Friday, Apr. 26, 1968
The Search for Something Else
While proven classroom performance remains the best ticket to college, other qualities can also turn the trick -- a wild sense of humor, a weird hobby, or almost anything that sets a student off from the ordinary. Anxious to tap un usual attributes that may not show up in a high school senior's grades or test scores, college admissions officials are relying more heavily on references from school principals and personal inter views with the applicant himself. In selecting next year's freshmen, the nation's leading universities took extra pains to seek out students who, says Cornell University Admissions Dean Walter Snickenberger, "look like they have something else to offer."
The straight arrows in the class of 1972 will be balanced by plenty of students with something else to offer. The University of Pennsylvania found one in a senior at Massachusetts' Phillips Academy with a generally undistinguished academic record. He impressed Penn officials by mentioning in his application his deep love of sailing, which, he rhapsodized, occupies his attention "from the first wakening sail in early April to the last frostbite stint in late October." Columbia passed over applicants with stronger academic credentials to accept a practicing Buddhist from up state New York, a New Jersey student who arranged music for an off-Broad way show and a Long Island youth who accompanied his application with photographs of his sculpture. It also agreed to accept Vladimir Gulevich, 20, of Paterson, N.J., who graduated from his local high school two years ago with below-average grades, went on to a Manhattan business school. Gulevich caught the notice of admissions officials by writing the required essay about himself in the form of an extended poem, then by showing interviewers a sheaf of first-rate translations of Russian verse.
"I'm Different." At Swarthmore College, which rejected four out of every five students who applied for admission, one of the 450 accepted was a youth with average grades who spent last summer driving a Jeep across the U.S. and sleeping in jails. "That takes maturity," comments Douglas Thompson, the school's assistant dean of admissions. "Swarthmore looks well beyond mere grades for qualities of uniqueness, which usually come across in interviews or in the essay that Swarthmore's application requires. We want a boy with something that tells us: 'Hello, I'm different.' "
Universities are particularly inclined to depart from considerations of grades and tests in choosing students who show unusual initiative. Harvard, for example, rejected one applicant who ranked third in his high school class while accepting a classmate who ranked 15th and did not fare as well on his College Board exams. The youth chosen, explains Admissions Director David Smith, displays "personal strength and determination." Wesleyan similarly passed up a top student and star athlete from a suburban Boston high school to pick instead a lower-ranking classmate who, predicts Admissions Director Robert Kirkpatrick, "will work like hell to get through."
This year, admissions officials have been particularly zealous in seeking out Negro students--and no longer just those from middle-class homes. In their eagerness to attract Negroes from disadvantaged backgrounds, many schools have relaxed their admissions standards.
The University of Chicago has accepted Charles Jones, 18, a Negro from Chicago's Marshall High School whose College Board test scores were far below those of most incoming freshmen. But Dean of Admissions Anthony Pallett is confident that Jones, who has worked 40 hours a week as a dish washer to help support his family, "knows where he's going, and he's determined to get there."
Stanford, in addition to the 71 Negroes already accepted for next year (against 52 a year ago), this month said it planned to admit and provide special tutoring for ten "marginal minority-group students" who do not meet normal academic requirements. Brown, in a freshman class of 720, expects to have 25 Negroes next year, up from 13 last year. Princeton, which accepted 23 Negroes a year ago, has tapped more than three times as many, 76, for its incoming freshman class of 810.
Week of Whimsy. Picking applicants with a special quality is a real headache for admissions officials, who are often forced to find intangible and indefinable differences between highly qualified students. Vying for the 1,025 places in Yale's class of '72 were 6,800 applicants, all but 300 of whom easily met the university's academic standards. Princeton officials approved 100 applications a day at the start of its decision-making period this year; it took one whole week of what Admissions Director John T. Osander called "whimsy and brutality" to fill the last 89 positions. Obviously forced to look beyond grades, many universities look well beyond. Yale actually took the initiative in seeking out Dan Shute, a bright high school senior who spends most of his free time working on his family's isolated farm in Maine. Until Yale accepted him, Dan was not even sure whether he would attend college.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.