It really can be most anything you want it to be, however, I an a firm believer that a minor should compliment, supplement, and/or enhance your primary program of study, and should help lead to your overall career goals and objectives in a more beneficial way.
Take the classes that you are good in and that inspire you/interest you. In college, you can have a major and a minor, usually, so you can pick two fields then.
A good major would be pre law. A long with your pre law major, a minor in journalism or political science would be helpful.
Tackling a double major and a double minor is a heavy course load for college. Law schools will be interested in finding out how you plan to parlay that educational background into a law degree.
Business and nutrition
A psychology major would be a good option.A psychology major would be a good option.A psychology major would be a good option.A psychology major would be a good option.A psychology major would be a good option.A psychology major would be a good option.
A Minor and a Major chords.
In vet school, you won't have time to go for a minor. There are some dual degree programs where you double major, but a fair number of them add a year onto your time in school to get both degrees. In pre-veterinary medicine work, however, a common minor is chemistry.
You start out when you play in college in the minor leagues. Then if you're good enough and get noticed, you may get put into the draft of whatever sport. Then, when the draft comes around, if you are picked by a major league team, you are officially in the major leagues. Then you make a lot of money :).
If you practice a lot and get on a high school team you can get a baseball scholarship for college if you do good in the collage team you could get drafted for a minor league team then you could eventually get reconised by a major league team
College plays only about 35% of the number of games MLB plays, so endurance is one difference. The other major thing would be the pitching. The level of pitching is so much higher in MLB then in college. Think of how many players are sitting in the minor league system that were good in college. Why is that?? Most of it has to do with their ability to hit. Fielding is something you can teach and practice to make yourself really good. Hitting is something that is very difficult because every pitcher you face is different. If you do not learn to adapt to the pitcher then even if you are a great college player you will spend your professional career in the minor leagues
yes
Wikipedia has a good list, its not complete, but its good.