Boston University Group Offers White Scholarship

sdy284

sdy284

Audioholic
The Daily Free Press Article

Award meant to protest race-based scholarships

Looking to draw attention to what they call the "worst form of bigotry confronting America today," Boston University's College Republicans are circulating an application for a "Caucasian Achievement and Recognition Scholarship" that requires applicants be at least 25 percent Caucasian.

"Did we do this to give a scholarship to white kids? Of course not," the scholarship reads. "Did we do it to trigger a discussion on what we believe to be the morally wrong practice of basing decisions in our schools and our jobs on racial preferences rather than merit? Absolutely."

The scholarship, which is privately funded by the BUCR without the support of the university, is meant to raise awareness, group members say. BUCR member argue that racial preferences are a form of "bigotry." The group has a similar view on affirmative action.

The application for the $250 scholarship, due Nov. 30, requires applicants be full-time BU undergraduate students and one-fourth Caucasian and maintain at least a 3.2 cumulative GPA. Applicants must submit two essays, one describing the applicant's ancestry and one describing "what it means to you to be a Caucasian-American today."

BUCR President Joe Mroszczyk said he spoke to Dean of Students Kenneth Elmore before publicly releasing the scholarship to make sure it would be legal. Mroszczyk said BUCR members also talked to others beforehand, some of whom were initially "agitated or upset" but understood the point after members explained themselves, he said.

"If you give out a white scholarship, it's racist, and if you give out a Hispanic scholarship, it is OK," the College of Arts and Sciences senior said. "It is the main point. We are not doing this scholarship as a white-supremacy scholarship."

La Fuerza Co-Chair Sara-Marie Pons, who is also on the Admissions Student Diversity Board, said although she agrees with BUCR's claim that racial preference is "contradictory to our American ideals of freedom and equality," she feels American history justifies today's affirmative action." Our country oppressed people of color for centuries while everyone else who was 'preferred' continued to succeed and lead our country in all aspects," the School of Management senior said in an email. "The goal of a university in striving to admit more students of color is a positive movement to increase the diversity of its institution."

Pons said the university's diversity creates a "better learning environment" and "dynamic discussion." She said she believes minority-specific scholarships serve an important function.

"While I can see the controversy over scholarships toward specific ethnic groups, we need to keep in mind its intention," she said. "The [group-specific] scholarship is there to increase the interest of students in that group to continue their education and reach the equality that we all strive for."

After the recipient is chosen, BUCR plans to host an event to honor the winner and speak about the award, as well as hold a forum discussion about racial preference, Mroszczyk said.

Mroszczyk said the BUCR borrowed the scholarship idea from the College Republicans at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R.I., which sponsored a similar award in 2003. Former RWU College Republicans President Jason Mattera said the "whites-only" scholarship was meant to be a parody, but it brought harsh media attention to their campus.

Mattera, now the Young American's Foundation National Spokesman, a group supporting the conservative movement, said the idea was spurred when RWU administrators "compiled a list of scholarships for people of color only." Although Mattera, a Puerto Rican, would have been eligible for some of these scholarships, he said he still wanted to "expose the inequities."

RWU College Republicans adviser June Speakman said the organization started receiving complaints as soon as it released the scholarship. Despite protests, 15 students applied for the scholarship.

"It was a way to make their protests highly visible, provocative," she said. "They stuck to their guns. They were steadfast."

Speakman said the scholarship was discontinued after its first year when the national and state Republican parties severed ties with RWU College Republicans.

Mattera said people were aware the scholarship had "nothing to do with racism," but the Republican National Committee still did not want to be affiliated with the scholarship.

"The RNC under [former chair] Ed Gillespie disagreed with me," Mattera said. "For Ed Gillespie to be dismissive or to imply that there was racism, he lacked any type of -- to put it bluntly -- balls in standing up against racial preferences. It would have been a great opportunity."

Regarding BU's adaptation of this scholarship, Mattera said he is glad the BUCR is interested in continuing to promote awareness.

"I guarantee that once this happens, be ready for hypocritical charges of racism, and be ready to be attacked," Mattera said, "but once they attack you, the hypocrisy is exposed."

i'll let others voice their opinion before i voice mine
 
Seth=L

Seth=L

Audioholic Overlord
Good luck getting anyone to read that in this hemisphere at this time.:D
 
sdy284

sdy284

Audioholic
Seth=L said:
Good luck getting anyone to read that in this hemisphere at this time.:D
well now its monday morning...and still no other replies
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
I can tell you from personal experience it's true. My brother in law was up for promotion after serving 15 years on his post after getting passed over by inferior candidates (who were minorities)who hadn't put in the years and didn't have the experience, he was forced to file a reverse discrimination suit, he won, the jury, mostly minority was unanimous. And in his line of work people's lives are at stake. The city was accused of discrimination trying to fill an affirmative action quota. It's a double edged sword.
 
Seth=L

Seth=L

Audioholic Overlord
This reminds me of some dialogue in "American History X". Were the father is telling his son Derek about minorities that scored lower on the fireman tests got the job over those who scored the highest.
 
Rock&Roll Ninja

Rock&Roll Ninja

Audioholic Field Marshall
That movie was amazing. Watch that and then rent Norton's next film Keeping The Faith. A complete physical transformation. You'll hardly believe its even the same person.
 
Seth=L

Seth=L

Audioholic Overlord
I have never seen Keeping the Faith, how is it?
 
Rock&Roll Ninja

Rock&Roll Ninja

Audioholic Field Marshall
sdy284 said:
only 2 legit replies in 7 posts....good job audioholics :rolleyes:
What? have you never been on the internet before?
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
Seth=L said:
This reminds me of some dialogue in "American History X". Were the father is telling his son Derek about minorities that scored lower on the fireman tests got the job over those who scored the highest.
The only difference Seth was that it is a movie. This happened. I saw the movie and it was very disturbing. Extremes are extremes.
 
gmichael

gmichael

Audioholic Spartan
Tough call. Both sides have valid points. But in the end, I believe scholarships should go to whoever deserves it the most. Who is smart enough and hard working enough to finish what they started, but don't have the cash to go? Color, religion, etc should have nothing to do with it.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
G,
You hit the proverbial nail on the head, it should be left to personal abilities, hard work, and preparation.... leave out color, religion, etc., etc. If you meet the criteria (and said criteria is level accross the playing field for everyone)you should be rewarded (scholarship, position, etc.). If your economic situtaion means you must apply for said scholarship that doesn't exclude you from above points. You must perpare, it shouldn't be handed out exclusively for the sake of filling a quota, or for racial considerations. It only harms the person later on in life (you develop the "I deserve this" complex), then boom, life hits you and the real world isn't always like college.
 
Jack Hammer

Jack Hammer

Audioholic Field Marshall
Interesting Concept...

...I'm sure it will pi$$ off a number of people.

There was a time when it was somewhat necessary to have these types of quotas. That time has, for the most part, passed. It's more a problem of a good and well meant idea getting mucked up in actual usage. I'm a older white male American born college student. Lastyear when I searched a database (Fastweb) of over a million scholarships, I qualified for a grand total of...
...19. When I changed the search from male to female it jumped to over 1,000. When I changed the ethnic to something other than white it jumped to several thousand. This doesn't make me bitter or hateful, at all. I can see where a bunch of white college kids are getting their proverbial panties in a bind.

The programs need some modification to reflect current times. Some quotas should be eliminated, others should be re-worded to reflect and protect peoples needs. There are still companies and city governments that would prefer to not hire people of color. There needs to be some sort of system to ensure that fair hiring practices are being used. A system that doesn't penalize people based on race or economic class. I don't know what that system is.

As far as topics like this go...
...people get overly touchy and emotional about them. I think most people have more pressing issues for them than to get into a heated debate about a subject they likely see as not having a huge effect on their immediate existance. Dont be offended or offensive if a lot of members don't reply.

My $0.02

Jack
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
Hey Jack,

My sentiments exactly, especially with political threads.
 
Jack Hammer

Jack Hammer

Audioholic Field Marshall
WTF?:confused: my reply in the Master and Commander thread posted here instead...:confused: :eek: :confused:

I deleted it and reposted in the other area.

Jack
 
Last edited:
furrycute

furrycute

Banned
We are audioholics. Not technocolorholics (is there such a word?)
 
mikeyj92

mikeyj92

Full Audioholic
I pretty much agree with Jack. There was a time when it was helpful, if not needed, to have such "quotas". I too believe that time has passed. This idea by these college guys is a good one, imo.
 
Last edited:
mikeyj92

mikeyj92

Full Audioholic
loose tool said:
Thanks it's been edited, except in your post where I will always remain less than "litrate".:eek:

I deleted that part of my post. I'm not out to embarrass or flame anyone for $hits and giggles.
 

Latest posts

newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top