I am pleased to write this strong recommendation letter for my former student, Miss Nan Li, who graduated from this college with an L.B. degree in June 1978. Miss Li was admitted to the Department of Law in 1974 through a highly competitive national entrance examination, which is conducted annually and open to the entire country. Even among such a selective group, Miss Li distinguished herself as an outstanding candidate for advanced legal studies abroad.
As both professor and dean of the college, I have had full access to her records of academic work and moral conduct. During her fourth year, I instructed her in Anglo-American Laws on Trespass, and thus came to know her quite well. Her performance in that course—like in many others she took—was excellent, earning a superior grade of 86 in the first semester and 84 in the second.

At our university and elsewhere locally, a grade of 80 is considered A, the highest level. To the best of my knowledge, Miss Li wishes to continue her legal studies for an advanced degree. I am confident she possesses sufficient prerequisite knowledge for the subject and certainly has the ability to undertake such study. I wholeheartedly recommend Miss Li without reservation and would sincerely appreciate your favorable consideration of her application for graduate admission.
