- -A A AMEMEMMIM& -MM AMMOMMIL, MMMMMMM=d -9w- -i - M - mw w Imw w qw Ar 'w w - :- - S ..- SO. Wednesday, October 4, 2006 - The Michigan Daily Fireworks By Karl Stampfl he middle-aged country- club member was known as eccentric even before he rounded up 50 black people and bought them tickets for the exclusive club's Fourth of July dinner and fireworks. They arrived in cars ranging in quali- ty from 1987 Chevy Caprices to 2005 Hyundai SUVs, but every eye in the exclusive club stared at them as they paraded into the lush parking lot, the eccentric member leading them, his wife trailing behind, blushing. "What's going on hereChuck?" another member asked as they walked into the clubhouse. "Isn't it the Fourth of July dinner tonight?" the eccentric member asked. "Yeah, but ... " "Then I'd say it's safe to assume that we're eating," he said as he motioned the troops into the main dining room. The group, who was fully aware that they were being mar- ginalized and tokenized and probably a number of other ices, tried to ignore the stares. They sat down and began to eat. "What the hell is Chuck up to this time?" one member whis- pered into another's ear. They were on the other side of the dining room. "He's taking this admitting minorities crusade too far," the first member said. "We talked about it at the meeting last week. What more does he want?" After dinner, they marched onto the fifth fairway, set up lawn chairs, blankets and wait- ed for the fireworks to begin. "How much did this charade cost you?" another member asked the eccentric member just before the show. "Four, five thou?" "It's not a charade," the eccentric member said. "It's the Fourth of July." And the correct figure, he almost added, when you added up the hours he spent recruiting and convincing people, the newspaper ads, the bribes, the tickets, the gas money and a few other expenses, was closer to $10,000. But it was worth it. He would show this club what was right and what was wrong, no matter the cost. So they quietly waited for the fireworks to start, 50 black people in a sea of L.L. Bean polo shirts and pressed khaki shorts and all the stereotypes you see when you close your eyes and think about a suburban country club. They didn't act any dif- ferently from the country-club people, and the country-club people didn't act any differently from them, except the wildfire of gossip that spread from blanket to blanket, even among the chil- dren, who were mostly confused but not really sure why. The gossip settled during the fireworks, when everyone hushed to enjoy the expensive display. It was oddly quiet dur- ing the 20-minute show, much quieter than the year before, perhaps because everyone was contemplating the newcomers. About halfway through the show, the club's oldest mem- ber and most revered gentle- man walked up to the eccentric member's chair, put his hand on the shoulder of his pink Hawai- ian shirt, and politely said, "Don't be a fool." The eccentric member looked up at him to see the reflection of blue and red fireworks erupt- ing in his glassy eyes. "We've got a lot of members around here, and a lot more on the waiting list. Lots of good guys on that waiting list," the oldest member said. "I know, sir." The oldest member turned to walk away but stopped first. "There's one more thing," he said. "Ekeland's out with a head cold, and there's a spot open in the first foursome Saturday morning." The morning's first foursome! The eccentric member's eyes lit up with their own fireworks. It was the most prestigious group in the entire club. Every week, they swept the dew off the wide-open course, driving gloriously white Titleists down curvy fairways sexy with unblemished possibility. "I'll be there," the eccentric member said. "Are you sure?" the oldest member said. "Because there are a lot of people on the wait- ing list who would die to be in that foursome." The implication was clear. The eccentric member consid- ered being offended, "Then maybe one of them should take it," he said. "As long as they're not a different skin color, right?" The oldest member winked wisely, momentarily snuff- ing out an eye of fireworks. "Maybe," he said. "Why don't you think about it?" After the fireworks, the eccentric member showed the group out of the parking lot and back to their regularly sched- uled lives. On the way home, his wife said, "I understand you were offered a spot to play in the first foursome Saturday." "How did you hear that already?" "You should take it," she said. It was then that the eccentric member fully realized the power it gave him to be a part of the first foursome. Slowly, methodically he began the humiliating process of self-justification. It took him five days, but on Saturday he was at the first tee box at 6:30 a.m., wearing a new pink shirt in an effort to main- tain at least some eccentricity. "I'm glad to see you came around," the oldest member said. "It's a beautiful morning," the eccentric member said as he swung a 5-iron through the misty air. "Might as well enjoy it." Stmpfl is an RC junior and the Daily'smanagingnewseditor. BEAM Continued from page 8B point, those immutable charac- teristics of race, class and gen- der come into play. They are present in nearly every aspect of a child's upbringing and educa- tion. Through affirmative action policies, colleges consider these aspects in determining who deserves to be admitted. The use of these characteristics in deter- mining merit is no more signifi- cant than how the more accepted measures of admission - SAT tests, difficulty of curriculum, GPA - are biased by them. Of course, college admis- sions is just one aspect of MCRI, though you might not know it from the discussion on cam- pus. MCRI would ban affirma- tive action in public employ- ment and contracting as well. If the factors Of course, dgterain-dm ing admis- sion to just one a college are M C t complex, MRCI, tho then cer- mih tainly those not for employ- from the c ment and contract- Sion on ca ing are even more so. Hiring involves qualifica- tions, work experience - and connections. Less than 4 percent of the 11,000 seats on the boards of Fortune 1000 companies were held by blacks in 2002, and less than 2 percent were held by Lati- nos. Eleven percent of corporate officers are women. Thanks to decades of discrimination, the higher-ups in businesses and government are overwhelmingly white men. These powerful white men have golfing buddies who have kids who could really use a job. These powerful white men know a white guy who can definitely offer the lowest bid. They've been friends for decades, since college. It's certainly under- standable why just 3 percent of government contracts were awarded to women-owned busi- nesses in 2003. It's understand- C able why the unemployment rate among blacks and Hispanics in Michigan was more than twice as high as among whites in 2004. And so in a world where con- nections determine who gets hired and which small business makes it, affirmative action allows those who have been shut out from those connections to have a shot. If we lived in a world in which only hard work and talent paid off, maybe we wouldn't have to consider factors like race and gender when we look at what it means to be deserving. But admissions decisions, hiring decisions and contracting deci- sions aren't made like that. Few employers have the time or energy to thoroughly review every appli- cation and objectively select the best-quali- fied candi- date. And the sort of "best-quali- fied" MCRI Col- support- ers tend to SSI',/9 5 advocate is speCt of again some set of crite- ugh you ria labeled -as objec- know it tive, despite Sisc us- being any- thing but. Impus. One wom- an's story should not determine a state con- stitutional amendment, and allowing one school's admissions policy to confine the discussion about MCRI to the college campus is just as myopic. As a society, we - not Gratz - have to determine who is deserving. Is merit the only fac- tor we should consider when hir- ing, contracting and admitting students? Does a specific attempt to measure merit make those selected deserving? MCRI's passage would take a difficult issue and make it sim- ple. Those who are privileged, those who score well on stan- dardized tests, those who have connections to ensure they never count themselves among Michi- gan's unemployed - they, and they alone, would have merit. They, and they alone, would be deserving. . >: m...- - . . - . .. Send fiction and poetry submissions to cyanj@umich edu. TOP: Students rally against the MCRI. BOTTOM: LSA sophomore Kim Leung sits in the Law Quad.