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Old 05-20-2007, 08:39 PM   #17
RubenB84
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 239
Interesting way of demeaning the HES. So because she had a great resume before going to HES, the ALB she recieved played no part in her sucess? Not to mention that Carnegie Mellon has no problem with her putting ALB Harvard University on her CV proves your point wrong about grads misrepresenting their degrees. It's also interesting that with her dazzling record she could've easily gotten into Harvard College, but chose the ES instead. Probably for financial or other personal reasons? Who knows but HES still helped her out in more ways than one.

http://www.lawyers.com/Texas/Austin/...2069263-f.html

Another example. ALB cum laude, Ohio State JD

http://johncarroll.org/students/arts_faculty.asp

Harvard ALB, MS ED Johns Hopkins

http://www.colby.edu/directory_cs/ljtaylor/
Harvard ALB, Brown MA, PhD

Marie E. Burke, A.L.B. in psychology and J.D. (Harvard University).
http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/1....12/admin.html

Luis Miranda received a master’s degree in professional management from the University of Miami.

J. Vin Vera earned an advanced degree at Harvard Business School.

'00 Isa Seow received a master’s degree from Cambridge University, England.

'99 Adam Cogley is pursuing an MBA at the University of North Carolina’s Kenan Flagler Business School.

'98 Caesar Sodre earned an MBA from Babson College

http://www.dce.harvard.edu/pubs/alum/2005/31.html

The whole point siserune is that Harvard ES is really good at placing people into sweet grads schools. Thats is forte. There are a ton of grads that do. If you were to just skim through a lot of the archive alumni bulletins you would see that, but you are too busy demeaning the school for some strange reason. I am not here to say thats its a substitute for the College. Not at all, but for people looking to GO BACK to school, HES is one of the best out there.
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