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Whiz Kid with almost perfect satellite score sues U. Washington, Umich, Cornell, claims discrimination

An Asian-American teen-whiz child, which, however, rejected a weighted grade average of 4.42 and an almost perfect score of 1590 in his Sat Haten-Wurde from 16 colleges, to which he applied for the list of universities, which he sued for discrimination.

The 19 -year -old Stanley Zhong and his father Nan Zhong rejected the University of Washington, the University of Michigan and Cornell University, three schools that Stanley rejected after he was applied for in autumn 2023.

In addition to the system of the University of California and five UC schools, which Stanley's application rejected in mid-February and mid-March, the legal proceedings submitted in mid-February are rejected.

The complaints describe Stanley's success as a high school, to which the development of an e-signing startup from Amazon Web Services and “Progress of the Google Code Jam and Facebook Hacker Cup, semi-finals, 2nd place in the co-battle code and the highest volunteer volunteer service award.

The complaints claim that Stanley had suffered “the loss of educational opportunities, emotional stress and reputation damage”.

Nan Zhong said he thinks the lawsuits could make the distance.

“Based on the lawyers who have retained these universities, they seem to take the complaints very seriously” The College fix.

Zhong said the UC system had retained the large and international law firm Wilmerhale, and the University of Washington retained Robert McKenna, the former attorney in Washington, to fight the duo's complaints.

“It's as big as a legal weapon as possible,” said Nan Zhong The fix. “Apparently they found that this case cannot be easily released.”

Stanley Zhong accepted a software engineer on a doctoral student on Google in the high school. He received a position that usually requires a doctorate, his father said.

He said his son was still working there and was quite happy, but the complaints are for other Asian-American students who are faced with the same dilemma.

“From my point of view, this is really important for my younger son, who will apply to college in a few years, and we have to do that for my grandchildren now,” he said.

Nan Zhong said the lawsuits had a certain strategy for them: California, Washington and Michigan all very established state laws that prohibit specific racial decisions in college registrations.

In an explanation The college fix, Dana Robinson Slote, director of media relationships from UW, said that “UW is behind his approval process, and we have long recognized that our capacity is limited and that we are unable to admit some very talented and capable applicants. We are checking the lawsuit and will probably not have any additional comment while the legal process takes place.”

Kay Jarvis, Director of Public Affairs of the University of Michigan, said in a statement about explanation The fix that the university does not comment on legal disputes.

Nan Zhong emphasized part of his legal strategy and the use of AI to write his lawsuits in a post-April post on the heterodox stem sub-stack.

“Our” Rights Team “consists of Chatgpt and Gemini,” he wrote. “You did a fantastic job to create the legal complaints. For 20 US dollars a month, around the clock and no conflict of interest that we had to worry about, we can hardly wait!”

“When the lawyer applied for one of the universities against the scope of our legal dispute, our AI-Drateded response forced you to support and comply with our request for the document application.”

Complain:

University of California – (Google Doc Link)
University of Washington – (Google Doc Link)
Michigan University – (Google Doc Link)
Cornell – (Google Doc Link)

Nan Zhong told The fix He was disappointed that all newspapers of Campus students, except in Cornell, ignored the history of his and the story of his son, even though he sent the editors copies of the lawsuit.

“All of these campus newspapers don't seem to be interested,” he said.

In the Zhongs, students are listed who oppose a reference to racial discrimination or sword as an additional plaintiff and indicate the substance: “While we whistleblower reports about the secret use of each of the sued universities, we actively collect more for the student recording and setting of faculties, whether anonymous or not.”

More: Youth of Google was rejected by 16 colleges. Now he is suing for discrimination.

Caption and credit: a photo of Stanley Zhong / YouTube Screenshot

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