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Do You Think Ohio State Will Revoke My Admission

Revoke of admission from Ohio State?!?

was accepted to Ohio State University with a 23 ACT, and about a 3.4 GPA. I also auditioned, and was accepted as a Music Education Major to the School of Music on trumpet. Senior year, I had a slight slip. It wasn't anything too bad. But I know that OSU is selective, and I'm freaking out. Here's my schedule, and the final grade in that class.

Jazz Band-A
AP French-A
Concert Band-A
AP Psychology-B
AP English-D
Choir-A
Anatomy-C
Show Choir-A

My final GPA of senior year will be like a 3.5 on a 5 point scale. Somewhere around a 3.0-3.1 on a 4 point scale. I know this isn't too bad of a slip. I'm just worrying about that "D". What do you think? Do I have to worry about maybe getting my admission revoked, or should I be okay? Thank you so much. I will choose a best answer, but I want the truth

Would OSU revoke my admission?

I just got admitted into The Ohio State University and their pharmacy undergrad program 2 days ago. However, right now I might have a D+ in AP Calculus BC for my first semester of senior year. My classes senior year are: Fine Art I, AP Calculus BC (dropping to AB), Honors Anatomy, Economics, Personal Health, AP English, AP Biology. Also, I'm just planning on taking the AP English exam just to get English out of the way for college, but I want to take Calculus and the Intro Biology class in college for better understanding since they're important classes for my major. My weighted GPA this semester looks to be around a 3.2 which is horrible compared to my 3.7 cumulative. Would Ohio State revoke my admission?

Sjsu revoke admission?

Students are getting their admissions revoked because of not passing everything in their senior year. SJSU offered a conditional admission, which is admission to the university, contingent upon the student passing all the classes in progress. Your D as a sophomore doesn't really matter because you might have made it up during summer school or as a junior. Its not something that will get your admission revoked because it is a class from the past.

You should probably pay your tuition, as you can be dropped from your SJSU classes due to lack of payment by the deadline

Will my senior grades get my admission revoked?

I'm a senior, and I have to admit that this year's been the hardest, mostly in my second advisory that's ending in a few weeks (overall end of 1st semester).

I'm worried that if U of Michigan looks at my grades:
1st advisory: all a's except for calculus bc (b)
2nd advisory: prob. a's and b's and a possibility of getting a d or f in calculus....
....they may revoke my admission.... :(

Let's just say i HATE calculus and it's the hardest class i've ever taken, but I truly try my best in that class....but I really don't get anything!!!! T_T

Do you guys think if I try harder next semester (or like have a letter from my calc teacher explaining), they won't do it?

Will the University of Wisconsin- Madison Revoke My Admission?

when you finish high school and shove off to college, you are supposed to grow a pair and learn to live on your own and make your own decisions, so, honestly, if you are sitting on your computer asking this question, you aren't ready to decide what you want to do for the rest of your life... you're a freaking nerd, and you need to remember, life is more important than a f***ing letter or number. there are thousands of americans dying in iraq and afhanistan and korea so you can live a free life and make your own choices. make the most of it dumbass.

to answer you, they wont revoke you over a C, to ask that is idiotic. plus Wisconsin- Madison isnt exactly a high caliber school like Harvard or Duke (Duke reevaluates admission if you get a C, but most other schools arent pricks). So, please, for your sake, go get laid, have a few shots of whiskey, and relax. or else we'll be reading that the rescue squad is scraping your remains off the curb after jumping from a bridge.

Will Ohio State rescind my acceptance?

Hi,

I am a senior and I was accepted into the Pre-Pharmacy program at Ohio state. My grades have been pretty decent throughout high school.
I got a 1400 on the SAT out of 1600 and my cumulative GPA from freshman-junior year was a 3.85 on a 4 scale. My junior year GPA was a 4.09.

However, this year my grades have fell a bit. I’m struggling especially in AP Chemistry. I got a 77 and a 70 in the first 2 marking periods, but this marking period I have a 50 at the moment, averaging out to a D for chem. Other than this, my other grades are pretty good — mostly B’s and B+’s with a couple A’s (I’m in 4 AP classes). My average GPA for this year is a 3.65 at the moment, compared to 4.09 last year and 3.85 freshman-junior.

I’m just very afraid that OSU will revoke my acceptance because of my drop in GPA and that D in chemistry. Do you guys think my acceptance will be revoked? Also I received a scholarship for my SAT, will that be stripped?

Thanks in advance

Is it possible that with Paul Manafort having his bail revoked will force him to seek a plea deal?

While I don’t know what his defense strategy is, or whether he’s been surreptitiously offered a pardon, his pretrial incarceration will likely put more pressure on him to plead guilty, for several reasons.Now that he’s in custody, he is more likely to want a speedy resolution to his charges, to get released sooner. When he was walking around on bail, he was in no hurry to proceed to trial, and his attorneys had plenty of time to put together their strongest possible defense. With more pressure to move faster, they’ll have less time to prepare for either legal motions or factual witnesses, which puts them at a disadvantage.The nature of the new charges also make a conviction on all the charges more likely: evidence of attempted witness tampering will most likely be admitted at his trials on the other charges, and could be very convincing evidence of his guilt on those underlying charges. The stronger the prosecution’s case is, the more likely Manafort is to plead.Now that he’s behind bars, Manafort’s ability to maneuver is limited both physically and strategically. People who are looking for him know exactly where he is, and he is much more susceptible to attack. If he was truly involved in the things he’s been accused of, then he was associating with people who would not hesitate to arrange his death in custody if he became a threat to them. The prosecutor may be able to provide Manafort with witness protection in exchange for his testimony about the others involved, which increases the incentive for him to plead.

Will I get My Scholarship revoked? (Alchohol/weed)?

Only time will tell.

I suggest you read The Ohio State University Policy on Alcohol and Other Drugs. This is the link to the PDF document:
* http://studentlife.osu.edu/pdfs/osu-poli...

This is an excerpt from that policy (Page 3):
[Quote]
D. Policy Violations
1. Any student, faculty member, staff member, volunteer, or visitor found to be in violation of local, state, and/or federal law, or who violate the university’s alcohol and other drug policies, are subject to university disciplinary procedures and/or referral to the appropriate authorities for legal prosecution. Campus disciplinary sanctions include, but are not limited to, written warnings, loss of privileges, probation, participation in an alcohol or other drug assistance or rehabilitation program, suspension, and/or dismissal. Sanctions may also apply to registered student organizations and to off-campus conduct.
[End quote]

Read the full policy for more information.

If you are legally charged and convicted (in a court of law) with possession of marijuana, you may become ineligible for Federal student aid.

[Quote]
If you are incarcerated, have a conviction for a drug offense, or are subject to an involuntary civil commitment after completing a period of incarceration for a sexual offense, your eligibility for federal student aid may be limited.
[End quote]
Student Aid on the Web (part of the FAFSA web site) - Federal Student Aid - Who Gets Aid?
* http://studentaid.ed.gov/eligibility

Librarians--Ask Us, We Answer!
Find your local Public Library at:
* http://www.publiclibraries.com/
Find your College/University Library at:
* http://lists.webjunction.org/libweb/Academic_main.html

Best wishes

Can the US federal government revoke statehood?

As far as I can tell, the only way that a State can cease to exist is for that State to adopt, according to its own law, a binding resolution that it has ceased to exist. As far as I know, this would require the State to adopt an amendment to its Constitution, as no State has any provision for declaring its own dissolution within its present Constitution. That is, there is presently no State which has any means within its own law to adopt a resolution of dissolution; it would have to first create such a mechanism, then avail itself of it, should it wish to dissolve. A State that did so would revert to unorganized Federal territory unless it had, prior to enacting a resolution of dissolution, made other arrangements binding under both the law of that State and of the United States. Obviously, this has not happened in the United States since the formation of the Constitutional Union; no State has, after having declared itself a State and recognized as such by the other States and the Federal government, then subsequently voluntarily dissolved as one.There is simply no means by which the Federal government can “revoke” a State’s statehood, absent that State’s consent.There is, however, at least one situation in which a State might lose its Statehood “involuntarily”: Utah, in its Organic Act, agreed never to adopt any law that would legalize polygamy. If Utah were to do so, the Federal government would arguably be entitled to invoke this provision and declare Utah in breach of that agreement, and demand dissolution as remedy for the breach. It is more likely, however, that Utah would elect to cure the breach by invalidating the errantly adopted law.The United States could, in theory, “cut off” a State, with the consent of that State and of the United States, through the adoption of a treaty, in much the same manner as the United States abrogated its sovereign claim over the Philippines in 1949 with the Treaty of Manila, thereby creating the independent sovereign state of the Republic of the Philippines. However, the State itself would not be dissolved in this case; it would, instead, continue as an independent sovereign State.

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