Why doesn't Emory University publish its Common Data Set submission?

@GeronimoAlpaca : Lately Collegeboard (which would give the same admissions, okay not admissions, but matriculate data given in a CDS) has been very accurate with enrolled student data if you want to see that. Emory also has its academic profile reports now-a-days which will give the averages for enrolled students of each unit:
http://opb.emory.edu/data/factbook/index.html

After the academic profile reports, there is really no reason for Emory to do CDS (especially if collegeboard is sufficient). After that misreporting thing, they may have had to also go back and change all CDS’s which would be annoying and kind of useless if there are other ways of finding or reporting the same data.

The admissions websites tell about who these colleges wanted, CDS and academic profile tells who they got when the smoke cleared and except for HYPSM level schools, the enrolled data is always lower, and is in fact often significantly lower, so therefore the information on the admissions website is most pertinent to those attempting to get in. Also, if you are interested in just getting in (and not just data gathering), do not be naive and just apply to both because they are linked to Emory and you just want to get into one of them. They are very different, so whether their admissions statistics differ or not should not matter much. Do not apply to both unless you can see yourself as benefiting from going to both equally (in fact, straight up exclude one if it is not a fit whatsoever. Do not “settle” for any option just to get some access to prestige (this even goes to generally selecting schools), choose based upon a somewhat defined set of characteristics outside “great academically” in a vague sense or “well-ranked” or “prestigious”. Be careful.