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Are US Ivy League colleges excluding star Asian students because of their race?

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People walk around the Princeton University campus in New Jersey. Photo: Reuters

Michael Wang was ranked second at James Logan high school in California, according to his grade point averages.

He had a perfect score on his ACT college exam, and a near-perfect score on his SAT, or Scholastic Aptitude Test. He was a national districts qualifier on the debate team. At the AMC 12 - a nationwide mathematics competition - he placed first in the state.

He performed with the San Francisco opera company, and sang in a choir that performed at Barack Obama’s first presidential inauguration. He volunteered his free time to tutor underprivileged children.

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So when all the Ivy League schools to which he applied rejected him out of hand, he was, understandably, upset.

“I felt I was unfairly treated,” he said. “Of course receiving rejection letters was very sad, but at the same time I felt anger."

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Wang’s parents emigrated from China. So when he saw friends who were not Asian American – and who had neither his near-perfect grades nor his wide range of extracurricular activities - being accepted to the same schools that rejected him, he wanted to know why.

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