Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Harvard battles lawsuit over admissions practices

- PATRICIA HURTADO AND JANELLE LAWRENCE

BOSTON Harvard University engages in “racial balancing” that brazenly discrimina­tes against Asian-Americans seeking admittance in the same way the university once set quotas on Jewish students, a group of applicants said Friday in asking for a ruling before a trial.

The Ivy League school is defending a lawsuit over how it chooses its students by a group representi­ng more than a dozen AsianAmeri­can applicants who were rejected. The group, which sued in 2014, told a federal judge in Boston on Friday that they’ve obtained “incontrove­rtible” evidence the university has “engineered the admissions process to achieve” illegal goals.

Lawyers for Harvard asked the court to throw out the case. In a motion filed Friday, Harvard said its admissions data and testimony taken during deposition­s don’t support claims by the group, called Students for Fair Admissions.

“SFFA is left to offer only gerrymande­red statistics to support its claims, but that evidence is far too flawed to support a finding of discrimina­tion at trial,” Harvard’s legal team wrote.

Lawyers for the students claimed leaders of Harvard’s admission team were evasive during deposition­s and appeared to suffer memory problems.

“The process is readily subject to manipulati­on, as history and the data amply demonstrat­e. The data showed massive discrimina­tion against Asian-Americans — and Harvard knew it,” they said. “Harvard has a desired racial balance and aims for that target”

Harvard said in a statement that it doesn’t discrimina­te against any group and that evidence shows the rate of admissions for Asian-American students has grown 29 per cent over the last decade. The school criticized Edward Blum, the leader of the plaintiffs’ group.

“Mr. Blum and his organizati­on’s incomplete and misleading data analysis paint a dangerousl­y inaccurate picture of Harvard College’s whole-person admissions process by omitting critical data and informatio­n factors, such as personal essays and teacher recommenda­tions, that directly counter his arguments,” the university said in a statement.

The U.S. Justice Department said in April it has a “substantia­l interest” in the case and urged the judge to make the admissions data public. Harvard noted in response that it has already provided the informatio­n to the government for its investigat­ion into the school’s admissions practices.

Harvard announced in April that it admitted 4.59 per cent of the applicants to its class of 2022. Women represente­d 50.1 per cent of those accepted; African-Americans 15.5 per cent; Latinos 12.2 per cent; and Native Americans two per cent, according to the Harvard Crimson. AsianAmeri­cans made up a record 22.7 per cent of the class.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada