Difference between revisions of "Vivian Wu"
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In 1989 [[Vivian Wu]], was a contributor to [[League of Revolutionary Struggle]]s' [[Unity]]. | In 1989 [[Vivian Wu]], was a contributor to [[League of Revolutionary Struggle]]s' [[Unity]]. | ||
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+ | ==MIT== | ||
+ | [[Arthur Hu]] '80 has filed a formal complaint with the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights against the University of California at Berkeley for discriminating against Asian-Americans. Hu, an activist against affirmative action in university admissions, charged the school with using "quotas and differential admissions standards" to turn away Asian-American students in order to implement affirmative action. | ||
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+ | Because schools would rather not reduce the number of white students, he said, and because they have a limited number of spaces in each class, they turn away qualified Asian-Americans to make room for underrepresented minorities. | ||
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+ | Many Asian-Americans in the MIT community oppose Hu. "Affirmative action does not have to conflict with the `merit-based' plans touted by its opponents," said [[Vivian Wu]], a research fellow with the [[Community Fellows Program]] in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning. The solution lies in increasing student enrollment across all racial groups, she stressed. Moreover, Asian-Americans have benefited from affirmative action, according to Wu, who is also a member of the newly formed [[Asian-American Caucus]] at MIT.<ref>[http://tech.mit.edu/V109/N61/hu.61n.html]</ref> | ||
=="A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond"== | =="A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond"== |
Revision as of 04:17, 4 August 2016
Template:TOCnestleft Vivian Wu
LRS
In 1989 Vivian Wu, was a contributor to League of Revolutionary Struggles' Unity.
MIT
Arthur Hu '80 has filed a formal complaint with the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights against the University of California at Berkeley for discriminating against Asian-Americans. Hu, an activist against affirmative action in university admissions, charged the school with using "quotas and differential admissions standards" to turn away Asian-American students in order to implement affirmative action.
Because schools would rather not reduce the number of white students, he said, and because they have a limited number of spaces in each class, they turn away qualified Asian-Americans to make room for underrepresented minorities.
Many Asian-Americans in the MIT community oppose Hu. "Affirmative action does not have to conflict with the `merit-based' plans touted by its opponents," said Vivian Wu, a research fellow with the Community Fellows Program in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning. The solution lies in increasing student enrollment across all racial groups, she stressed. Moreover, Asian-Americans have benefited from affirmative action, according to Wu, who is also a member of the newly formed Asian-American Caucus at MIT.[1]
"A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond"
Unity, January 28 1991, issued a statement "A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond" on pages 4 to 6.
This group was a split in the League of Revolutionary Struggle which soon became the Unity Organizing Committee.
Those listed as supporters of the call included Vivian Wu, U Mass/Boston, East Coast Asian Student Union, Boston. .