Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
International

Asian-American Students' Complaint Against Harvard Dismissed

The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 01:16 PM
    The US Department of Education is dismissing a claim that Harvard shows bias against Asian-American applicants because a similar lawsuit has already been filed in federal court.
     
    Education Department's Office for Civil Rights reportedly told Bloomberg Business that it's dismissing the claim without evaluating its merit, because of a similar lawsuit filed in federal district court in Boston in November.
     
    In May, a coalition of more than 60 organizations filed a complaint with the federal government, alleging that Harvard holds Asian-Americans to higher standards than other ethnic groups, according to On Campus, a public radio initiative produced in Boston.
     
    They also complained the university uses racial quotas lumping all Asian-Americans - Indian, Chinese, Pakistani - into a single, broad category, and asked the federal government to investigate.
     
    "We feel the Department of Education and the Department of Justice should have access to Harvard's admissions records," Swan Lee who helped to organize the coalition, was quoted as saying.
     
    Civil rights activists suggest the complaint is a back door attack on affirmative action, and Harvard says its admissions philosophy is
    "holistic" and it complies with the law.
     
    The group behind that lawsuit, Students for Fair Admissions Inc., is also responsible for another case against the University of North
    Carolina, according to On Campus.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters
    Pro-Russian forces Wednesday captured the Ukrainian naval headquarters in Crimea even as UN chief Ban Ki-moon got ready for a visit to Russia and Ukraine.

    Pro-Russian forces seize Ukraine's naval headquarters

    Ukrainian ministers barred from entering Crimea

    Ukrainian ministers barred from entering Crimea
    Ukrainian First Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Yarema and Defence Minister Igor Tenyukh have been barred from entering Crimea, the Minister of Social Policy Lyudmila Denisova said Wednesday.

    Ukrainian ministers barred from entering Crimea

    MH 370: Maldives Islanders report 'sighting' of missing Malaysia Airlines flight

    MH 370: Maldives Islanders report 'sighting' of missing Malaysia Airlines flight
    Eyewitnesses from the Kuda Huvadhoo concurred that the plane was traveling north to southeast, towards the southern tip of the Addu atoll. They also spoke about the incredibly loud noise that the flight made when it flew over the island.

    MH 370: Maldives Islanders report 'sighting' of missing Malaysia Airlines flight

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft
    The search corridors for the Malaysian Airlines passenger plane that went missing March 8, have been narrowed, acting Transport Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Hussein said Tuesday at a press briefing here.

    Malaysia says search corridor narrowed for missing aircraft

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US
    Sikh children in American schools have been punched, kicked, have had their turbans ripped off by fellow students and called "Bin Laden" or worse. Some have even had to face abuses like "Go Home Terrorist".

    Go home terrorists: Abuse Sikh students face in US

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate
    More than half of Sikh children in US schools endure bullying with over two-thirds of turbaned Sikh children among its worst victims, according to a new national report. Sikh children have been punched kicked, and had their turbans ripped off by fellow students, it found

    Sikh children in US schools becoming targets of hate