<p>
</p>
<p>REALLY?! Well, then all's well that ends well. It's great having you posting here.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>REALLY?! Well, then all's well that ends well. It's great having you posting here.</p>
<p>Thanks for all your help an guidance!</p>
<p>Go MIT/CALTECH ADMISSIONS!</p>
<p>Yes, MIT admissions team is great. When benjones responded 10 minutes after I posted one SUNDAY morning, I was completely amazed. Also, when I was at MITES, I had dinner with Bryan Nance and Amy Perez; they were just so friendly and made students feel comfortable talking to them. As for the admissions process, I love how MIT looks at anything an applicant sends. This truly tells us that the team care and take the time to look at the applicant.</p>
<p>Sorry -- the title should have read "MIT has THE best admissions team of all". I have no excuse as a native speaker of American, for forgetting the THE.</p>
<p>No wonder Son won't let me "correct" his essays! (note presence of, uh, those squiggly marks around "correct")</p>
<p>True story: I was emailing my cousin about a paper Son was writing, titled:
:o,oyd pm foggidr ;i,ompdoyu g;ivyisyopmd om yjr ///
and the worst part is it looked ALMOST THE SAME AS THE REAL TITLE to my tiny non-science brain. (CCers can figure out the real title, right?)</p>
<p>Also, ahem, I got a little carried away spacing btwn letters in T H A N K Y O U that I forgot to add a couple of extra ones between the thank and the you, so I want to add a
T H A N K Y O U
to all the current MIT parents on this board who have also been encouraging and supportive.</p>
<p>All the best,
'Nudduh, a parent who majored in Art History back in the days when we wrote our research papers by hand. On clay tablets. With a little stick.</p>
<p>can someone plz give me the link to the blogs.</p>
<p><a href="http://ben.mitblogs.com/%5B/url%5D">http://ben.mitblogs.com/</a></p>
<p>as a start</p>
<p>All the blogs can be found at <a href="http://my.mit.edu%5B/url%5D">http://my.mit.edu</a> :)</p>
<p>thanx!!!!!!!!!!</p>