University must cut clout culture off at its source

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Posted: July 15, 2009 - 12:00 AM
Updated: July 19, 2009 - 11:02 PM
Tagged with: Editorials
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On Tuesday, UI trustees Lawrence Eppley, Kenneth Schmidt, and David Dorris testified before the commission charged with investigating the admissions scandal. Commission members addressed Eppley's role as an intermediary between the Board and the office of former Governor Rod Blagojevich. Eppley claimed that his interventions were merely "referrals" with no influence over the admissions process. Whether or not it was Eppley's intention to favor candidates he referred, he should know that the very act of his referral was an unethical interference in the admissions process.

"I don't think I pushed anything, I was merely referring a candidate," Eppley said before the commission. But it is would be absurd to claim that referrals had no influence over the admissions process. Whether Eppley or others advanced this point of view or not, admissions officers would reasonably feel pressure to admit candidates that had been referred to them by trustees and legislators, who after all, are indirectly their bosses. Legislators and trustees should know this and refrain from making referrals.

Even if "recommendations" only led to reconsideration of well qualified candidates, interference of outsiders in the admissions process is unfair. Most students don't have connections that would give them access to trustee and legislators. When prominent people from outside are allowed to influence the admissions process, admissions decisions are skewed towards students from privileged backgrounds and well-connected families.

Eppley commented, "I said I knew the applicant's family, but it wasn't my business to say yay or nay." The second part of his statement is absolutely right. Admissions officers alone have the right to evaluate candidates. Since putting a candidate's name forward could never hurt them, and in many cases would help, Eppley and others who recommended candidates were nonetheless influencing the admissions process. While reforms in the process may be necessary as well in order to address corruption in admissions, outsiders must be banned from making referrals. To change the culture of clout, we need to cut it off at the source.

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Reader Comments

adamb2000

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Hey DI Editorial Board, I have a question for you. What would happen if one of your newest writers failed to check facts and reported incorrect information? You'd probably jump down his/her throat, as editors, right? Well, at least if you were a real, credible, paper you would. Then shouldn't you, as editors, be held to an even higher standard? How about doing just a bit of fact checking. In the very first sentence of your opinion, you state that Trustees Eppley, Schmidt, and Dorris testified on Tuesday. Trustee Dorris was scheduled to testify, but the commission ran out of time and he was pushed back until next Tuesday. So did write your opinion before the hearing was over, or did you just not bother to check at all? Responsible journalism, I'm sure.

Also, on an unrelated note, can we PLEASE, for the love of God (or in the case of the DI audience and staff, for the love of Obama), stop using the word clout? I swear, it makes me want to vomit. The Chicago Tribune runs a series called Clout Goes to College and now every single story on the admissions scandal uses the word. It's annoying and I think, at least on this point, I can speak for the majority of readers everywhere when I say I'm sick and tired of that word.

skiparoo

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It would seem that Mr. Eppley is about as honest as Senator Burris. Of course the criminals of Illinois' governments would want to reach into the deep pockets of the University of Illinois. And they have. It must be cleaned totally.

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