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Harvard rescinds admission offer to 10 students over obscene Facebook group

Harvard University has revoked its acceptance of at least 10 applicants to its incoming freshman class after learning the group traded sexually explicit and sometimes racist images in a private online message group, the student newspaper reported.

Posts included joking about sexual assault, child abuse and the Holocaust

In this March 7, 2017 file photo, rowers paddle along the Charles River past the Harvard College campus in Cambridge, Mass. The Harvard Crimson, the school's student newspaper, reported June 4, 2017, that Harvard revoked admission offers to at least 10 prospective freshmen over offensive online messages. (Charles Krupa, File/Associated Press)

Harvard University has revoked its acceptance of at least 10 applicants to its incoming freshman class after learning the group traded sexually explicit and sometimes racist images in a private online message group, the student newspaper reported.

A university spokesperson declined on Monday to comment on Sunday's Harvard Crimson report, which cites multiple members of the incoming class, including one unnamed prospective who said his admission offer had been withdrawn.

The messages, exchanged on a private Facebook group, at times joked about sexual assault, ethnic groups and the Holocaust, and referred to child abuse as sexually arousing. One message referred to the hanging of a Mexican child as "pinata time," the newspaper reported.

University officials notified the students in April that their admission offers had been revoked, the Crimson said.

"We do not comment publicly on the admissions status of individual applicants," Harvard spokeswoman Rachael Dane said in an email.

University policies allow for admission offers to be rescinded under several circumstances, including if students fail to graduate from high school, are shown to have lied on their applications, or take part in conduct that brings their honesty, maturity or moral character into question.