Monday, December 4, 2017

80-20 Ships Ammo to DOJ to investigate Harvard

Let's build up the pressure on Harvard


WeChat account ID is: 8020ef.  Please scan our QR code, 
shown below, & on 80-20 EF's WeChat site. For a Chinese version of this e-newsletter, click  https://goo.gl/6GsJWe .
    On Nov. 29, 80-20 president S. B. Woo shipped ammo to Acting Assistant Attorney General John M. Gore for his investigation of Harvard.  If we want to win this crucial struggle for our youth, we must send good information to Mr. Gore so that he can be fairly certain that (1) Harvard is violating Title VI, and (2) there is enough evidence to convict Harvard. Excerpts from Woo's letter are shown below:


"Dear Acting Assistant Attorney General Gore:

     Thank you for your reply to me of Nov. 1, 2017. . .  we finally have a DOJ official who truly wants Justice to prevail.

      Please see 4 SIMULATED curves, appended herewith, showing the SAT scores of applicants to Harvard, broken down by race.   The curves easily explain why Harvard needed to add  540 and 370 SAT points, 

    
respectively to black and Hispanic students in order to achieve its pre-conceived idea of race balance.  More importantly, the two curves on the right side show why Harvard needs to take 140 SAT points away from Asian American applicants in order to place a quota on the number of Asian American students on Harvard's campus.

     Assuming that Harvard will eventually comply with your requests for information, you will be able to construct such 4 curves using REAL data from applicants They will resemble what you are seeing now, except for their peaks, which will shift much to the high-score end of the graph.  That is because only the best students apply to Harvard.  However, the tails on the high-score end will NOT shift at all.  The tails are already predetermined by the academic characteristics of each racial group.

     The 4 SIMULATED curves were constructed using data already publicly available on websites.  For details, click on the attachment ....

S. B. Woo

President, 80-20 Educational Foundation, Inc.

Former Lieutenant Governor of Delaware (1985-89)"

       EXTRA!  EXTRA!  Harvard Complied on Dec. 1
       
      The NY Times reported that "Harvard Agrees to Turn Over Records Amid Discrimination Inquiry."  

        As a result, if the DOJ wants, it may now construct the 4 curves of Harvard's applicants using REAL data from applicants.  Such a diagram will help illustrate that Harvard's holistic evaluation, judging from its evaluation results, which are vastly different from the academic achievements of its applicants, is a charade.  The purpose of the charade is to do race-balancing as it sees fit, with emphasis on limiting the admission of AsAms.

             $$$ You Could Claim in CA & Other States 

    80-20 normally shies away from this kind of service.  But this one seems cost effective.  Click on https://ucpi.sco.ca.gov/UCP/Default.aspx which lists unclaimed assets in Calif.  The site is very user-friendly.  Anyone can use it.

   Unclaimed assets usually mean dormant savings & checking accounts & 
certificates of deposit, but not real estate.

    At the site, all you need to enter is the last name of the person whom you suspect might have unclaimed assets in CA.  A huge list of persons with that last name will pop up.  You can then narrow down the list by specifying first name and/or city, ..., etc.  If you happen to find that person, even the claim process is supposed to be quite user-friendly.  Good luck!  Other states also provide such websites.  They may not be as user-friendly. The above service was suggested by Nancy Tai, Downingtown, PA who is a $1,000/yr for 5 yrs donor.  We thank her.

                                                DONATE

S. B. Woo 

President and a volunteer for the past 18 years
80-20 Educational Foundation, Inc, a 501 C-3 organization,
http://www.80-20educationalfoundation.org/index.php
 
To know more about 80-20, view these videos :
https://youtu.be/dB3eGVqG-wA  (Ignore the last 35 secs. The election is over.)