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Post by Mocha on Feb 25, 2020 19:21:10 GMT -5
She should be fed nothing but Hot Pockets while in prison.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2020 19:53:30 GMT -5
I don't know anything about rowing but Olivia Jade's rowing credentials look impressive. Coxswain. Not rower.
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Post by Mocha on Feb 26, 2020 10:32:12 GMT -5
Not sure what's more embarrassing, that she is going to prison for the admission scandal or that she's known for being related to the guy who invented Hot Pockets.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 26, 2020 20:01:59 GMT -5
Not sure what's more embarrassing, that she is going to prison for the admission scandal or that she's known for being related to the guy who invented Hot Pockets. You have all the money someone ever could need, provided by your father's unique invention. You do not have to work because of all these millions, all you had to do is raise the next generation and help them do even greater things. They went to a super expensive private high school in Newport. And you had to pay a bribe to get them into USC? Maybe she has a lawsuit against Sage?
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Post by ilalum92 on Feb 26, 2020 23:51:57 GMT -5
They were positioned as Beach Volleyball recruits. I wonder if this coming out relates to Collier’s retirement???
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Post by Maui’s Hook on Feb 27, 2020 12:00:38 GMT -5
They were positioned as Beach Volleyball recruits. I wonder if this coming out relates to Collier’s retirement??? This was discussed in the beach forum when Collier was retiring. There were some coincidental athletic department resignations around the same time. Crazy to see some of the different ways Heinel and Co. gamed the system, and how coaches were either compliant or complacent when their admin did some complimentary fundraising for them.
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Post by ilalum92 on Feb 27, 2020 17:24:58 GMT -5
They were positioned as Beach Volleyball recruits. I wonder if this coming out relates to Collier’s retirement??? This was discussed in the beach forum when Collier was retiring. There were some coincidental athletic department resignations around the same time. Crazy to see some of the different ways Heinel and Co. gamed the system, and how coaches were either compliant or complacent when their admin did some complimentary fundraising for them. Thanks for the info. Don't follow the beach forum so appreciate the insight. I thought it was strange she just decided to retire so suddenly. Probably didn't want to be around when the %*$# hit the fan.
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Post by kaygirl97 on Mar 1, 2020 20:46:35 GMT -5
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Post by jcvball22 on Mar 3, 2020 17:54:01 GMT -5
JUDGE ORDERS USC TO COME CLEAN About Admissions Documents A judge in the college admissions scandal says USC's been covering up the fact it gives preference to students tied to influential people, and a new court order seems to be good news for Lori Loughlin and her co-defendants. The judge is ordering USC to turn over unredacted documents in the college admissions scandal. According to the judge, the University has been misleading the court by blacking out certain information in documents it's produced. The judge says prosecutors have argued students trying to get into USC do NOT get preferential treatment if influential people advocate for them. However, the judge says she's now seen unredacted USC emails which "directly contradict" that claim from prosecutors. While the court had previously allowed USC to redact names of applicants and school officials -- it's now changing that because it sees the information is critical to defense attorneys in the case. Lori and Mossimo Giannulli's attorneys, along with other defendants, have argued USC institutionally gives preference to so-called "side door" applicants -- people with money, power and influence. The judge seems to be saying there are emails, and other documents, that could support that ... and USC needs to be more forthcoming with admissions info. www.tmz.com/2020/03/03/lori-loughlin-judge-usc-documents-college-admissions-scandal/USC, as a private institution, is under absolutely zero obligation to anyone. They can admit or not admit any student they want for any reason they want. The selectivity threshold and average standards may take a hit, but the negligible number of admits per year that would affect wouldn't put much of a dent in that. It has no bearing on the issues at hand with Giannulli. Handing over the documents doesn't make the case for them, as their issue is using a third part to falsify documents and lie on the admissions application (which voids admission at the discretion of the institution as you have to sign a statement of veracity on the application) and gave a donation to a "non-profit" and took a tax deduction for it. That's money laundering and fraud, hence the wire fraud charges in the original indictment. People seem to be horribly up-in-arms over this idea that "more deserving" students were not admitted. That is highly debatable. Weirdly enough, selectivity and standards aren't entirely tied. It is the business and task of the admissions office to decide by individual merit who they want to admit and what their focus for the campus community is (state schools may have more oversight as part of a system of schools, but private schools can do whatever they want). What we see in the admissions profiles for schools is usually an average, but the range of academic backgrounds actually in an incoming class is usually stratified significantly at a lot of schools. Having ties to influential people or something those people can bring to the school is a perfectly acceptable reason to admit a kid if the school feels it brings something to the community. Falsifying an application is reason to rescind admission.
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Post by hoosierdraft on Apr 2, 2020 10:26:38 GMT -5
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Post by Mocha on Apr 10, 2020 19:02:40 GMT -5
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Post by akbar on Apr 10, 2020 19:40:51 GMT -5
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Post by hammer on Apr 10, 2020 23:58:32 GMT -5
Incriminating evidence no doubt. I'm not seeing much muscle tone in those legs.
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Post by mikegarrison on Apr 11, 2020 1:18:02 GMT -5
But ... she was claimed to be a coxswain.
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Post by silverchloride on Apr 11, 2020 15:44:45 GMT -5
Nice rowing machine.
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