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What Groups Need Affirmative Action?
  + stars: | 2024-03-15 | by ( David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
To do so, Abramitzky and Boustan collected millions of tax filings, census records and other data and analyzed upward mobility over time. As in the past, immigrants themselves tend to remain poor if they arrive poor, as many do. Within a generation or two, immigrant families resemble native families in economic terms. Overall upward mobility has declined sharply. For a mix of reasons — including their willingness to move to U.S. regions with strong economies — immigrant families have kept climbing society’s ladder.
Persons: — Ran Abramitzky, Leah Boustan, Princeton —, , Boustan Organizations: Stanford, Princeton, Immigrants Locations: United States, Gold, Asia, Latin America, Italy, Russia, U.S
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —Drug task force officers suspected a Minnesota couple of selling methamphetamine when they raided their house in an operation that left five officers and one resident wounded last week, according to a search warrant released Wednesday. Gunfire broke out last Thursday when Sherburne County Drug Task Force officers attempted to execute the search warrant at the home of Karl Thomas Holmberg, 64. A second warrant released showed that police also looked for flammable and electrical materials and fire damage after the raid after seeing black smoke inside the residence as Holmberg exited, look back, then went back inside. He wrote that he got an informant or informants to buy meth from the couple twice earlier this year. Interviewed by police at the hospital, he said he didn’t think the officers serving the search warrant “had a right to be there and told them to leave,” according to the complaint.
Persons: Karl Thomas Holmberg, Holmberg, . Holmberg, , Ron Thomas, Austin Turner, Turner, Organizations: Task Force, Princeton —, BCA Locations: MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota, Sherburne, Glendorado Township, Princeton, Minneapolis, Benton, Benton County, Sherburne County
Parents are willing to pay upward of $1 million to try to ensure an acceptance letter to Harvard or Princeton. It's not a request Command Education honors, as the company often sticks with clients for years — starting in seventh or eighth grade for some. Command EducationHis fee is more than the average starter home, but Rim says Command Education isn't the priciest firm in the industry. And, some parents offer even more in the hopes of securing their child's admission to an Ivy League school. AdvertisementAdvertisementRim says Command Education often sells out of its fewer than 200 slots for clients.
Persons: they'll, Christopher Rim, Rim, Chris, Princeton — Organizations: Command, Service, Ivy League, Harvard, Princeton, Christopher, Bloomberg, New York's Trinity School, Yale, Ivy, New York Post, Columbia, Stanford, MIT Locations: Wall, Silicon, New, Rim
Some parents are willing to pay nearly $1 million to try to ensure an acceptance letter to Harvard or Princeton. Christopher Rim, the 28-year-old founder and CEO of Command Education, charges parents $750,000 for six years of his company's college counseling services, Bloomberg reported. It's not a request Command Education honors as the company often sticks with clients for years — starting in seventh or eighth grade for some. Command EducationHis fee is more than the average starter home, but Rim says Command Education isn't the priciest firm in the industry. AdvertisementAdvertisementRim said Command Education often sells out of its less than 200 slots for clients.
Persons: they'll, Christopher Rim, Rim, Chris, It's, Princeton — Organizations: Command, Service, Ivy League, Harvard, Princeton, Christopher, Bloomberg, New York's Trinity School, Yale, Ivy, New York Post, Columbia, Stanford, MIT, Command Education Locations: Wall, Silicon, New, Rim, New York
watch nowMarch 30 is "Ivy Day," when many Ivy League schools release those long-awaited admissions decisions. The colleges that ranked the highest on students' wish lists are "perennial favorites," according to Robert Franek, The Princeton Review's editor-in-chief. They are also among the most competitive: MIT's acceptance rate is just under 4%; at Harvard, it's about 3%. Coming out of the pandemic, a small group of universities, including many in the Ivy League, have experienced a record-breaking increase in applications this season, according to a report by the Common Application. The report found application volume jumped 30% since the 2019-20 school year, even as enrollment has slumped nationwide.
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