Last November, North Thurston Public Schools, located east of Olympia, Washington, made headlines when their yearly “equity report” removed Asian students from the “person of color” category. Instead, they were lumped in with whites in…

Last November, North Thurston Public Schools, located east of Olympia, Washington, made headlines when their yearly “equity report” removed Asian students from the “person of color” category. Instead, they were lumped in with whites in…
The California state university system faced complaints remarkably similar to the ones Harvard is facing now, and leveled by the same ethnic group.
If you spend any time at academic conferences, you realize that their biggest target is not conservatives (and realize they have vanquished), who they barely acknowledge, but “neoliberals.”
Asian American students, by taking responsibility to integrate international Asian students, are perpetuating ‘colorblind racism,’ one professor claimed in a study.
The Trump administration will take a look at Harvard University’s affirmative action policies, which university is facing a lawsuit from Asian Americans over the implementation of said policies.
Princeton University, facing a lawsuit over racial discrimination in college admissions of Asian-Americans, is suing to keep their admissions data private.
From the College Fix: “A group called the Asian American Coalition for Education plans to file an official complaint tomorrow with the federal Department of Education and Department of Justice noting that Yale, Brown, and Dartmouth have “unlawfully discriminated” against Asian-Americans in their admissions policies.”
They haven’t ever seen a sumo suit before? It’s pretty fun to mess around like that, but to be offended? Come on. Photo by ninahale Photo by ninahale
A conservative is sponsoring the slate of five candidates for the Harvard Board of Overseers: An “outsider” slate running for Harvard’s Board of Overseers is pledging to end tuition for undergraduates as well as treat…
The university president was at a morning prayer session at the Memorial Church and defended the university’s admissions policy.