<p>I just sent my application in on friday and wanted to know about how many people they already "accepted".</p>
<p>ps. Thanks for everyone who asked questions on this forum it helped soooo much.</p>
<p>I just sent my application in on friday and wanted to know about how many people they already "accepted".</p>
<p>ps. Thanks for everyone who asked questions on this forum it helped soooo much.</p>
<p>I submitted my application in September and received an athletic likely letter in late October. The letter was preceded by a phone call from an admissions rep telling me the letter was coming, and stressing the importance of senior year grades.</p>
<p>Apparently the letters are sent out on a rolling basis, so even within any given sport, recruited athletes have been receiving their letters at different times.</p>
<p>Wow...a phone call; very nice! Does anyone know Princeton's policy on non-athletic likely letters?</p>
<p>Princeton is known for doing very few likely letters to non- athletes. The only ones I ever heard about were for folks who had high international recognition for an academic discovery/research or for stellar applicants related to significant donors.</p>
<p>Thanks....</p>
<p>I know of two likely letters, one for a recruited swimmer, and one for a non-athlete. Both were sent out on the same day, but it could be by region.</p>
<p>I got one but im an athlete.</p>
<p>Got a phone call first--answered in the middle of class cause i knew the area code, teacher was mad until she figured out what it was lol-- then the letter.</p>
<p>Have you guys heard of any being sent out after the 1/1 deadline? What about for students who only applied by the final deadline?</p>
<p>how about for non-athletes?</p>
<p>^ This has been posted in other school forums. He's just trying to promote his website.</p>
<p>@setzer557: Yes. There are likely letters for non-athletes.</p>
<p>My Vietnamese acquaintance got a non-athletic Likely Letter. She’s an URM, I suppose? Not any amazing international accomplishments, though.</p>
<p>I don’t think any asian nationalities count for URM. There are still a lot of asians on college campuses.</p>
<p>She’s not an American, she’s from Vietnam, the country. FYI Vietnam is a third-world country, and there are very few well-qualified applicants whose standard of English is high.</p>