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Supreme Court to revisit affirmative action in Texas case

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Experts on higher education differ on whether a Texas-style automatic admissions law would work elsewhere.

Florida and California have used such policies to increase diversity after their affirmative action plans were halted in the 1990s. The results have been mixed.

In California, students who graduate in the top 9 percent of their high school class are admitted to the University of California system, but not necessarily to the campus of their choice. UC officials also give extra consideration to students who faced social and economic hardships.

The percentage of Latino students at UC has been rising steadily, but officials attribute this mostly to the surge in the Latino population. Despite their best efforts, they say, UC Berkeley and UCLA have fewer black students than in 1996.

UC President Mark G. Yudof was formerly the chancellor at the University of Texas. The automatic admissions policy “works well in Texas, but not so well in California,” he said, because Texas has more segregated schools. UC’s lawyers told the high court they had tried race-neutral policies, but achieved “limited and disappointing results.”

But Edward Blum, an activist against affirmative action who launched Fisher’s suit, believes the success of UT’s automatic admissions policy will show the Supreme Court that race-based policies are no longer needed.

“Using a student’s race to give him an advantage or disadvantage strikes most Americans as wrong,” he said. “They are creating more diversity through the top 10 percent policy, and every black and Hispanic student can say, ‘My race was not a factor in my admission.’”

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