<p>My friend told me that he got his yesterday.</p>
<p>Where does he live?</p>
<p>how'd he do?</p>
<p>what?? what is this?? ...did he get in?</p>
<p>Got in. Orange County CA, big shot wrestler. I am lurker, this is my first time posting, wanted to clarify that some people did get their decisions, only a few however less than 200 if I am not mistaken.</p>
<p>niteghost, RETURN!</p>
<p>great, now I am officially leaving school at 1 pm tomorrow to go home and check my mail.</p>
<p>Nightghost, If you applied EA, add yourself to the list.</p>
<p>I can understand likely letters, but why are they mailing out a small bunch so close to their notification date?</p>
<p>yes... anyone notice that niteghost and jaman misspelled "decisions" the exact same way?</p>
<p>hahahahaaaa that is too funny</p>
<p>But their writing style doesn't quite match up. However???</p>
<p>I see that we couldn't stay off from long, even at AIM.</p>
<p>There's a girl at my school who's a recruited athlete (one of the top tennis players in the nation) and she's known that she's in for quite some time because she talked to the coach. (There's also a swimmer who got into Stanford in September...god I wish I was athletic)</p>
<p>*twitch
Ok now that makes me really nervous. R those letters just for recruited athletes? Cos hearing unexpected news like this makes me wanna throw up......</p>
<p>Not to say that those recruited athlete stories aren't true, but I know that in some situtations, an athlete will be virtually assured by a coach that he/she will get in and then will be rejected. That happened to a friend of mine at Haverford. Coaches often say things that they don't have the authority to say because they aren't actually on the admissions com. However, there are times when people are legitimately accepted very early for sports... I'm just saying that it doesn't always happen.</p>
<p>There's a difference between a likely letter and an acceptance letter. Not a big one, but still. I suspect if this /is/ true, it's really just a likely letter. There is absolutely no reason why Yale would choose to send only a few random envelopes before thousands more. It makes no sense.</p>
<p>I don't know if the Yale tennis player has her letter...actually I don't think she does...I hope what happened to your Haverford friend doesn't happen to her. :(
But the Stanford girl got the actual letter and signed the thingy that says she's going to matriculate at Stanford. Again, however, that is Stanford, not Yale.
(Incidentally, most of her grades have now dropped to Bs and she's made it her goal in life to become a socialite....you all may be jealous of her but I wish she would just leave, she's driving me insane..."I'm a rich socialiate who's going to Stanford lalala!")</p>
<p>selia27, this may not happen to your friend because of her lofty tennis playing status, but a lot of kids from our hs go to Tufts and during the last year or so, one kid who got in early totally slacked off and was then uninvited. It can happen.</p>
<p>slacked off how much?</p>
<p>ooo those lucky people. i am not jealous i am not jealous.</p>