<p>My friend got a likely letter from Yale a few years back saying that he was among their top 100 RD applicants, and he was eventually formally accepted. He was neither an athlete nor a URM.</p>
<p>They can be sent any time in advance of the December 15 (early) and April 1 (regular) formal notification dates. </p>
<p>In the case of recruited athletes, the letters are usually coordinated with the NCAA “signing period” for a particular sport, when the athletes are being asked to “commit” at Div. I schools offering athletic scholarships.</p>
<p>In other cases, the letters are usually sent anytime after Jan 1 and prior to April 1 - with the intent of being the first school to tell the candidate that you love him or her, and hoping that he or she will look kindly on you in consequence.</p>
<p>Some schools send them out in batches, and some send them as soon as the app is read and the candidate is identified as a “clear admit.”</p>
<p>do you have a job byerly?
or do you just sit around in your mcmansion in westchester talking about how gay people are ruining our national morals?</p>
<p>NYCFan doesn’t have a job. He’s set for life. The legal profession has been good to him. A major highlight of his life is interviewing Harvard applicants. He’ll be posting again shortly. He does this all day.</p>
<p>Now, guys, this is a great thread containing very helpful links and information. Whether any of what is being said about people and their personal lives is true, none of it has been done on this thread, so let’s not ruin it.</p>
<p>Byerly, thank you for all the great links-- I would have never thought to go to the YDN site myself.</p>