Word: admitting
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...York Times on March 29, 2003. They expressed this sentiment in reaction to a Supreme Court case which questioned the admissions process at the University of Michigan (UM). Treating race as one factor among many, both Harvard and UM (which won the legal battle) seek to admit a diverse student body. With classes composed of a wide range of ethnicities and backgrounds, each individual Harvard student benefits from the myriad perspectives their peers bring to the table. The logic is simple. But in practice, Harvard’s well-known policy of treating race as a factor in admissions decisions...
Donato agreed, though he did admit that his generally airtight squad “did some things we don’t normally...
Both critics and supporters of the new school admit that Evans’ history as principal of CRLS from 1999 through 2001 has added a personal element to the debate...
...while much of the criticism is leveled by those members of the Class of 2008 currently embroiled in the process, even upperclassmen favored with the gift of hindsight (most would likely agree that, in retrospect, blocking choices are far less monumentous than they seem at the time) can admit that the current procedure is far from perfect. But thusfar, reasonable solutions seem few and far between...
...wonder how many of the 119 applicants recently rejected by Harvard Business School (HBS) for hacking into the admissions website were actually to be admitted. If the number is significant (and I suspect it is, by HBS’s reluctance to disclose it), then it’s time for HBS to admit the obvious—that its process admits people that HBS Dean Kim B. Clark ’74 calls “unethical at best...