the question at the center of the case in this day and age should colleges consider race when deciding who gets in and who doesn t? i m harris faulkner. john wang is at the center of this mom he says it is hurting asian-americans in particular. wang graduated high school with a 4.65 gpa and scored 1590 out of 1600 on s.a.t. six top colleges denied him entrance. i got an 800 out of # hundred on math. 99th percentile. i got a 790th out of 800. the top tier schools were mit, princeton, harvard, carnegie-mellon. they all told me it is tougher to get in especially as an asian-american. i took it as gospel. harris: a new op-ed says we better brace for impact on this one. whatever the decision is, it s bound to make waves just as with the overturning of roe v. wade. this could potentially lead to another summer marked by social unrest with defenders of race-based admissions pulling out the long knives for the u.s. supreme court. calling it inherently racist, end of quote. our
country. the high court s ruling could have a major political impact and societal impact reaching beyond academic institutions to hiring and other race over merit practices. john wang had nearly perfect s.a.t. scores. and yet was rejected by those six elite schools. he says he was warned it is tougher to get into college especially as an asian american. he is doing this on behalf of future generations of students. i thought a little bit about the consequences but i just think that it was an opportunity for me to fight for what i think is right and also fight for asian-americans that are younger than me. the debate over college admissions is being closely watched at the white house. the argument there is the biden administration has been focused on racial equity. the president has been very clear, the vice president has been very clear. there are real issues that we