12A- The MichiganDaily - Friday, October 1, 1999 - FRIDAYFOCUS Admissions.lawsuits itervenors to share perspectives in court By Michael Grass and Nika Schulte Daily Staff Reporters *1 ether in an Angell Hall auditorium, on the steps of the The Washington, Michigan Union or in the Diag, many campus groups D.C.-based Center fighting for the preservation of affirmative action have for Individual worked hard and publicly throughout the last two years, defend- Rights sues the ing the use of race in the University's admissions process with a University's very real threat to that use looming overhead. College of But what's different this academic year - unlike the past two - Literature, since the University was sued for using race in its Law Schools Science and and the College of Literature, Science and the Arts' admissions the Arts. CIR processes - is that these groups have a louder voice, one that the claims their court cannot ignore. clients, An August ruling handed down from the 6th Circuit Court of Jennifer Gratz and Appeals in Cincinnati made history by letting two coalitions join Patrick Hamacher, were the lawsuits as intervening defendants. The two coalitions repre- unfairly evaluated under sent 58 students of various ethnicities and grade levels as well as LSA's admissions system, several national organizations, including the American Civil which uses an applicant s Liberties Union. The judges' ruling gives them the same status as race as a factor. both their co-defendants, the University, and the plaintiffs. "M felt there was a The groups had tried to intervene unsuccessfully several times wrongdoing. The policies since the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Individual Rights need to be changed so. filed two lawsuits against the University on behalf of three white nobody has to go through applicants - two who claim they were denied admission to the what I went through." LSA when less-qualified minorities were admitted and one who - Jennifer Gratz, filed a similar complaint against the Law School. The plaintiffs LSA lawsuit piaintiff sued in the fall of 1997 and the two intervening parties officially took form during the winter semester of the same academic year. "The students' success is of historic significance because the CIR files asiiarlawsuit case is at the center of a national student movement that has the against the capacity to change the social context of affirmative action," said University Miranda Massie, lead counsel for the defendants intervening contending Law in the suit facing the Law School. School applicant The ruling marks the first time the courts have Barbara Grutter allowed minority advocates to represent themselves was denied due to i 4, + directly in an affirmative action case. For the inter- the school's use venors to be permitted into the case, they had to prove of race as an that the University, as a defendant, would not adequate- admissions ly represent their stake in the case's outcome. factor. As defendants in the case, the intervenors say they t { want to preserve the University's use of race in the admis- The University sions practices, which is what the plaintiffs want to elim- responds to the mate. Affirmative action advocates rally in support of affirmative action on the Diag during the National Day of Action, Feb. 24, 1998. request documents and other information from both the plaintiffs and defendants. Outside voices In addition to obtaining discovery materials, public opinion is a factor both Dillard and Massie anticipate to play a key role in the time proceeding the trial. "You cannot look at law in a vacuum." Dillard said. "Public opinion determines how law evolves. Public opinion has an impact on how judges view law." Dillard said the University has been fortunate to have many influential voices speak up in its defense. He said backing from such prominent figures as former President Gerald Ford, a University alum who had an editorial published in The New York Times in August, bolster the movement. behind affirmative action and strengthen the University's position. "The fact that President Ford, the man who led the most pow- erful country in the world, says that this is a very good interpreta- tion is very persuasive," Dillard said, referring to Ford's opinion that the University's admissions practices comply with the Supreme Court precedent case for affirmative action. Massie agreed that Ford's editorial piece is significant, but because "it shows how marginalized and extreme the position CIR is taking about affirmative action. "When you have an elderly, white man who is a republican and ex-president coming to bat for affirmative action on the basis of equality and diversity, "my sole purp it is clear that this CIR's posi- tion is only advocated by a tiny de en afir and isolated minority," she said. t l t a ve Dowdell said CIR's suit against the University stirred a feeling of obligation within her. "I realized I had to fight for myself and the kids in Detroit," she said. After getting permission from her parents, Dowdell became part of the Law School intervening coalition. One of her classmates from Cass Tech, LSA junior Julie Fry, has taken a similar stance by signing on to the Law School group. Fry said the past two years have been a long journey for her and the other intervenors. "It seems like so long ago" when the initial motion to inter- vene in the'lawsuits was filed, she said. Fry, a Law School case intervenor, said when she first came to the University, the issue of affirmative action was not a popular topic for debate like it is now and although campus rallies and protests publicize the pro-affirmative action message, she said she needed to help in a different way. "I wished there was something more that I could do," she said. So Fry took an additional step by becoming an inter- venor. But with prior rulings limiting or abolishing affirmative action in Texas, California and Washington, Fry said she wasn't too hopeful that the courts would allow her and the students to enter the cases. "I'm kind of surprised, but extremely happy," Fry said, adding that she hopes the rul- ing is an indication that the se here is to courts in the end will allow affirmative action to remain tiv/e action in place. - Erika Dowdell But for the intervenors to pre- enor in the Law School case vail, Fry said she and others have to keep the issue alive on A colective voice? Although the University and the two intervening coalitions are now on the same side, the groups are not necessarily joining forces. Massie said that while both the University and the intervenors defend the use of affirmative action, the two groups will not approach the case with all the same arguments. Even though the University and the student intervenors legal counsel only established a relationship in late August, Massie said it is an association that has already been both friendly and businesslike. Godfrey Dillard, lead counsel for the LSA coalition, said he feels the short time has not been enough to create a substantial relationship, "We are evaluating discovery material and are hoping to have a good relationship once we get to the point where we can work together," Dillard said. Dillard said he has spent the last month "doing his homework" by examining discovery materials. Massie said she is not daunted by the short amount of time she has to prepare for the case, which had been scheduled to begin last month before a judge admitted the intervenors. "Our perspective is that we were entitled to the same amount of factual development as the other parties, and though we are not going to get it, we are confident that we will make excellent use of the time we now have," Massie said. Although Massie and Dillard both have different factual cases, Massie said they will be working together as much as possible. The Law School and LSA intervening coalitions will have until March to complete "discovery period" explorations, which includes examining evidence and taking depositions. Dillard said the intervenors' participation in the trial will enable the judges to hear from the people the decision will affect direct- ly. "Like anything, if you need to make a decision and someone only brings you one argument, you are not getting the complete story," Dillard said. University Deputy General Counsel Liz Barry said the inter- venors may offer a "unique perspective that is relevant to the cases." Barry said the intervenors will have a chance to interview the University's and CIR's witnesses, plus have an opportunity to + r a A long journey After CIR filed the lawsuit against LSA on Oct. 14, 1997, charging that applicants Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher were unfairly denied admission because the University used race in its process, legal counsel representing 17 high school students hoping to intervene in the LSA lawsuit submitted a motion in February 1998 to become co-defendants. In addition to the ACLU, the students' motion was backed by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the Mexican American Legal Defense Fund. In March 1998, a similar motion was filed by 41 students hop- ing to intervene in the Law School suit, which was CIR filed on Dec. 3, 1997. The motion was backed by United Equality for Affirmative Action, Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action By Any Means Necessary and Law Students for Affirmative Action with the intent of trying to intervene in the case against the Law School. In July 1998, U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman denied the motion to intervene in the Law School case and similarly, U.S. District Judge Patrick Duggan blocked the LSA suit intervenors from becoming part of the LSA case. But in June, months after being rejected from the suits, the two groups appealed and presented the case to the 6th Court of Appeals in Cincinnati where the court admitted the intervenors. So far this year, the University has paid $1 million to two out- side law firms, bringing legal bill totals to $3.3 million, said University spokesperson Julie Peterson. Barry said it is difficult to predict how much legal costs will total, adding that each time there is a delay in litigation, the legal fees pile up. "The University is committed to the defense of these cases," Barry said. "It's not about cost, it's about defending our policies." Massie and CIR legal counsel Terry Pell both said they offer- ing their legal services pro bono, Massie said several fundraisers, including benefit concerts and donation mailings, might be used to offset legal fees. Lifting their voices As one of the intervenors in the Law School case, Erika Dowdell might have to testify during the trial, bringing her per- sonal experiences to the courtroom. For Dowdell, an LSA sophomore, the University is not a com- fortable environment for minority students. "It's not always pleasant being one of the only black faces in the lecture hall," Dowdell said at the "Our Voices Will Be Heard" panel discussion last week. The University is composed of 69 percent white students; 12 ervnt Asian sidents:- nine nercent hbck students: five nercent campus protests. with rallies and The prosecu ion Having more defendants involved in the case will not signifi- cantly change CIR's legal strategy, said Terry Pell, CIR senior legal counsel. "The thrust of the intervening motion was to add new issues to the cases," Pell said. "But these new issues don't add or subtract to the main issue." Although CIR could have appealed the judges' August ruling allowing the intervenors in to the cases. "We're glad the 6th Circuit made a decision," Pell said. "We were waiting in a holding pattern." But Pell said the delay is somewhat disheartening, since the announcement of the lawsuit delay came only weeks before the trials were set to begin. "Clearly, it takes away from the momentum," Pell said. Although LSA case plaintiff Jennifer Gratz graduated from the University of Michigan's Dearborn campus earlier this year, Pell said co-plaintiffs Patrick Hamacher, currently a student at Michigan State University and Law School applicant Barbara Grutter still hope to attend the University after the cases are set- tied. A national movement While the trial focuses on the University's admissions policies, students from other schools across the nation have decided to intervene. Hoku Jeffrey, a student at the University of California at Berkeley, said he chose to get involved in the case because he has seen first-hand what an institution can lose when its does not use affirmative action in its admission selections. In 1995, the UC Board of Regents banned all use of race and gender in hiring and admissions. Fifteen months after the board's resolution, California voters approved Proposition 209, which applied the same ban to educational and other public institutions throughout the state. "Since the attack on affirmative action, we have seen resegre- gation on campus," Jeffrey said. In the first year affirmative action was not used in Berkeley's admissions process, the school extended offers to 64 percent fewer black students and 56 percent fewer Latino/a students. Jeffrey said he views the intervention in to the lawsuits facing the University of Michigan as a way to prevent such effects from happening on other campuses. "This is an onoortunity to build a new civil right's movement," irin t < ... . . _. s . . . ... ......,