10 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 13, 2001 FRIDAY FocUs With all eyes turned to Michigan, Cass Technical High School students Tomicka Glenn, Amber Martin, Ebony Buck and Shellie Bonds are working to mobilize their classmates in the fight for race-conscious admissions policies. For them and other under-represented minorities, the future depends on . AFFIRMATI VELY ETROIT - The lawsuits chal- lenging the University's admis- sions policies have captured nationwide attention as they may ultimately decide the future of affirmative action in higher education. But perhaps no one is watching closer than the students of Cass Technical High School. For these students, the debate over affirmative action is not an intellectual exercise. While law professors battle over the exact meaning of terms like "critical mass," students such as Cass seniors Shellie Bonds, Ebony Buck and Tomicka Glenn and freshman Amber Martin fight to be a voice for those who will be the most affected by the out- come of the lawsuits - under-repre- sented minority students applying to college. "o me, affirmative action is recognizing that things aren't fair, recognizing that until things are fair, race needs to be taken into account to level out the playing field. - Shellie Bonds Cass Tech senior Behind the legal jargon, statistical models and theories about diversity lies a very real truth for minority high school students applying to the Univer- sity of Michigan: If the University is forced to abandon a race-conscious admissions policy, many of them might not be accepted. In its August 1999 opinion allowing the student intervenors into the cases, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals wrote that "there is little room for doubt that access to the University for African- American and Latino/a students will be impaired to some extent and that a sub- stantial decline in the enrollment of these students may well result if the University is precluded from consider- ing race as a factor in admissions." The student intervenors argue that affirmative action programs are neces- sary to address societal discrimination, past and present. The students at Cass also want to show that the effects of this discrimination have given their white counterparts certain advantages. "To me, affirmative action is recog- nizing that things aren't fair, recogniz- ing that until things are fair, race needs to be taken into account to level out the playing field," said Bonds. THEIR PLAYING FIELD mier high schools, Cass Tech has a stu- dent body of about 2,500, 91.3 percent of which are black. To attend, students must pass an entrance exam and stu- dents who are talented in the arts can audition for admission. Students at Cass Tech have the oppor- tunity to take a specialized course of study, and the school offers Advanced Placement courses in English, govern- Means Necessary come to Cass Tech to talk about the lawsuits. "People from BAMN came to Mr. Conn's class" and exicouraged us to attend the rallies," renmimbered Glenn. "At first, I wa$n't too interested," she said. "But when I weint to the rally. I the movement. "The students at Cass have really stepped forward and put themselves at the center of the legal and political fight to expand and preserve affirmative action," said Miranda Massie, lead counsel for the Law School intervenors. The:student's involvement, she added, has "given real life and vitality to the intervention The Detroit high school, U of M and other students who attended the trial are fighting for their future and that is what this case is about in the 0S OUT Tech students end affirmative vost of the stu- college-bound est in ensuring )ortunity possi- o top-tier insti- chance, argue, addresses the racism inherent in the allocation of resources to schools. "These students deserve to have what the other students from U of M feeder schools have," Conn said. KEEPING UP THE FIGHT While Glenn and Bonds will not be attending Michigan in the fall, they plan to remain active. Buck is still waiting on her application to the the University and is hopeful she will be in Ann Arbor we in September. She said the lawsuits were a factor in e that her application. "My grandmother always told me that if you believe in anything worth 1, but fighting for, you might as well fight for, it until the e to end. I want to see it through to the bitter end," the she said. Currently, the two cases have been filed with the 6th Circuit Court of Ebony Buck Appeals in Cincinnati. A ss Tech senior briefing schedule has been issued by the court for the puters are 1987 Apples that do not work. "It's a completely unequal playing, field - from the conditions of the building to the lack of equipment and supplies," Conn said. Despite these problems, Bonds, Glenn, and Buck say they are glad they attend Cass Tech. In fact, they point to the adversity they have faced there as an asset for the future. "I wouldn't say students from Cass are not as qualified (as white students)," Buck said. "I would say that given the differ- ences and the obstacles that you face going into a school that's in the city - the different things we encounter make us more qualified. If given the chance, we can prove that we are as qualified, but you have to give us the chance. " RALLIED TO ACTION Many Cass Tech students first heard about the lawsuits against the Universi- ty of Michigan through Conn. An ardent defender of affirmative action, Conn had representatives from the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action and Inte- gration and Fight for Equality By Any Cas undergraduate case, and are expected to be heard; fall. Until then, the Cass will be waiting. oral arguments as early as this Tech students Long regarded as one of Detroit's pre- _____________________________-