Word: asianized
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
She’s ours! And the Advocate can’t have this fantastic writer, who has graced our pages with her insight on Asian-American stereotypes and free food at the Women’s Center. As someone whose stories hardly need editing, Alwa will certainly pass her skills on to a new generation of FMers...
...better questioner…you can be heard even if you aren’t in the mainstream.” In addition to rapping and politicking, Ramaswamy is one of three College representatives on the Presidential Search Committee and is involved with the South Asian Association, club tennis, and intramural sports. “Vivek has a boundless capacity to get things done,” says friend Nicholas R. Green ’07. Though described as fearless by his peers, when reflecting on his undergraduate career, Ramaswamy admits that he would’ve been...
...efforts to chart a new direction for Japan's foreign policy, one less consumed with the U.S. and more embracing of Asia - albeit selectively. "With [former Prime Minister] Junichiro Koizumi, the U.S. was Number 1, Number 2 and Number 3," says Takako Hirose, a professor of South Asian politics at Tokyo's Senshu University. "I think for Abe, Asia is more important...
...Harvard students shared their own leadership experiences. The panel included Tracy L. Britt ’07, president of Women in Business, Jennifer N. Green ’07, vice-president of the Black Students Association, Mayuri N. Shah ’08, co-president of the South Asian Association (SAA), and Kristina M. Moore ’08, president-elect of The Crimson. When asked for advice, the four stressed the importance of passion in an activity. “Trust in your abilities,” Green said. “If your passion and conviction are there...
...Change the Definition. Make it poverty, not pigment. This is an imperfect solution. Yes, a disproportionate number of African Americans and Latinos are poor, but the majority of poor people are white-and more than a few are Asian. If race-based remedies are supplanted by class-based remedies, the number of African Americans attending elite universities, for one thing, will fall. Tom Kane, a Harvard economist, told me, "You'd need an economic affirmative-action program six times the size of the current racial preferences to [benefit] an equivalent number of African Americans." There's another step that would...