Anonymous wrote:My cousin's wife was on the Harvard Law Review. She's a smart go-getter who has way to much going on in her life, raising kids and making millions, to waste her time whining about the President on a moms' website.
C'mon, bigotted PP, there's no way you are in the same class as Harvard Law Review types, let alone were one yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a friend going to Harvard Law School. They were shocked how many colleges were represented there. Here is the list
http://www.law.harvard.edu/prospective/jd/apply/undergrads.html
Over 170 different colleges represented in the first year law school class. Think about that 170 different colleges represented at arguably one of the premiere graduate schools in the world.!!!!
Lesson learned is for christ sake - stop obsessing over college entrance to one of 15 or so school - let alone Ivy. Find a place where your child will thrive. Its not over with college admissions and we all know grad school matters more these days.
Your thesis is correct, but you'd have to correct the list to account for affirmative action. It isn't all that difficult for affirmative action
candidates to gain admission to HLS -- or even become editor of the law review.
You have no idea what you're talking about. I actually went to HLS, and affirmative action has nothing to do with the process of choosing the law review editor. Also, while admissions does take underrepresented minority status into account, it is still PLENTY hard to get in. They have more uber qualified candidates than they can possibly admit.
And i knew many a white kid from lesser known colleges there as well.
And you obviously didn't go to HLS, as I did, affirmative action, poverity, women's issues and any number of other "discretionary issues" can be a factor in the write-on competition and has been at least since I was there in 1981. Read from wiki: Membership in the Harvard Law Review is offered to select Harvard law students based on first-year grades and performance in a writing competition held at the end of the first year.[9][10][11] The writing competition includes two components: an edit of an unpublished article and an analysis of a recent United States Supreme Court or Court of Appeals case.[9] The writing competition submissions are graded blindly to assure anonymity.[11][12] Fourteen editors (two from each 1L section) are selected based on a combination of their first-year grades and their competition scores. Twenty editors are selected based solely on their competition scores. The remaining editors are selected on a discretionary basis. According to the law review's webpage, " Some of these discretionary slots may b
e used to implement the Review's affirmative action policy."[9] The president of the Harvard Law Review is elected by the other editors.[
+1. Bottom line is no one is getting into HLS without the creds. Affirmative action or not. Period.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Barry made it on to law review via the write-on process because he had one of the "discreiotnary slots" for being black and then his co-editors elected him President because they thought it would be cool to have the first black editor in their class. I was there.
And now he's President of the U.S. and you're there, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a friend going to Harvard Law School. They were shocked how many colleges were represented there. Here is the list
Actually, i did go there, graduated in 2003, and one of my closest friends (a white male) was pres of law rev, so i am fully aware of the process. Bitter much?
http://www.law.harvard.edu/prospective/jd/apply/undergrads.html
Over 170 different colleges represented in the first year law school class. Think about that 170 different colleges represented at arguably one of the premiere graduate schools in the world.!!!!
Lesson learned is for christ sake - stop obsessing over college entrance to one of 15 or so school - let alone Ivy. Find a place where your child will thrive. Its not over with college admissions and we all know grad school matters more these days.
Your thesis is correct, but you'd have to correct the list to account for affirmative action. It isn't all that difficult for affirmative action
candidates to gain admission to HLS -- or even become editor of the law review.
You have no idea what you're talking about. I actually went to HLS, and affirmative action has nothing to do with the process of choosing the law review editor. Also, while admissions does take underrepresented minority status into account, it is still PLENTY hard to get in. They have more uber qualified candidates than they can possibly admit.
And i knew many a white kid from lesser known colleges there as well.
And you obviously didn't go to HLS, as I did, affirmative action, poverity, women's issues and any number of other "discretionary issues" can be a factor in the write-on competition and has been at least since I was there in 1981. Read from wiki: Membership in the Harvard Law Review is offered to select Harvard law students based on first-year grades and performance in a writing competition held at the end of the first year.[9][10][11] The writing competition includes two components: an edit of an unpublished article and an analysis of a recent United States Supreme Court or Court of Appeals case.[9] The writing competition submissions are graded blindly to assure anonymity.[11][12] Fourteen editors (two from each 1L section) are selected based on a combination of their first-year grades and their competition scores. Twenty editors are selected based solely on their competition scores. The remaining editors are selected on a discretionary basis. According to the law review's webpage, " Some of these discretionary slots may b
e used to implement the Review's affirmative action policy."[9] The president of the Harvard Law Review is elected by the other editors.[
Anonymous wrote:Barry made it on to law review via the write-on process because he had one of the "discreiotnary slots" for being black and then his co-editors elected him President because they thought it would be cool to have the first black editor in their class. I was there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have a friend going to Harvard Law School. They were shocked how many colleges were represented there. Here is the list
http://www.law.harvard.edu/prospective/jd/apply/undergrads.html
Over 170 different colleges represented in the first year law school class. Think about that 170 different colleges represented at arguably one of the premiere graduate schools in the world.!!!!
Lesson learned is for christ sake - stop obsessing over college entrance to one of 15 or so school - let alone Ivy. Find a place where your child will thrive. Its not over with college admissions and we all know grad school matters more these days.
Your thesis is correct, but you'd have to correct the list to account for affirmative action. It isn't all that difficult for affirmative action candidates to gain admission to HLS -- or even become editor of the law review.
Anonymous wrote:Barry made it on to law review via the write-on process because he had one of the "discreiotnary slots" for being black and then his co-editors elected him President because they thought it would be cool to have the first black editor in their class. I was there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Another reason I like the private school forum is reading complaints from rich white people who can't stand it that their rich white kid didn't get into some elite something and a non-rich non-white kid did. When everybody knows perfectly well that rich white kids are by definition better than non-rich non-white kids!)
If you really want to see ugly racial whining like that, try reading the public school threads on GT/magnet admissions. Those people are nasty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Barry made it on to law review via the write-on process because he had one of the "discreiotnary slots" for being black and then his co-editors elected him President because they thought it would be cool to have the first black editor in their class. I was there.
And now he's President of the U.S. and you're there, too.
Anonymous wrote:...and has a Nobel Prize.
I guess life is not fair and your smart, intelligent inheriter of your genes was cheated of his/her entitled place as leader of the free world.