<p>The “argument” is that it is disgraceful for an allegedly “elite” academic institution like Stanford to pay salaries to athletic performers, and to admit people substantially below the median academic level applicable for other applicants.</p>
<p>To be sure, the Ivies also recruit, and allow in some athletes below the level typial for other applicants, but there is a world of difference between the Ivies’ self-imposed “AI” guidlines and the NCAA minimum standards with which Stanford must comply.</p>
<p>The “argument” is also that it is irrelevant whether the athletic program at Stanford may be “self-funding” - to use the euphemism. This is all a phony shell game anyway … the athletic program doesn’t make a profit, but hits up grads and sponsors to make up the deficit. This doesn’t make it “self-funding” IMHO. (See “The Shape of the River”.)</p>
<p>Moreover, it is wrong for the jocks and their allies in the Department of Athletics to be setting university funding priorities just because they are successful in caging a disproportionate share of alumni contributions.</p>
<p>Hell, any athletic department can out-raise the math department head-to-head with the alumni if you allow them to do so.</p>
<p>No, Stanford will always fall short of what it could be by overemphasizing athletics, letting the tail wag the dog in fundraising, and giving short shrift to need-based financial aid. </p>
<p>They took a positive step three years ago when they gave up the crutch of so-called “Presidential Scholarships” in an effortto buy top students with “merit aid” awards. The powers that be concluded that it was beneath Stanford to stoop to such a device. If you don’t have to “pay” real students to attend - because your school is good enough to attract them without a bribe - then the same thing should be true with jocks.</p>
<p>And we’re not only talking about the salaries paid to the jocks, either. By “bribing” 1 out of 20 matriculants with an “athletic scholarship” Stanford gives a phony boost to both its admit rate and its yield - making it appear far more selective relative to the Ivies + MIT than is actually the case. (The same thing is true at Duke.)</p>
<p>This is especially true since the main “business” of Stanford is presumably education, and the “business” of football more properly can be left to the 49-ers and the Chargers to entertain the Cali masses.</p>