<p>can u plz scan ur merit letter in for us to see it....make sure to edit our your name, address, and personal information...</p>
<p>^^text is way too small to see. can someone with scanning knowledge help?</p>
<p>'scuse me, I do have scanning knowledge. It displays fine on my computer, perhaps your browser has that automatic image resize thing turned on.</p>
<p>Ridewithbd24 -- just zoom it. When I first opened the link, it was really small...then I zoomed in, and it was perfectly fine. Csquare, we share the same first name! =]</p>
<p>^^^thanks alot. i can see it now and i am jealous. seems these scholarships offer great benefits beside just the money (which is great as well)</p>
<p>Hey csquare...mine was 5500/year (22K over four years). While its not that much, its still nice to be recognized :). Congrats to you on the scholarship!</p>
<p>Let me try to understand this; Northwestern awards these Northwestern Scholarships to students demonstrating financial aid, yet in the brochure I received from them it shows a pie chart of different income brackets and the averga emaount of these NorthwesternScholarships these brackets typically earn. My bracket (90K-120K) shows they offer on average 14K per year. Is this a scholarship or does it need to be repaid? I'm confused?</p>
<p>Thanks for the clarification mahras, and congrats to you, too!</p>
<p>caliboi, that is a scholarship and does not need to be repaid. When you put things into perspective, 90k-120k isn't necessarily a huge amount of money, what with the cost of living, amount paid in taxes, etc. Also, it does say, "Please note that many, if not most, of the families with higher income levels who receive NU Scholarships have more than one child attending college." In conclusion, 14k in aid sounds about right.</p>
<p>sweeeet!! thats like a 56K savings over the 4 years!</p>