I'm failing Calculus winter quarter before I transfer! HELP!!!

<p>Alright so I'm coming towards the end of my winter quarter at a California community college, and I'm failing Calculus 1B. I'm a finance major applying for Fall 2012 to schools all over the country. I've already received acceptances from UCSD, UCSB, and UCR. I'm scared my grade in Calculus this quarter could jeopardize my admission into these colleges, as well as all the others that I haven't heard from yet. In addition to all the UC's, I'm applying to NYU, Georgetown, UVA, UT Austin, USC, Northwestern, UNC, Boston College, etc.</p>

<p>Here's my question: If I receive a D in Calculus 1B this quarter, and I retake it next quarter and receive an A / A- , how much will it affect my chances at these universities? I also plan to makeup for wasted time by taking Calculus 1C over the summer. I really just want to know if I'm royally screwed or if I still have a chance?</p>

<p>Additional Info: Current Sophomore. Applying for transfer as a Junior. GPA: 3.8. LOTS of extra-curriculars (Investment management intern at Wells Fargo, Accounting tutor, Law Intern at the law firm that discovered the famous Toyota defect, Volunteer at a bunch of organizations, Special Education tutor, member of Phi Theta Kappa, Dean's List, etc.). THANKS!</p>

<p>EDIT: I'm failing this class because of a combination of me biting off more than I can chew, and a terrible teacher. I took 23 units this quarter (never again), along with a tutoring job at my college. So it was really just too much for me to handle. However, I do have an A in all of my other classes this quarter. Also, my teacher is the hardest at my college, which doesn't help. ugh.</p>

<p>Can you take a break from your tutoring job and instead get tutored? I would suggest that. I don’t know much about college admissions, but I would think that a D would be pretty killer to your chances especially without some reason to back it up (I don’t think overloading/overworking counts unless you seriously needed the money).</p>