Could my friend get rescinded for this?

<p>^ You said it backwards. You basically said that 6% of students score BELOW a 29. </p>

<p>And she is not necessarily an AA admit.
I have a friend at Princeton who is very white, blonde hair, blue eyes, the whole works. She scored less than a 29 on the ACT and had about a 3.6 GPA. However, she is also a starter for their softball team. You never know and it isn’t anyone’s place to judge.</p>

<p>He probably won’t lose his spot, unfortunately. What a snob.</p>

<p>No, nothing will happen sadly</p>

<p>oops sorry. im pretty sick so im not really thinking clearly and i dont care</p>

<p>If i were the teacher, I would have simply forwarded the email to the folks at Princeton. They may or may not rescind their offer of admission, but at least they’d get a warning that they have an egotistical twit heading their way.</p>

<p>

How so? I would say he was clearly harassing another student, trying to disparage her achievement by bringing up race in an insulting manner. Plus, I’d assume that he has been displaying attitudes like this for a long time.</p>

<p>

Right, so someone who has had more education than him and is obviously more intellectually and likely morally mature than him is “inferior”? Not everyone can afford the Ivy League, let alone the prep that is often needed to get in, and large financial aid initiatives have just been in the past few years. Anyway, if Princeton was made aware of this, it is possible. If you’re asking if they can, the answer is yes. If you’re asking if they will… eh, probably not. Though she’ll likely tell the school, and both incidents will be on a record sent to Princeton (unless this occurred after the end-year report was sent out), so Princeton may address it. Either way, your friend needs a wake-up call, and you need to help him. Fast.</p>

<p>He needs to slip off the edge of an icy bridge.</p>