
don't go to yale and graduate in the middle of the class.
THIS IS VERY, VERY BAD ADVICE.
There are about 110 partners at my firm who think that is great advice.
Well, they're completely out of touch then.
Rich lawyers tend to be out of touch.
The dean who gave you that advice was intentionally giving bad advice or is a complete idiot. Given that he's a law school dean, it's probably the first. It's an absurd philosophy for an applicant to bank on getting in the top 10% at any school when he has no idea about what law school classes are like and whether or not he's any good at them in the first place.
The odds are against them. 9 out of 10 law students who all did well enough in undergrad and on the LSAT who hope they get in the top 10% end up not being in the top 10%.
If some one ever tells an applicant to go to KU or Illinois or tons of other schools over Yale (or a number of other schools) for any reason at all, they do not have the applicant's best interest in mind.
I agree that the dean is not exactly an unbiased source, but there are dozens of millionaire, practice leading attorneys at my firm who went to ku, mu, umkc and washburn over ivy league schools. The highest grossing attorney at my firm (represents fortune 500 companies in "bet-the-company litigation") went to mu for both undergrad and law school. He is arguably the best attorney in his field in the nation.
Another point is this: when law firms hire, they hire local talent. For example, there is a high dollar litigation firm based out of new york that just recently opened an office in kc. When they opened the office, they moved one or two attorneys from new york and then filled remaining positions with attorneys from the area. When they start to hire new associates for the kc office, they will look first at the top local talent that has served in summer associate positions with their office (not unlike a basketball or football program that recruits in-state). The attorneys in the area and the summer associates in the kc office will likely have come from.... ku, mu, umkc, etc.
I'm not saying "pick ku over yale." i'm saying pick the school where you will be competitive and at least as intelligent as your classmates. Law school choice means significantly less than your class ranking. It is better to be #1 at ku then #104 at yale. That's the point i am making.
But this is all moot. If you can get into yale, you will probably be well off no matter which top 100 school you choose.