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Lila15 That previously undisclosed report reveals that the hiring committee at Penn, where Warren worked from 1987 to 1995, viewed her as a white female applicant. Moreover, the committee went to some pains to explain on this form why she was selected over several minorities to fill a faculty position.
Not until she had been teaching at Penn for two years did she authorize the university to change her personnel designation from white to Native American, the records show.
This doesn't pass the smell test, Lila.
Warren "authorized" Penn to "change" her personnel designation from white to Native American?!
Why would it have even occurred to Penn to "change" her designation unless she TOLD them of her "background"?
A much more likely scenario is (as per the first paragraph above) is that Penn (and perhaps also Warren) were getting flak about hiring a white woman over minority applicants, and therefore "designating" her a minority would be an excellent solution. 😂 😂 😂
The Globe also reviewed, for the first time, a Harvard University human resources form showing that Warren first listed her ethnicity as Native American nearly five months after she started her tenured position at Harvard and 2½ years after she was there as a visiting professor and first offered the job.
And Harvard didn't know that Warren was already listed as "Native American" at Penn when they decided to hire her at Harvard? Don't make me laugh yet again. 😂 😂 😂