Word: recruitable
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Dubro eventually grew frustrated with the assumption that questioning the organization was the same as questioning God's will and that leaving Opus would result in eternal damnation. He says he felt constantly pressured to recruit new members. He began to speak openly about his grievances and within a couple of years was asked to move out of the center. He left the group in 1987. "There is no ability to complain," he says. "It's absolute control, absolute obedience...
...problematic” types. The admissions office in turn can use this feedback as a way of aiding judgments about how students in certain groups—among them different high schools and current students’ younger siblings—are doing overall and whether to recruit more or fewer of them. Despite concern amongst many freshman that they were not told about this practice, we can see no problem, provided this information is used sensibly. Collecting feedback about previous actions is a natural part of any review or strategy for improvement, and we welcome anything that will better...
Harrington, who helped recruit Browne, described her newly hired colleague as “her generation’s most foremost Darwin scholar...
Fellows would also profit from close interactions with the faculty members with whom they would work in advising groups of freshmen, as efforts to recruit ever-greater numbers of faculty to work as first-year advisers continue. At a college where the remoteness of faculty is a common complaint, creating opportunities for student-faculty contact into a new advising program stands to make a great contribution to the lives of both freshmen and the upperclassmen who advise them...
...founding and leading the Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights. FAIR, a coalition of 40 law schools, unsuccessfully sought over the last two and half years to overturn the Solomon Amendment, a federal law that forces universities to choose between forgoing federal funds and allowing the military to recruit on their campuses. Schools have refused to do so because “don’t ask, don’t tell” clashes with many law schools’—including Harvard’s—non-discrimination policies...