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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: E who wrote (13942)3/3/2000 9:50:00 PM
From: nihil  Read Replies (1) of 769667
 
I think its called "legacy" admission. Even today, at leading schools, perhaps 10 per cent of admissions are reserved for legacies. Usually they are a separate class, with plenty of smart guys at the top of the list. That is doubtless how Bush got into Yale. A few are reserved for athletes and artists -- and always have been doubtless that was how Bradley got into Princeton.
Selections for Rhodes Scholarships are based primarily on state of residency. The candidate must be successful in his studies and preferably an athlete. Interviews are critical. Rhodes specified that scholars should be hearty gentlemen.
Genius level people are selected as Harvard Junior Fellows (if at all able to relate to others like Tom Lehrer). The really smart are abducted into graduate school to work with the star professors. Oxford is considered to be rather infra dig for real scholars (there are some excellent professors) but a Rhodes scholar almost never seeks a doctorate, which is just as well, because the failure rate is ridiculously jacked up by cruel and degenerate martinets. You can always tell an Oxford man, but you cannot tell him much.
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