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Affirmative Action Faces a New Wave of Anger
The New York Times ^ | January 5, 2003 | JACQUES STEINBERG

Posted on 01/04/2003 10:38:08 PM PST by sarcasm

In 1995, when Jennifer Gratz applied to the University of Michigan's flagship Ann Arbor campus, she wanted to become a doctor. When she was rejected, she said she abandoned that ambition.

"I thought that if the University of Michigan didn't think I was good enough, I wasn't," Ms. Gratz, now 25 and working at a computer company in San Diego, said in an interview last year. "I think my life would be significantly different if I had been admitted."

Ms. Gratz's sense that her life would have been different, and better, underlies much of the opposition to the affirmative action at many colleges and universities. And that opposition, in the form of white applicants like Ms. Gratz who argue that their rightful places at the top schools are being given to black and Hispanic students of lesser ability, has been gaining momentum once again.

Their anxiety — that not getting into an elite academic institution will lead to a less prosperous and happy life — is at the heart of the constitutional challenge to the admissions policies of the University of Michigan that the Supreme Court recently decided to hear.

"I sense that the anger is rising," said James O. Freedman, president emeritus of Dartmouth and author of "Liberal Education and the Public Interest" (University of Iowa Press, 2003). "I sense that people whose children go today to a school that's not one of the Top 25 in the U.S. News poll feel defensive, that they have to explain it to friends. It's like a failure."

A measure of this edginess is the rise in early applications to Harvard and Yale, programs that drew relatively few applicants three decades ago. This fall, 2,611 applicants sought early admission to Yale; 7,620 applied for early admission to Harvard. Each represented an increase of nearly 25 percent over last year.

A large number of the students who apply early are middle- and upper-middle-class whites. They apply, at least in part, because their college counselors have told them that the odds of being admitted early are often greater than in the main round — when, not coincidentally, they will be pitted more directly against black and Hispanic applicants whose race is considered a plus by such colleges.

On the one hand, this frenzy to secure the imprimatur of an Ivy League institution is irrational, at least economically. In 2000, the National Center for Education Statistics, part of the federal Department of Education, examined the earnings of a group of college graduates five years after their graduation and concluded that the selectivity of their alma maters had had a minimal impact. A more important predictor of income was the person's undergraduate major.

Yet, Dr. Freedman acknowledges, these things still count. "I think for the first job, these credentials really do matter," he said. "Going to Dartmouth gets you an entree at Goldman Sachs. How you do at Goldman Sachs is up to you."

Moreover, an earnings survey can capture neither the quality of instruction at an elite college, nor the incalculable boost in status of students (and families) associated with the nation's elite schools. In a nation of few formal class distinctions, the college sticker on one's car may be the most potent.

Such issues are at the heart of the two cases seeking to undo the admissions policies of the undergraduate and law school programs at Michigan.

MS. GRATZ, a B student in high school, is one of the two white plaintiffs challenging the undergraduate policy at Michigan, where black and Hispanic applicants are given a 20-point bonus on a 150-point evaluation scale.

Like other selective universities, Michigan aids minority applicants for two main reasons: to level the playing field and to enrich the educational experiences of whites and nonwhites alike. But had Ann Arbor not given a statistical boost to applicants whose test scores and grades may have been lower than hers, Ms. Gratz contends, she would have had a better chance of getting in.

"They clearly discriminate based on the color of your skin," she said.

To Andrew Hacker, a professor of political science at Queens College, a fierce race and class struggle is being waged in the arena of highly selective college admissions. "Call it Whites' Rights," said Professor Hacker, whose 1992 book "Two Nations" will be reissued by Simon & Schuster this year.

To Professor Hacker, those whites who are most up in arms are those who indeed may be at the biggest disadvantage — those in the lower and middle classes. Upper-class whites, he said, can still afford to attend the top high schools, whether private ones or public schools in the wealthiest suburbs, that place a disproportionate number of their graduates at marquee colleges.

But whites of lesser means, particularly in the Northeast, face competition as never before, not only from blacks and Hispanics but also from Asian-Americans who may have higher test scores. Northeasterners also face competition from applicants from states like Utah and Missouri, who are in relatively high demand because they offer "geographic diversity."

At highly selective private and public colleges, admissions officers acknowledge that they generally demand white applicants with well-educated parents to have the highest SAT scores, often at least a 1400 score on a 1600 scale.

A black applicant with similar grades, particularly one whose parents did not go to college, might get in with an 1150 score. The colleges' reasoning is that children of better-educated parents are exposed to the vocabulary and advanced problem-solving skills that yield higher SAT scores.

Fearing that they will be held to a higher standard, those well-to-do whites (and Asian-Americans, who are not considered minorities at many institutions) may spend thousands of dollars on tutors to help their children raise their SAT scores or to enlist the services of for-hire guidance counselors, who help students hone their applications, and then lobby colleges on their behalf. One such service in Manhattan, known as Ivy Wise, charges $29,000 for its top junior-senior package. (The company also counsels several minority applicants without charge.)

FOR those families that came to see a Harvard education as a birthright passed from one generation to the next, the idea that a so-called legacy applicant may be rejected in favor of an affirmative-action one can be a source of outrage. So, too, for a white applicant with near-perfect scores and grades who is passed over in favor of a minority applicant at the same high school with lower scores and grades.

Asked how, as president of Dartmouth, he soothed such anger, especially when addressing a parent, Dr. Freedman said he would typically respond: "Those kids seemed somehow to us to add qualities to the class that your son or daughter did not, which only may mean that your son or daughter was like 75 percent of the class that we've already admitted."

It's an answer that is unlikely to mollify the excluded.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
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To: dennisw
I've seen demands from Arabs for "minority" status - to qualify for affirmative action.
41 posted on 01/05/2003 2:55:42 AM PST by sarcasm
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To: RLK
"Anything else, forget it."

He's proven he lacks any type of skills handling serious issues and his wimp factor comes forth over and over again. I agree. I laugh my rear off when folks tell me he's a serious and successful businessman. George Bush's entire life has been promoted with a type of elite affirmative action.

42 posted on 01/05/2003 3:03:26 AM PST by Uncle Bill
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To: sarcasm
"Michigan aids minority applicants for two main reasons: to level the playing field and to enrich the educational experiences of whites and nonwhites alike. But had Ann Arbor not given a statistical boost to applicants whose test scores and grades may have been lower than hers, Ms. Gratz contends, she would have had a better chance of getting in."

And THIS is the problem, as it, by law, is NOT "affirmative action". "Affirmative action", as passed into law, designated that if two EQUALLY QUALIFIED candidates were available for a position, then preference should be given to the minority. It was NOT intended to be a "horserace handicapping system".

43 posted on 01/05/2003 3:10:20 AM PST by Wonder Warthog
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To: Uncle Bill
I laugh my rear off when folks tell me he's a serious and successful businessman. George Bush's entire life has been promoted with a type of elite affirmative action.

Getting cut in on the Texas stadium/ballclub deal was his windfall of a lifetime. But while with the team he did work his ass off, increasing the value of the entire package and his 15 million smackers when he cashed out

http://www.bushfiles.com/bushfiles/SweetheartDeal.html

 

44 posted on 01/05/2003 4:31:08 AM PST by dennisw
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To: sarcasm
...to enrich the educational experiences of whites and nonwhites alike...

Yep. You betcha! I want my son to go to college so he can learn to be like a minority person. He needs to learn how to talk street language, wear hip-hop clothing, speak spanish, etc.

Since when does the cultural background of fellow students enhance one's knowledge, or ability to learn, that which makes one a good doctor?

45 posted on 01/05/2003 4:31:42 AM PST by raybbr
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To: Uncle Bill
.
46 posted on 01/05/2003 4:31:58 AM PST by dennisw
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To: TLBSHOW
did you know that Bush got almost 100% of the Muslim vote in 2000?

What is your source for this figure?

47 posted on 01/05/2003 4:38:35 AM PST by Carolinamom
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To: TLBSHOW
But these 2 issues (Affirmative Action ) and the bannning of (PB Abortion) that will have me as a conservative republican walk away from Bush (and I am one of his biggest supporters) if he caves on either.

You are right to critisize Bush on his positions, but a more conservative could not have been elected. (Based on the closeness of this race with ultra liberal Gore, thanks be that Nader was also in the race)

Bush however may believe he can skate on this and "be a uniter" by coming out in favor of afirmative action when it is clearly discrimination based on race because the Supreme Court will likely decide against afirmative action leaving Bush in the best position to attract voters from the minority side. (Of course this only works if he does not lose us in the process.)

48 posted on 01/05/2003 4:47:38 AM PST by KC_for_Freedom
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To: raybbr
Great point! The article also said:

......kids seemed somehow to us to add qualities to the class that your son or daughter did not, which only may mean that your son or daughter was like 75 percent of the class that we've already admitted."

I guess being in the 75% meant they met the qualification standards. The other 25% weren't as qualified, but they got a pass on the basis of thier race. I wish libs would drop thier code words. AA does not apply to ALL minorities; it applies to blacks and hispanics.

49 posted on 01/05/2003 4:48:28 AM PST by Sir_Humphrey
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To: dennisw; Uncle Bill
Getting cut in on the Texas stadium/ballclub deal was his windfall of a lifetime. But while with the team he did work his ass off, increasing the value of the entire package and his 15 million smackers when he cashed out

-------------------------

As far as I'm concerned this great effort is an urban myth generated by political hacks and operatives trying ro create an idol. I've never seen itemized documentation. It looks to be one of a series of figurehead positions cashing in on the family name. It's about as impressive as the sports star who buys a car dealership or opens a restaurant, only Bush didn't need to throw any foreward passes ir score any knockouts in the ring to get the reputation. That's the way I have to call it. The theme I see throughout his life is one of the effort of saying, "I'm George Bush" and that's it

50 posted on 01/05/2003 5:49:55 AM PST by RLK
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To: jbind
The poor girl doesn't know she is lucky to be in the computer business rather than the medical business. I do think the young people are enraged at this,,my kids are, they are color blind and resent like hell the well to do black and hispanic kids gettiing the good stuff. Most of the affirmative action kids I know came from high income black and Hispanic families, not from poor families. I think there ought to be a hand up to the poor kids, black or white.
51 posted on 01/05/2003 6:04:36 AM PST by cajungirl
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To: Carolinamom
Mainstream Media Acknowledges Importance of Muslim Bloc Vote


A record number of Muslim first-time voters may have tipped the presidential election in George Bush's favor, according to a poll released yesterday by the Massachusetts chapter of the American Muslim Alliance. About 91 percent of Muslims in Florida cast ballots for Bush as part of an alliance endorsed voting bloc, said chapter chairman Tahir Ali, of Westborough. "The Muslims in America did have an impact in the presidential election this year." Ali said during an interview at the Islamic Center in Wayland. "If we had voted like we did in previous elections, guess who would be president right now? Al Gore." This was the first time the alliance, in conjunction with the American

AND THIS THE MUSLIMS ARE TRYING TO TAKE OVER AMERICA

American Muslims aim for political clout
Muslims captured an unprecedented number of seats ranging from state judgeships to city council slots.

http://www.amaweb.org/election2000/media_acknowledges.htm

52 posted on 01/05/2003 6:29:19 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: TLBSHOW
This source makes the point that Bush got 91% of the Muslim 2000 vote IN FLORIDA. Your earlier statement, without this phrase, gives the impression that the "almost 100%" in the 2000 election was nation-wide.
53 posted on 01/05/2003 6:41:54 AM PST by Carolinamom
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To: Carolinamom
."In a national, post-election telephone poll of Muslim voters, the alliance found that

more than 80 percent of them voted for Bush,


compared to 10 percent for Raplh Nader and 9 percent for Gore. An even larger percentage of Florida's 60,000 eligible Muslim voters supported Bush, according to the survey.

FROM THE SAME STORY, MORE THAN 80 PERCENT IT SAYS....

that is close to 100% in my book........
54 posted on 01/05/2003 6:48:07 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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To: Carolinamom
which is why Isalm is Peace, it should be islam is votes
55 posted on 01/05/2003 6:49:26 AM PST by TLBSHOW
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