In other words, NO applicant was qualified based on grades alone. Their grades were sufficient to score them points, but their race was the decisive factor. Is that right, Pat?
It's not surprising - it happens everywhere.
I didn't say race was the decisive factor, and I don't have the point system used for the undergraduates at hand, but race was worth a lot of points.
I can't read the minds of the Law School Admissions Committee members, but the analysis of the respective GPAs and LSAT scores, the relevent strictly quantitative data, plus the races of admitted an rejected students, showed when taken together that anti-white discrimination was a strong factor. Racial discrimination in any amount is unacceptable to the rational and ethical.
It's not surprising - it happens everywhere.
I didn't say race was the decisive factor, and I don't have the point system used for the undergraduates at hand, but race was worth a lot of points.
I can't read the minds of the Law School Admissions Committee members, but the analysis of the respective GPAs and LSAT scores, the relevent strictly quantitative data, plus the races of admitted an rejected students, showed when taken together that anti-white discrimination was a strong factor. Racial discrimination in any amount is unacceptable to the rational and ethical.