<p>Did any of you got an admission letter instead of a rejection letter from UCSD?</p>
<p>UC San Diego -- a school for the smart ones, supposedly -- mistakenly congratulated nearly 29,000 applicants on their acceptance, according to university officials.</p>
<p>Earlier this month, about 17,000 student were offered admission for the fall, leaving nearly 29,000 hopefuls out in the cold.</p>
<p>But on Tuesday, the school's communications office said an e-mail was sent Monday afternoon to all 46,377 students who applied for admission -- including the 29,000 rejects -- welcoming them to the campus.</p>
<p>A half-hour later, school officials said, they realized their mistake. Almost two hours after the first note went out, a second e-mail was sent, apologizing to 28,889 freshmen applicants for the mistake.</p>
<p>"No member of this department is more acutely aware of the emotional roller-coaster that this could cause for our applicants," Assistant Vice Chancellor</p>
<p>An anonymous parent told the Los Angeles Times it was a "colossal screw-up."</p>
<p>Similar incidents have happened at other schools -- including Cornell in the recent past, the paper reported, but the UCSD incident was the biggest "screw-up."</p>
<p>Oops</a>! UCSD Sends Acceptance E-mail to Wrong List | NBC San Diego</p>