the LSAT's and MCAT's, and doing extremely well on both. And applying to Harvard Law and Harvard Med at the same time? </p>

<p>Is it possible to be a student at Harvard Law and Med at the same time?</p>

<p>Maybe if you want to kill yourself. Med students work something like 60 hours a week as is. It's not a problem of smarts; it's a problem of time commitment. Could you gain acceptance to both programs? Sure. Would you be able to manage it? I doubt it.</p>

<p>Law and Med?</p>

<p>It has been done before, actually my dad's friends daughter said she wanted to do that. I'm not sure if she did though.</p>

<p>I doubt that Harvard would be in favor of it. You'd have tell Harvard a lot of lies about your intentions, and they wouldn't like being lied to.</p>

<p>I think one way you could pull it off would be to enroll in say medical school first and then perform so brilliantly and be so far ahead of the rest of your class after a year or two that you could then sit down with law school dean and tell him that you were bored and needed another challenge to fill up your ample spare time.</p>

<p>Usually when someone has done both law and med it's one after the other, not both at the same time.</p>

<p>well actually, I was thinking attending Harvard KSG and Harvard Med. </p>

<p>What are the entry exams for KSG by the way? Is there any test like the lsat or mcat?</p>

<p>I just thought of something: If MIT had med school, you can apply to MIT Medical School and Harvard Law School. Then Harvard wont have a problem with it.</p>

<p>Yes you could do it (theoretically.) Harvard does offer joint-degrees. Can you you actually do it? A high tolerance for sleep-deprivation is a must, an IQ above 160, a twin with the same name could also help, must have a sense of compassionate cruelty (come on, a doctor AND a lawyer.) Forget chasing ambulance, clients will come to you, and they'll pay the medical and the legal bills.</p>

<p>I would think its an overkill to start with two. Instead I would follow the advice of coureur, try one out, and then consider another one if you have the time.</p>