Joe Lujan appeals the district court’s judgment in favor of the defendants, the Franklin County Board of Education and Howard M. Hannah, the former Superintendent of Schools of Franklin County, Tennessee. Lujan’s complaint alleged that the defendants’ failure to hire him as the head football coach at Franklin County High School violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
The complaint also alleged a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court’s decision is reported at
I.
Joe Lujan, who is of black and hispanic parentage, was first employed by the Board of Education in 1949. At that time, Franklin County operated segregated schools and Lujan worked at Townsend High School, an all black school. From 1949 to 1966, Lujan, in addition to his teaching duties, was the head football and basketball coach at Townsend. Litigation to force desegregation began in the early 1960’s and led to the closing of Townsend High in 1966.
See Hill v. Franklin County Board of Education,
In 1971 and 1979, the Board had openings for a head basketball coach at Franklin County High and Huntland High, respectively. In both instances, the Board hired Rodney Rogers, who is white. The Board did not advertise or take formal applications for these positions but instead hired Rogers through rather informal procedures. The coaching position at issue in this case became open during the 1978-79 school year when the Board decided not to renew the contract of its then current head football coach. The Board publicized the opening by having stories placed in several newspapers. A total of 17 persons, including Lujan, applied for the job. The Board narrowed the field to a group of five to eight applicants for further evaluation. Lujan, and all other assistant coaches who applied for the vacancy, were among this group. Superintendent Hannah checked the applicants’ references and made a recommendation to the Board. After interviewing the entire group of finalists, the Board followed Hannah’s recommendation and hired Harold “Red” Roberts, who is white.
The district court held that Lujan’s § 1983 claim was barred by the applicable statute of limitations and that only Lujan’s Title VII claim for the failure to hire him as head football coach in 1979 would be considered. Lujan does not challenge this ruling on appeal. Allocating the burden of proof in accordance with
Texas Department of Community Affairs v. Burdine,
II.
Lujan does not challenge the district court’s factual findings as being clearly erroneous. Rather, he argues that the district court evaluated this case under improper legal standards. Specifically, he argues that school personnel displaced or demoted as a result of desegregation are entitled to what have become known as
“Singleton
rights.”
See Singleton v. Jackson Municipal Separate School District,
III.
In Singleton, the Fifth Circuit prescribed certain general provisions to be used in desegregation injunctions. With regard to faculty and staff displacements, injunctions were to provide:
If there is to be a reduction in the number of principals, teachers, teacher-aides, or other professional staff employed by the school district which will result in a dismissal or demotion of any such staff members, the staff member to be dismissed or demoted must be selected on the basis of objective and reasonable nondiscriminatory standards from among all the staff of the school district. In addition if there is any such dismissal or demotion, no staff vacancy may be filled through recruitment of a person of a race, color or national origin different from that of the individual dismissed or demoted, until each displaced staff member who is qualified has had an opportunity to fill the vacancy and has failed to accept an offer to do so.
Prior to such a reduction, the school board will develop or require the development of non-racial objective criteria to be used in selecting the staff member who is to be dismissed or demoted. These criteria shall be available for public inspection and shall be retained by the school district. The school district also shall record and preserve the evaluation of staff members under the criteria. Such evaluation shall be made available upon request to the dismissed or demoted employee.
“Demotion” as used above includes any reassignment (1) under which the staff member receives less pay or has less responsibility than under the assignment he held previously, (2) which requires a lesser degree of skill than did the assignment he held previously, or (3) under which the staff member is asked to teach a subject or grade other than one for which he is certified or for which he has had substantial experience within a reasonably current period. In general and depending upon the subject matter involved, five years is such a reasonable period.
See
Lujan contends, and the district court found, that the diminution in his coaching responsibilities following desegregation constituted a “demotion” and that he was generally qualified for the head coaching *922 position which became open in 1979. These findings, Lujan argues, are sufficient to compel the conclusion that he was entitled to the job of head football coach in 1979. The district court held, however, that Singleton rights may not be asserted in an action brought solely under Title VII.
Although we agree with the district court, we expand somewhat upon its reasoning. First, we conclude that Lujan has failed to show that he had any Singleton rights, or, stated differently, that the Board was subject to the duties imposed in Singleton. Second, even had those rights and duties attached, they could not be enforced in Title VII litigation.
A.
For a number of years, court opinions have contained loose language referring to
Singleton
rights as if those rights rested upon a constitutional or statutory footing.
See Cousin v. Board of Trustees of Houston Municipal Separate School District,
arguments rest on a misapprehension of the nature of the Singleton provisions relating to displacements caused by integration. Singleton entitlements are not constitutional rights. Both the requirement that displacements be affected only in accordance with written, objective criteria and the requirement that displaced personnel be given a right of first refusal of subsequent vacancies are standards of conduct imposed upon school boards under court order. They are aspects of equitable remedies, designed by this court under its general equitable power to fashion relief for constitutional violations ... in accordance with principles of fairness and with a minimum of hardship to persons affected by large scale, court-ordered social change.
Hardy v. Porter,
The Fifth Circuit authoritatively clarified the nature of
Singleton
rights in
Cousin.
The defendant school system in that case had begun voluntary desegregation before the imposition of any court order. As a result of this voluntary action, the plaintiff was demoted.
See
Despite the fact that some of our cases refer to Singleton rights as “law” or as being “constitutional,” the inescapable fact is that an overwhelming number of cases apply Singleton III principles in court-ordered desegregation situations. If Singleton rights are “law,” then, they are law only in the sense that any injunction creates a law of the case, just as binding on the parties to the injunction as if it were statutory or constitutional. Although a meritorious Singleton claim also may be meritorious under the civil rights statutes or the fourteenth amendment, Singleton III does not create or embody separate substantive rights existing apart from the judicial orders that create the displacement damage Singleton attempted to mitigate.
Id. at 267-68 (footnote omitted). Since the Fifth Circuit authored Singleton, we regard that circuit’s later pronouncements on the subject as highly persuasive authority. *923 Accordingly, we adopt the Fifth Circuit’s holding that Singleton rights exist only insofar as a school system is subject to a valid Singleton order.
Lujan does not argue that the district court supervising the Franklin County desegregation case ever imposed a Singleton injunction. 1 Instead, he relies upon a document issue by the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare to “all Chief State School Officers and School Superintendents.” Lujan argues that this document imposed Singleton duties upon the Board. Assuming that a school district could be put under a Singleton duty by an order of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare as well as by a court order, we conclude that the document cited by Lujan was insufficient to create Singleton duties.
The document relied upon by Lujan purports to rest upon the powers granted to the Department by Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d et seq., which prohibits federal aid to programs engaging in discrimination. Section 2000d-l provides that each agency disbursing funds may issue “rules, regulations, or orders of general applicability” to effectuate the antidiscrimination provisions. The President must specifically approve each rule, regulation or order. See id. 2 Lujan has failed to demonstrate that the document he relies upon was intended to be, or was effective as, a formal order. First, it is not denominated as such. Instead, it merely is styled as a “Memorandum.” Second, the memorandum merely “describes HEW policies” and is devoid of mandatory language. Third, the specific passage relied upon states only that “courts have also held that persons demoted as an incident to the desegregation process are to be given preference in future promotions.” The memorandum does not say, however, that the failure to do so constitutes discrimination. This language is far from what one would expect an agency to use in ordering someone to take action upon the pain of losing federal funding. 3 Finally, Lujan made no effort to show that this document had been approved by the President, a prerequisite to its validity as a binding general order under 42 U.S.C. 2000d-l. Accordingly, assuming that the Department had the authority to impose Singleton duties upon the Board, we conclude that the document relied upon by Lujan was ineffective to do so. Lujan therefore had no Singleton rights.
B.
We also conclude that even if the Board had a Singleton duty to give preferences to displaced personnel, a violation of that duty may not be remedied in litigation brought solely under Title VII. This conclusion necessarily follows from an analysis of the nature of Singleton rights and the scope of relief available under Title VII.
Under
Singleton,
Lujan would be absolutely entitled to the head coaching position which opened in 1979 without regard to whether either the 1966 demotion or the 1979 failure to promote were moti
*924
vated by racial discrimination.
Singleton
rights are not mere remedies for victims of discrimination. Rather, they accord a preference to a certain class of persons: those who were displaced, not by discrimination, but by the historical forces of desegregation.
See Hardy,
The preferential treatment given to a particular class of persons under
Singleton
sharply contrasts with the more limited protections of Title VII. The sole question in a Title VII case is, quite simply, whether “the defendant intentionally discriminated against the plaintiff.”
United States Postal Service Board of Governors v. Aikens,
Clearly, then, what Lujan seeks in the name of
Singleton
may not be obtained under Title VII.
5
While a person might have a right to recall under a
Singleton
injunction and also have a right to relief under Title VII, he does not obtain the latter
by virtue
o/the former. Rather, a plaintiff must prove that he' was a victim of discrimination in order to assert a right to relief under Title VII.
Cf. Cousin
at
To summarize, Lujan has not shown that the Board was subject to the dictates of Singleton either by force of a court order or by the memorandum from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Under Cousin, then, Lujan had *925 no Singleton rights. In the alternative, even assuming that the Board was subject to a Singleton duty, Lujan may obtain no relief in this Title VII action because Title VII forbids court-ordered remedies for those who are not the actual victims of discrimination. 7 Thus, Lujan can obtain the relief he seeks only if he can prove actual discrimination.
IV.
Lujan’s second argument is that because of the Board’s history of segregation, the burden of persuasion, not merely of production, should have shifted to the defendants upon the establishment of a prima facie case. Lujan cites numerous cases to support this proposition.
See, e.g., Knighton v. Laurens County School District No. 56,
Once again, we agree with the district court’s result but our conclusion rests on slightly different reasoning. We conclude that Burdine does state a rule generally applicable to Title VII cases, including those connected to prior school desegregation. The Supreme Court has, however, shifted the burden of persuasion to the defendant in cases involving either a pattern or practice of employment discrimination or a disparate impact upon minorities. A number of cases relied upon by Lujan can be reconciled with Burdine by analyzing them in terms of the Supreme Court’s pattern or practice and disparate impact cases. Some of the other cases relied upon by Lujan, however, sanction shifting the burden of persuasion to the defendant in a manner inconsistent with both Burdine and the pattern or practice and disparate impact cases. Finally, Lujan’s claim falls within the standard rule for disparate treatment cases announced in Burdine and the district court therefore correctly allocated the burden of persuasion.
A.
An analysis of this historical roots of the doctrine relied upon by Lujan clarifies the issue greatly. Thorough research of the authority cited by Lujan reveals that the burden-shifting principle stems from the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Chambers.
*926
The cases in this circuit which have employed the burden-shifting device are
Rolfe
and
McFerren. McFerren,
the later case, cites only
Rolfe
and
Chambers. See McFerren,
As noted above, a number of cases rely on
Keyes,
a Supreme Court case, in addition to
Chambers. See, e.g., Evans,
B.
The principle that when certain preconditions are met a minority school teacher may shift the burden of persuasion to the defendant is thus firmly established. The cases stemming from Chambers have repeatedly applied it and the Supreme Court in Keyes has approved it, albeit in dicta. 12 A close reading of Keyes, Chambers and the earlier cases relying on Chambers re *927 veals, however, that later eases have loosened the requirements for applying the principle. Although the earlier cases may be reconciled with Burdine, some of the later cases cannot. We conclude that the Chambers principle remains valid only to the extent that it conforms to its initial use.
Chambers
involved the “startling decimation of Negro teachers” in the defendant’s school system following desegregation.
See
Shifting the burden of persuasion under these circumstances was what the Supreme Court approved in
Keyes.
Indeed, the court characterized the
Chambers
holding as applying only upon a showing that a school with a history of segregation discharged “a disproportionately large number of Negro teachers.”
Keyes,
This reading of
Keyes
and the earlier cases is also supported by the cases
*928
relied on in
Chambers. Chambers
analogized the discharge of a disproportionately large number of black teachers to those cases involving the systematic exclusion of black grand and petit jurors.
See Chambers,
Numerical disparities were clearly the crucial element necessary to shift the burden of persuasion to the defendant in
Chambers, Keyes
and other similar cases of that vintage. Nonetheless, later cases, including
Rolfe,
fail to set forth the requirement of numerical disparity as a precondition to shifting the burden of persuasion.
See
C.
Burdine is not the only Supreme Court case to discuss the burden of persuasion in Title VII cases. We conclude that cases such as Chambers and Rolfe can be reconciled with other Title VII cases. Any extension of those cases, which deletes the numerical disparity requirement, cannot.
If one examines the facts of
Chambers
and the actual language of
Keyes,
parallels to other Title VII theories appear. The critical finding in
Chambers
and
Keyes
of disproportionate numerical impact on minorities quickly brings two Title VII theories to mind. First, if a facially neutral employment practice, such as a written test, has a disproportionate impact on minorities, the burden of persuasion shifts to the defendant to show that the test has a “manifest relationship to the employment in question.”
Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
The range of Title VII theories addressed by the Supreme Court thus reveals two instances in which shifting the burden of persuasion to the defendant is appropriate. In both of these instances, numerical disparity is the key triggering factor. In contrast, where there is but one asserted occasion of discrimination,
Bur-dine
teaches that the burden of persuasion “remains at all times with the plaintiff.”
Burdine,
D.
Although this case was tried primarily as an ordinary individual disparate treatment case, Lujan’s complaint did contain allegations consistent with a pattern of practice theory. His proof, however, completely failed to show that the Board of Education had a policy of racial discrimination.
Lujan’s list of proposed witnesses, submitted in conjunction with the joint pretrial order, included several witnesses who were to testify “to the patterns and practices of discrimination relative to the hiring and *930 promoting of blacks.” Of those witnesses who testified, however, none produced the evidence foreseen in the pretrial order. John Hunt testified that he had been the principal of Townsend High prior to the 1966 desegregation. Following desegregation, he became assistant principal at Franklin County High. He testified that while he was the assistant principal at Franklin County High the position of principal became vacant and he was not hired. He also testified, however, that he did not apply for the principalship and was not at all interested in it. Similarly, Ophelia Miller testified that she had been a teacher and principal of an all black school prior to desegregation. When the all black school was closed due to desegregation, she was discharged but recalled within two weeks. In addition, following desegregation she was only a teacher and not a principal. Although a vacancy for a principal did occur after her demotion pursuant to desegregation, she did not apply for the vacancy “because I really didn’t want it.” This was the only evidence presented by Lujan of the Board’s failure to hire or promote blacks as a class. 18
In contrast, Fred Langford, who was Superintendent of Franklin County Schools from 1968 to 1976 and at the time of the trial, testified that the Board sought out blacks for teaching positions but the Board received few applications due to the school system’s low pay scale. In their first year of actively recruiting blacks, the Board obtained initial agreements from six blacks to come into the system to teach. Four of them changed their minds after finding jobs that paid more money. Two of the blacks did stay in the system for three or four years until moving away due to marriages. Langford testified that for the current school year the Board had obtained three applications from blacks and two of the applicants were hired. The third applicant lacked proper certification for the openings that the Board had. During this same year the Board hired only six teachers. Thus, for the current school year (at the time of the trial) one third of the Board’s new teachers were black. Langford also testified to several specific instances in which the Board had only one opening and a black was selected for that position over white applicants. Finally, Langford testified that although the Board continues to have a scarcity of black applicants, it has pending applications from over 300 white individuals.
Obviously, this evidence is far from sufficient to establish a pattern or practice of discriminatory hiring by the Board. Insofar as disparate impact might be relevant, Lujan has not identified any facially neutral practice which excludes a disproportionate number of blacks from being hired or promoted, and, as the evidence related above reveals, there was in fact no disparate impact upon blacks in the hiring or promotional practices of the Board. 19 Fi *931 nally, the history of de jure segregation in Franklin County does not suffice as direct evidence of a current facially discriminatory policy. 20 Cf. supra note 16. Accordingly, we conclude that Lujan has failed to present circumstances which warrant shifting the burden of persuasion to the defendants. The district court therefore properly allocated the burden of proof.
V.
Lujan’s final argument is that the defendants failed to articulate a legally sufficient nondiscriminatory reason for their selection of Roberts. In
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
First, contrary to Lujan’s suggestion, the defendants in this case did not fail to articulate any legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the hiring decision, but instead articulated several nonracial justifications, one of which is, arguably, legally insufficient. The bulk of the testimony concerning the defendants’ selection of Roberts focused on his excellent coaching record and the enthusiasm he had displayed while coaching at other schools. The testimony about Lujan’s age as a factor in the hiring decision was, in contrast, rather fleeting. Thus, the defendants did articulate a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason. We are simply not confronted with the case Lujan envisions: a defendant attempting to overcome a plaintiff’s prima facie case of racial discrimination only with testimony that it was practicing age discrimination instead.
Second, nothing in the record before us indicates that Lujan objected to Hannah’s testimony or otherwise presented this argument to the district court. To the extent that the defendants could not legally justify their selection of Roberts over Lujan by reference to the ages of the applicants, Lujan should have either objected to the testimony in question as irrelevant because probative only of a legally insufficient excuse or acquiesced in the admission of the testimony and later argued to the district court the point he seeks to present here.
21
Since we do not consider arguments not raised below, Lujan is barred from presenting this claim here.
See Brown v. Marshall,
VI.
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Notes
. Indeed, the injunction in this case was entered well before the 1969
Singleton
decision.
See Hill v. Franklin County Board of Education,
. The President's authority to approve these orders has since been delegated to the Attorney General. See Exec. Order No. 12,250, 45 Fed. Reg. 72,995 (1980).
. In contrast, the Department has imposed
Singleton
duties under a “compliance agreement,” which expressly "required the district to comply with ...
Singleton." See Barnes v. Jones County School District,
. Of course, slightly different questions are presented when the plaintiff alleges that minorities are unfairly treated by a facially neutral employment practice.
See Burdine,
. Lujan sought injunctive relief as well as other remedies. Although we recognize that some courts have held that an injunction is proper where a pattern or practice of illegal discrimination is shown even if the plaintiff before the court was not a victim of discrimination,
see Evans v. Harnett County Board of Education,
. We also note a third problem with Lujan’s
Singleton
claim. The document upon which Lujan relies purports to rest on Title VI, not Title VII. A violation of a duty imposed by that order would, then, be a violation of Title VI but not,
ipso facto,
of Title VII. Although a violation of a valid Title VI
Singleton
order might also be a violation of Title VII, the latter conclusion would follow only if a violation of Title VII were proven. If it is true that a
Singleton
duty may arise under Title VI, then it must also be true that not every violation of Title VI is also a violation of Title VII. This necessarily results, since, as we concluded above, the
Singleton preference
exceeds the protections of Title VII. Thus, again assuming a valid
Singleton
order under Title VI, the proper vehicle to redress violations of that order would be a private cause of action under Title VI or, perhaps, an action under § 1983.
See Guardians Association v. Civil Service Commission of New York,
. This is not to say
Stotts
renders
Singleton
rights unenforceable. We hold only that
Singleton
rights may not be vindicated in an action brought solely under Title VII. We also note that our comments about the scope of relief available under. Title VII apply only to coercive remedies and not to
Singleton
-type preferences which a school Board might voluntarily grant.
See Vanguards of Cleveland v. City of Cleveland,
. Some cases state that the burden of persuasion is upon the defendant to justify its actions by "clear and convincing” evidence,
see, e.g., Chambers,
. One of the cases cited by Lujan simply does not contain the proposition.
See Hatton v. Board of Education,
.
Barnes
also cites
Roper v. Effingham City Board of Education,
. The Fifth Circuit cases also rely on the unattributed proposition in
Roper. See supra
note 10. The cases in the Eleventh Circuit follow the Fifth Circuit cases.
See Bonner v. City of Prich-ard,
.
See Price,
. The other cases cited by the Supreme Court in
Keyes
also required a showing of numerical disparity in order to shift the burden of persuasion to the defendant.
See North Carolina Teachers Association v. Asheboro City Board of Education,
Thus, all of the cases relied upon in Keyes required significant numerical disparities to shift the burden of persuasion to the defendant.
. Under the facts of some of the more recent cases, certain applications of the Chambers rule appear to be in consonance with our reading of the Supreme Court’s cases governing the burden of proof in Title VII cases. See infra note 17.
. The only alternative to using statistics to demonstrate a pattern or practice would appear to be direct evidence of an intent to discriminate.
See Trans World Airlines, Inc. v. Thur-ston,
— U.S. -,
.
Rolfe
might also proceed on the theory that the defendant had a hiring policy which was • discriminatory on its face.
See supra
note 15. In that case, the defendant evaluated only the teachers of an all black school for discharge and the only teachers of that school were black. The necessary result of the policy was that only black teachers would be discharged. Given such direct evidence of a facially discriminatory policy, the burden of persuasion would shift to the defendant to justify its actions by whatever means available.
See Bell v. Birmingham Linen Service,
. This analysis is consistent with the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Evans.
In that case, the plaintiff proved to the satisfaction of the district court that the defendant had engaged in a pattern or practice of hiring only black principals for black schools and white principals for white schools.
See
. Lujan also relies on a prior employment discrimination case against the Board,
Hill v. Franklin County Board of Education,
. The district court found that the defendants used subjective criteria in selecting the new head football coach. Although the use of subjective criteria may be analyzed as a facially neutral employment practice under the disparate impact model of
Griggs, see Rowe v. Cleveland Pneumatic Co.,
Lujan also complains that the use of subjective criteria violated the mandates of
Singleton
and
Rolfe.
Those cases require, however, only that objective criteria be used to determine which teachers to demote or discharge.
See Singleton,
. Although several all-white schools remain in Franklin County, the only evidence in the record indicates that these schools exist in isolated rural areas where no blacks live. Thus, the existence of these schools does not establish that the Board has a facially discriminatory policy as to student assignments, much less as to teaching or coaching positions.
See Dayton Board of Education v. Brinkman,
. Lujan does not argue on appeal that he is excused by the plain error doctrine. See generally Fed.R.Evid. 103(d).
. We do not decide whether an objection is necessary to preserve such an argument, only that an objection would be sufficient to do so and that the issue is not properly preserved if there is neither an objection to the evidence nor a presentation of the argument to the district court in another form.
