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Ill. college had accepted movie shooter

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Accused movie theater shooter James Holmes (left) makes his first court appearance at the Arapahoe County Courthouse with his public defender Tamara Brady on July 23, 2012 in Centennial, Colorado. Holmes was charged with 24 counts of murder as he made his second court appearance. Holmes is the suspect that opened fire on a movie theater showing the premier of 'The Dark Knight Rises' killing 12 and injuring 58 other people. (File Photo) UPI/RJ Sangosti/Pool
Accused movie theater shooter James Holmes (left) makes his first court appearance at the Arapahoe County Courthouse with his public defender Tamara Brady on July 23, 2012 in Centennial, Colorado. Holmes was charged with 24 counts of murder as he made his second court appearance. Holmes is the suspect that opened fire on a movie theater showing the premier of 'The Dark Knight Rises' killing 12 and injuring 58 other people. (File Photo) UPI/RJ Sangosti/Pool 
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Published: Aug. 11, 2012 at 8:55 AM

CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Aug. 11 (UPI) -- Faculty at the University of Illinois were impressed with the potential of the graduate student accused of a mass shooting in a Colorado movie theater.

Officials at the Illinois university offered to admit James Holmes and give him a stipend, 176 pages of documents released by the school Friday indicated.

In the documents, Holmes described himself as an "aspiring scientist" when he applied for admission to UI's neuroscience department in early 2011, CNN reported.

A letter of reference from one of his former professors described Holmes as bringing "a great amount of intellectual and emotional maturity into the classroom."

Holmes visited the Champaign campus in March 2011 and met with the department head, professors and research assistants.

The university decided to admit him and offered a $22,600 stipend and waivers of tuition and fees.

Holmes turned down the offer without explanation. About the same time he was accepted to the University of Colorado in Aurora.

Holmes dropped out of UC's graduate program about a month before the July 20 shooting spree at a midnight showing of the Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises," in which 12 moviegoers were killed and 58 were wounded.

The University of Colorado has declined to release Holmes' records, citing a judge's order sealing all documents related to Holmes' murder trial.

Topics: James Eagan Holmes
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