H5 Dutch, good find.
A couple of points to note, just additional background: The LSAT was formerly on an 800-point basis, so old LSAT numbers can sound preposterous if someone unaware of that change compares them to the current maximum. I took my LSAT in the late 70s, and scored (as best I recall) 725 on it. I have no idea what that translates to in the current scoring system...but it was damn' good then.
Also, not just the Ivy League schools, but most Big Ten and many other law schools also had a self-imposed interest in promoting "Cultural diversity" and in the past (probably still do) gave minority students a leg up on making the cut for entry, though the method of applying it and the quantum of advantage afforded are matters about which they are generally quite secretive, and differ significantly from one institution to the next. My law school relied primarily on an arcane formula based on undergraduate GPA and LSAT score, with an undisclosed method for slicing extra minority applicants into the mix (which was, of course, at the expense of non-minority applicants who would have made the cut based on their GPA/LSAT formula score had it been applied equally to every applicant).