
I have 2 questions, can anybody help me?
First, I'll attend the March ASW, should I ask about the money before or after the visit? Second, is there any particular person or email address I should write to?
Thanks.
lolRVP11 wrote:Everyone should go for VJIL because it's so prestigious and a big leg up at OGI.
i heard you become chummy chummy with your interviewer. Thinking about applying to vigil and social policy.Cavalier wrote:lolRVP11 wrote:Everyone should go for VJIL because it's so prestigious and a big leg up at OGI.
right, but it's going to get more complicated now that everyone knows that. At least two people have told me about this over the past weekYCrevolution wrote:Tax Review.uvahooo wrote:i heard you become chummy chummy with your interviewer. Thinking about applying to vigil and social policy.Cavalier wrote:lolRVP11 wrote:Everyone should go for VJIL because it's so prestigious and a big leg up at OGI.
Woooo.
In your heart, you know it's right.
[More seriously, VTR picked too many LR people last year and had a smaller-than-normal 2L editorial pool, so they're presently understaffed.]
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Hell I wouldn't even include LR on an hard v. easy list. More like impossible(law review) v. hard/easy (the rest of them). 15 write on spots for 368 students....lolgladiator wrote:It varies year to year but generally:whoknows12 wrote:does anybody know the general order of hardest to easiest journals to get on to?
Law Review
International (VJIL)
Politics, Social Policy, Tax
Business, Environmental
Technology, Sports/Entertainment
Not sure where Criminal fits in, it's a fairly new journal.
Honest answer - it varies every year. Some years VJIL is the 'hardest' to get on while other years Law & Social Policy is hardest. It's difficult to predict. Our year, VJIL had fewer than average tryouts (per rumor) because there was a reputation for it requiring dramatically more time (probably not true) than other journals.whoknows12 wrote:does anybody know the general order of hardest to easiest journals to get on to?
It's the only journal with a note requirement (other than LR) which is at least some time increase, even if you do a paper course. I'm also pretty sure I've heard horror stories of cite checks involving all kinds of treaties and weird foreign sources that are harder to pull than SCOTUS cases and LR articles.vamedic03 wrote:whoknows12 wrote:reputation for it requiring dramatically more time (probably not true) than other journals.
This is hearsay, but I've heard that they separate the source finding from the cite checking. If that's really the case, then hunting down odd sources isn't that bad.thesealocust wrote:It's the only journal with a note requirement (other than LR) which is at least some time increase, even if you do a paper course. I'm also pretty sure I've heard horror stories of cite checks involving all kinds of treaties and weird foreign sources that are harder to pull than SCOTUS cases and LR articles.vamedic03 wrote:whoknows12 wrote:reputation for it requiring dramatically more time (probably not true) than other journals.
It might still be exaggerated, but based on those two pieces of evidence it wouldn't surprise me if it really was a bigger time commitment.
tbf there could be some overlap between those who write on and those who grade on, but yeah, 15ish out of 368 is not what i would call good odds.BruceWayne wrote:Hell I wouldn't even include LR on an hard v. easy list. More like impossible(law review) v. hard/easy (the rest of them). 15 write on spots for 368 students....lolgladiator wrote:It varies year to year but generally:whoknows12 wrote:does anybody know the general order of hardest to easiest journals to get on to?
Law Review
International (VJIL)
Politics, Social Policy, Tax
Business, Environmental
Technology, Sports/Entertainment
Not sure where Criminal fits in, it's a fairly new journal.
I have literally heard 0 good things about this journal, including from people who are on it. Lots of work (citechecks, note requirement, etc.) for no real benefit...except the uber prestige of course. I mean if you like International Law it may be worth it...RVP11 wrote:Everyone should go for VJIL because it's so prestigious and a big leg up at OGI.
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I'd guess that it's nearly 100% undergrads.LLB2JD wrote:I am wondering about your opinions of this location:
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Thanks in advance
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+1oscodasa wrote:I have a question regarding housing at UVa...What do you do with your place during the summer, assuming you take a position outside of Charlottesville? As it's more of a college town I assume it's harder to sublet and I doubt many places offer 9 month leases...so to that end, what is the most common path here?
Thank you in advance!
1) Get a lease that doesn't run through the summer.oscodasa wrote:I have a question regarding housing at UVa...What do you do with your place during the summer, assuming you take a position outside of Charlottesville? As it's more of a college town I assume it's harder to sublet and I doubt many places offer 9 month leases...so to that end, what is the most common path here?
Thank you in advance!
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The class of 2010 did OGI in August/September of 2008. The Dow was between 11,000 and 12,000.$$$$$$ wrote:46% class of 2010 got jobs paying six figures and they did oci at a time the dow hit 6000, to me thats pretty ridiculous.
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