Word: recruiters
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Because Harvard doesn’t recruit dancers, the team has a history of taking dancers with a variety of backgrounds...
...harder for Fox to trumpet his accomplishments when criminals like El Verdugo are on the loose. According to Mexican officials, Lazcano was a clean-cut Mexican army recruit from the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz when he was picked a decade ago to be part of the highly trained Airborne Special Forces Group. The unit was sent to the eastern border to battle drug trafficking. But in the late 1990s, Lazcano and more than 30 other members of the special forces began working for drug lord Osiel Cárdenas, head of the Matamoros-based Gulf cartel, which at the time...
...Professors Bobo and Morgan leaving was a substantial influence on my decision to leave Harvard,” Dawson said. “Professor Bobo was my closest research colleague at Harvard University and probably did as much as anyone to recruit me to Harvard in the first place. I left behind a couple of research teams at the University of Chicago in order to work with Professor Bobo and other members of the African American Studies department...
Nevertheless, Harvard cannot be content to rest upon its laurels. It must continue to work to recruit low-income students and must also continue to publicize the HFAI and its financial aid program in general so that as many high school students as possible know of the aid the College offers. Harvard has made great strides forward, but it still has a long way to go. Only then will we have realized President Summers statement in the Harvard University Gazette that “Harvard is—really and truly—an option for exceptionally talented students whatever...
...their student populations, the programs at these two-year schools are graduating more black and Latino students whose talents and preparation mean they don't necessarily need to rely on a quota system for admission into those schools. "It does make it easier for selective institutions like ours to recruit a greater diversity," says Peter Spear, provost at Madison. And that, in turn, is making it easier for community colleges to keep recruiting honors students...