Protip: Putting down anything besides "white" equals an automatic 20% reduction in pay and six months doing the worst job in the building (usually scrubbing the boss' personal bathroom with a sponge)
Make sure to circle and triple underline the "white" choice, and draw a cute little American flag next to it too; it'll raise your starting pay by 60% and give you first pick at office ho
Protip: Putting down anything besides "white" equals an automatic 20% reduction in pay and six months doing the worst job in the building (usually scrubbing the boss' personal bathroom with a sponge)
Make sure to circle and triple underline the "white" choice, and draw a cute little American flag next to it too; it'll raise your starting pay by 60% and give you first pick at office ho
Protip: Putting down anything besides "white" equals an automatic 20% reduction in pay and six months doing the worst job in the building (usually scrubbing the boss' personal bathroom with a sponge)
Make sure to circle and triple underline the "white" choice, and draw a cute little American flag next to it too; it'll raise your starting pay by 60% and give you first pick at office ho
Actually, a real "protip" is that they can't legally question anything you put down besides "native American." It's against the law (except for native Americans, because they have a unique dual-citizenship sorta status thing going on). I found this after my Egyptian friend put "african-american" on his application, got in trouble (because he techincally wasn't - because as we all know, "African-American" really just means black), and then got out of it when it was pointed out.
I found this after my Egyptian friend put "african-american" on his application, got in trouble (because he techincally wasn't - because as we all know, "African-American" really just means black), and then got out of it when it was pointed out.
Got something (letter maybe?) from the admissions office. I don't know, he was always more caught up in how pissed off he was that he couldn't put "African-American," despite the fact that he was much, much more African than 90% of the people who are technically supposed to be able to put it down.
Actually, a real "protip" is that they can't legally question anything you put down besides "native American." It's against the law (except for native Americans, because they have a unique dual-citizenship sorta status thing going on).