This is what I don't understand, while affirmative action may have gotten them a place in the Ivy league school, they still have to earn the degree, doing the work and passing. the degree is not handed to them, it must still be earned, no matter how they got into the school.
Maybe affirmative action didn't get them into the Ivy League school, either, though. Maybe they had awesome grades and test scores. I know you used the word "may", and I know you didn't mean it this way, but to me, your post still gives off a little assumption about how the person got into the school.
I took a Poli/sci class a few years ago, and had a conversation with another student (I'm white, she's black, just for prespective). This class was in IL, but she was from the South originaly. She was saying how much better it was up here compared to in the South, even these days. But she did tell me how much more subtle racism is (if more rare) here compared to her home.
Is Florida considered the south? The most blatant racism I've noticed was on a trip to Florida, looking at houses with a realtor. I lived and worked in California and the company was moving to Florida, so took us there so we could get to know the area before deciding if we wanted to move or not.
Anyway, this realtor is showing us around, we drive by a neighborhood of older, but well-kept homes with beautiful, large, shady trees. I asked the realtor about it and she said "oh, you don't want to look in there, that's where all the black people live."

I couldn't believe it. Later we got a similar comment from the hotel staff. We asked if it was too far to walk to some restaurant or something and he said it was close enough to walk, but we wouldn't want to because we'd have to pass a black neighborhood.
Funny thing was, some of our black employees loved their visit to Florida and ended up moving with the company (I didn't). I asked them about it, and they said they didn't feel they were treated any different there. To me, the difference was shocking, but then I probably never noticed the more subtle forms of racism in California that they did.