<p>I would pay $65 to apply. Or however much it was.</p>
<p>If you want to put a market value, take the average life earnings of a Harvard grad adjusted for inflation.</p>
<p>I would pay $65 to apply. Or however much it was.</p>
<p>If you want to put a market value, take the average life earnings of a Harvard grad adjusted for inflation.</p>
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<p>I agree.</p>
<p>I understand what you mean. After all, you know better than me.</p>
<p>I asked my dad this question and he was unimpressed. He graduated in 79 from
Harvard, and said that back then the admin criteria were much more lax than now. Today, he says, he probably wouldn’t get in. He also says if he had to work as hard as they do today to get in, he would’ve spent so long on trivialities and wouldn’t have gotten such a handle on the world, and made as much money. LOL…he even said he thought it was all a bubble.</p>
<p>Four million is enough to fund the COA of twenty students. That should be more than enough to let an extra student in (a student that’s going to be paying in full, of course).</p>
<p>i’m sure if you donate 10 million to the school, you’ll get accepted…</p>
<p>I applyed for harvards summer school program as a high schooler and was accepted. I don’t know what to expect and I’m nervous. What two classes would you recommend for me to take that will give me a taste of what harvard is like? Also, can you explain to me in detail what to expect in harvard classes and how to be successful (B, B+, A) in them? </p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>I would like to hear the answer from Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber and an Harvard Graduate…On the other hand, the answer from Mark Zuckerberg would be completely different.</p>
<p>Wow I was figuring around $250,000 at the most</p>
<p>^Lol. No, that wouldn’t do. But I’m sure they’d be more than happy to take the money anyway.</p>
<p>Paying millions of dollars for a Harvard acceptance is stupid. If you have that kind of money, you don’t need the Harvard degree.</p>