School Of Human Ecology

<p>do NYS residents get preference here, since its technically a public state school within cornell ? is ther any statistics wit NYS residents at cornell</p>

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<li><p>it is technically NOT A PUBLIC SCHOOL, which you would know if you had read any of about 5 othr recent threads. It is a private college of Cornell University. The state essentially pays part of NY residents tuition (in the form of a tuition break for NY residents) because they feel the school is good for NY and the economy etc., and they want Cornell to keep it around (not that Cornell would get rid of it otherwise or anything). It is a "state-contract college."</p></li>
<li><p>Grammar is valued, as are syntax, and spelling. "is ther any statistics wit NYS residents at cornell" Sure I can tell what you're asking, but even corrected to "Is there any statistics with NY residents at Cornell?" it doesn't make sense. "Are there any statistics on NY residents pertaining to Cornell admissions?" is what you were aiming for. Having your facts wrong is fine, but theres no reason to leave letters out of words all over the place and write sentances that still don't make sense even when the blanks have been filled in.</p></li>
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<p>lmaooooooooooooooooooooooooo</p>

<p>yeah i always spell that wrong it's in my brain by rote or something. People always make fun of it because I always spell it wrong on the threads here. I DO appreciate the irony though;), but am I wrong in saying misspelling one word is a bit different from a sent*e*nce composed entirely of unofficial contractions and devoid of punctuation?</p>

<p>yo what up wit dis tread, any1 gunna gimme sum answas up in hurrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr</p>

<p>i'm so sorry i got too caught up to answer your question. again, nice grammar^</p>

<p>The contract colleges are said to have a slight break in admissions for NY residents, and a significant break in tuition. The admissions break may be fictional in that it only appears to be that way since a greater portion of the applicants are NY residents, due to the tuition reduction, and so a greater percent of the acceptees are NY residents.</p>