Michigan Enrolls Fewer Minorities
By Alison Go -
The Paper Trail
- June 13, 2008
Class of 2012 is first class to fully apply after the state banned use of race in admissions.
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The Real Boost From Affirmative Action Bans
By Lucia Graves -
Education
- February 7, 2008
When affirmative action is removed from admissions, it's Asian-Americans, not whites, who benefit most.
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Michigan's First Day With New Admissions Policy
The Paper Trail
- January 11, 2007
A federal court blocked Michigan universities' attempt to delay Proposition 2, which bans affirmative action in admission. That made yesterday the first day the University of Michigan would enact new admissions policies, after a week in which administrators froze all admissions activities so they could adapt to the new law, the Michigan Daily reports.
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Michigan's Prop 2 Delayed Until July
The Paper Trail
- December 21, 2006
The anti-affirmative action proposition passed by Michigan voters November 7 will not take effect until Julyand they mean it for real this time. The Michigan Daily reports that the district judge who needed to give final approval to an agreement reached late last week has given it.
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Michigan Schools Could Win Delay on Affirmative Action Ban
The Paper Trail
- December 19, 2006
The state's attorney general and three Michigan universities have reached an agreement that, if approved by a U.S.
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Michigan Schools File Motion Seeking Delay of Prop. 2 Rules' Start
The Paper Trail
- December 13, 2006
Michigan State, the University of Michigan, and Wayne State have filed a motion asking for federal courts to delay the start of an anti-affirmative action ban state voters approved this November, University of Michigan President Mary Sue Coleman announced in a statement published today in the Michigan Daily. "We want to ensure that our process is consistent and fair throughout the entire admissions cycle," Coleman writes.
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Is Dialogue Enough to Address Anti-Affirmative Action Poem at Tufts?
The Paper Trail
- December 12, 2006
To address an anti-affirmative action poem published in Tufts University's conservative journal The Primary Source, the student government held a forum this weekend. But some argue that dialogue isn't enough to address the poem, a satirical rip-off of "O Come All Ye Faithful," translated into the voice of a fictional admissions officer pleading "O Come All Ye Black Folk.
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Underrepresented Minority Applications Up Almost 20% at Michigan
The Paper Trail
- December 11, 2006
Applications from black, Latino, and Native American students are up nearly 20 percent at the University of Michigan, where state voters passed a ban on affirmative action this fall. "The increase," reports the Michigan Daily, "goes against what many were bracing for: a drop in minority applications due to worry that the ban could paint the University as an unwelcoming place for minority students.
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At University of Michigan, Partying for Diversity
The Paper Trail
- November 30, 2006
A statewide ban on affirmative action has focused University of Michigan students' attention on racial tensions on campus--and they're starting to fight back, with a diversity push from an unexpected player: the fraternity and sorority scene. Self-segregation long plagued fraternities and sororities, but they've now launched an "unprecedented" move to reverse that, the Michigan Daily reports.
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University of Michigan President Tones Down on Affirmative Action
The Paper Trail
- November 29, 2006
After her state voted in favor of an affirmative action ban the school had opposed, University of Michigan President Sue Coleman vowed to fight for diversity anyway--maybe even with a legal challenge. But now her tough talk seems to be more talk than tough, according to a report from the Michigan Daily.
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Are You at Least 25-percent Caucasian? B.U. College Republicans Have $250 for You
The Paper Trail
- November 22, 2006
Copying a move that won a student group at Roger Williams University national media attention two years ago, the College Republicans at Boston University have made a call for applications to their "Caucasian Achievement and Recognition Scholarship." The winning student, who must be at least 25 percent Caucasian, will get $250.
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After Proposition 2, a 'New Edge' to Racial Harassment
The Paper Trail
- November 17, 2006
Racial slurs and hate speech aren't new at the University of Michigan. But since the state voted yes on Proposition 2, an affirmative action ban, they've gotten a "new edge," the university's dean of students told the Michigan Daily.
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Hostage Situation...or Meeting with a University President?
The Paper Trail
- November 16, 2006
Michigan State University's president met with students yesterday to film an action movieer, talk about affirmative action. "Students with black bandanas tied around their mouths lined the walls, stood in corners, and sat on the floor, listening as a group of their peers explained their demands," the State News reports.
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Anti-Affirmative Action Advocates Look for Next Target
The Paper Trail
- November 10, 2006
With a victory in Michigan under his belt, the California businessman who bankrolled that successful anti-affirmative action initiative is turning to other states, the Wall Street Journal reported yesterday. "If we can win in Michigan, a blue state with a Democratic governor.
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University of Michigan Prepares to Fight Ban
The Paper Trail
- November 9, 2006
Voters passed the affirmative action ban on Election Day, but that won't stop the University of Michigan from battling the new law in court, an option university President Sue Coleman announced yesterday she is strongly considering. Her first priority, the Daily Michigan says: to prevent the initiative from taking effect this year, so that all Michigan applicants can be considered under the same criteria.
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Michigan Voters Pass Affirmative Action Ban
The Paper Trail
- November 8, 2006
"It's like Christmas," says a University of Michigan student who supported the winning Proposition 2, which bans some forms of affirmative action, the Michigan Daily reports. The proposition's victory--about 62 percent of voters supported it--came despite the fact that its campaign had only a third as much money as the campaign against it as of last week, says the Chronicle of Higher Education, which also says the ban could have wide-ranging effects.
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