NY
Times - The Trump administration is conducting a far-reaching
investigation into whether Yale University’s admissions practices violate
anti-discrimination laws, prompting one of the country’s most elite schools to
pursue settlement talks with the government, according to three people briefed
on the matter.
The Justice Department last month accused Yale’s medical
school of giving illegal preferential treatment to Black and Hispanic
applicants. But the department’s review is reaching beyond the medical school,
the people said, encompassing undergraduate and law school admissions as well.
The expansive inquiry demonstrates the aggressive approach
the Trump administration is taking to enforce its interpretation of the Supreme
Court ruling that effectively banned race-conscious admissions three years ago.
It shows the administration’s intensifying focus on admissions and represents a
new front against Yale, which has largely been spared in the White House’s
effort to punish elite colleges and reshape academia.
Yale’s quick moves to try to reach an agreement with the
government suggest it does not want a high-profile, drawn-out fight similar to
the one involving Harvard University. The status of a potential agreement was
unclear on Friday, but Yale recently offered a proposal to the government,
according to the three people briefed on the matter. The people, who have ties
to the Trump administration or to Yale, spoke on the condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the talks.
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