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I actually went to the University of Virginia, but I have a lot of respect for Michigan. Unless you are completely driven towards one field as an undergrad, keep your options open until something grabs you. If you are thinking about post-graduate, then you can tailor what you do towards that goal. Unfortunately, today's colleges and universites are treated a lot like vocational schools rather than institutions of higher learning. The point used to be to grow as a person, socially and academically, and prepare yourself for life, rather than locking you into whatever it is you happened to choose as your major. I did some statistics in school and found it a lot of fun. There is no rule saying you couldn't do Statistics undergrad and go to Law school. I actually think the math curriculum would benefit you greatly in law school. You could probably take some classes in classical Logic, as well as Stochastic systems that would help with it as well.
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Where's the cake?
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