Word: transfers
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...marinated white anchovy sandwiches ($8). Owner Tom Colicchio (Craft and Gramercy Tavern) also has an outpost on a Tribeca street corner and even caters to Hampton Jitney passengers. But don't be fooled by these eateries' casual façades and low prices. Fine ingredients and culinary methods can transfer from ritzy kitchens to patches of grass...
...Swisher first presented the UVA Student Council with the petition to persuade them to pass a resolution and present it to the Dean and President of the University. Despite tremendous support from both students and faculty, the petition was ultimately unsuccessful in persuading the UVA administration to alter its transfer policy. “The Student Council passed the resolution, but the Dean and President still stuck with their original decision,” Swisher said. Ryan A. Petersen ’08 recently wrote a position paper advocating that eight visiting freshman students from Tulane be allowed to apply...
...course, allowing visiting students to apply to transfer does not mean that all of them will stay, but the act of giving them the opportunity to transfer is important in and of itself. By having the opportunity to apply, visiting students would benefit psychologically from playing an active role in determining their future, rather than simply being shuttled from university to university without any sense of agency. Perhaps this would be cold comfort to the visiting the students who are not accepted, but the opportunity to transfer is better than getting rejected a priori and summarily cast...
...practical consequences to the New Orleans universities will be minimal, and possibly even positive. There are only eight freshmen here from Tulane, and the transfer admission rate hovers around 6 or 7 percent, so even if every visiting freshman applied to transfer, it is unlikely that more than one or two would be accepted. Even with upperclassmen also applying, the impact on Tulane’s 6,000- and Loyola’s 3,500-strong student body would be infinitesimal. Furthermore, forcing students to return to New Orleans will only lead to embittered student bodies that spend their time...
...situation, the University should not feel bound by rigid adherence to typical admission rules. These students are not the property of their original universities, to be shipped away on the next flight back to New Orleans; rather, they are important members of our community. Allowing them to apply to transfer will benefit everyone. After all, the original agreement to take these students was not made to help Tulane and Loyola, it was made to help the students themselves. We shouldn’t turn our backs on them now that New Orleans...