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Thompson broke this number down into 600 firms and 25 to 30 public interest organizations. In addition, McKinsey and Company and Merrill Lynch interviewed on campus, and other consulting firms and investment banks presented information to students...

Author: By David Lenter, OF THE HARVARD LAW RECORD | Title: News From The Harvard Law Record | 4/28/1997 | See Source »

...Massachusetts, you get a week of vacation every two months. Plus you get all holidays off, and three months in the summer. That's plenty of time to write your novel, sing in your band and read the books you'd never have the time to read working for McKinsey and Company...

Author: By Michael K. Mayo, | Title: Gateway to the Good | 3/4/1997 | See Source »

...nothing more than dressing all up to try and impress a date who can't even party because she has to get up early for lab the next morning. It's the grades that matter anyway. Don't worry about dating until you're out there working at McKinsey...

Author: By Christopher R. Mcfadden, | Title: The Harvard Dream | 2/18/1997 | See Source »

...Firms are realizing that people with a science or arts background bring a different sort of analysis to the table," said Christopher Aisenbrey, a recruiter for McKinsey & Co., one of the largest consulting firms recruiting at Harvard last week. "That diversity lends itself to being successful as a consultant and learning the way we think...

Author: By Molly Hennessy-fiske, | Title: Consulting Clamor | 2/8/1997 | See Source »

...artists. A teacher makes $90,000 his or her first year, and a staff reporter at The New York Times makes several hundred thousand dollars. In this magical kingdom, a partner at Sullivan and Cromwell earns $25,000 a year, and similarly those at Smith Barney, Bear Stearns, McKinsey and the others receive a meager $30,000 salary. Would Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Columbia Law Schools still attract enough students to fill next year's incoming class? Would the same percentage of Harvard seniors still decide to undergo recruiting? In sum, would these corporate-America professions still have an appeal...

Author: By Erica S. Schacter, | Title: Pre-Professionals Are Not Morally Bankrupt | 11/18/1996 | See Source »

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