international kid with low SATs and high SAT2s

<p>FB, please quote the specific parts of your past posts that we are missing. In addition, I advise you to email the financial aid and the admissions department with your query. And with regards to your earlier statement, how does being an international student yourself give you more knowledge than domestic students like myself regarding he workings of Cornell, we both get our information from the same places.</p>

<p>Go to this link:</p>

<p>Aid</a> for internationals lags | w/ Interactive Feature - News</p>

<p>Written Feb. 2008 in the Daily Pennsylvanian:</p>

<p>
[quote]
With Dartmouth College's announcement last month that they would extend need-blind admissions to international students, Penn now stands in the minority of Ivy League schools without such a financial-aid commitment.</p>

<p>Cornell and Columbia Universities are the only other Ivies that have not made the financial leap.

[/quote]
</p>

<p>According to the Daily Pennsylvanian, Cornell, Columbia, and Penn are three universities in the Ivy League that are not need blind towards students outside of North America.</p>

<p>Maybe you both live in North America?</p>

<p>No brown man, I come from middle east, and that was specified in my email (the countries name) :)</p>

<p>I think it is the same case as with the wikipedia article -- maybe they state only need-blinds that cover 100%? I think Dartmouth does that, but Cornell does not.</p>

<p>I hope this settles the dispute: <a href="http://img175.imageshack.us/img175/9840/19761958mn2.jpg%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://img175.imageshack.us/img175/9840/19761958mn2.jpg&lt;/a>
OP, do not worry about fin. aid, and apply according to your ability to pay. It won't decrease your chances, but might get you some (probably small %), and give you ability to search for scholarships if you are admitted.</p>