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Several experts said the system described at Illinois may have crossed some important lines. The university, the Tribune reported, considered hundreds of connected applicants as a separate set of applicants called "Category I" that was not publicized. Illinois insists no unqualified students were admitted, and it is impossible to say how many would have gotten in otherwise. However, the Tribune found that they were accepted at a higher rate than their test scores would predict. "I had never heard of such a formalized process of circumventing the public rules the university has articulated itself," said Barmak Nassirian, associate executive director of AACRAO, a professional group for admissions and other college officials. "It is over the top in terms of the obviousness with which they were treating some people quite differently." Among the applicants on the clout list at Illinois was a relative of Tony Rezko, a key figure in the corruption scandal that brought down former Gov. Rod Blagojevich. The admissions office initially rejected the unidentified relative, but the Tribune reported the decision was reversed following an e-mail from university President B. Joseph White that noted the governor's backing.
Last week, White issued a statement calling it a sound and common practice to keep track of "expressions of interest in particular applicants" by alumni, politicians, trustees and others. But on Monday he said the university would drop the Category I system pending a review. Also on the university's to-do list will be rebuilding the public's trust. "We have lots of students who complain every year they can't get into the university," said Lianne Musser, college coordinator at Lyons Township High School, in suburban Chicago, which sends about 85 students to the university each year. "The feeling is, if it were a private university, you might expect some people would have more sway
-- donors, politicians. But in a state university, the expectation is that people would have an equal chance."
[Associated
Press;
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