<p>For those of you who plan on sending a letter of interest, how will you be sending it? If you're using snail mail, are you just sending it to their general admissions office?</p>
<p>I am not on any waitlists (I declined) but from what I have gathered snail mail is definitely the way to go.</p>
<p>I e-mailed.</p>
<p>Honestly, I don't think adcoms are going to care whether you send it either way, as long as you get your point across.</p>
<p>Go for regular mail over e-mail - it's more formal.</p>
<p>also, emails get missed, etc...everyone seems to thinks email is infallible, but it isn't at all</p>
<p>I would do both to be honest...</p>
<p>Just note ont he bottom "hard copy to follow"</p>
<p>do you want to risk this by depending on a system that could judge your email "junk"</p>
<p>I think fax is sometimes a good compromise, it gets there quick, its hard copy and taes a bit of effort.</p>
<p>But mail is always better over email for something importnat</p>
<p>If I do regular mail, should I just send it to their general undergraduate admissions office? Or should I address it to someone specific?</p>
<p>I e-mailed and got off the waitlist at Johns Hopkins.</p>
<p>It doesn't matter.</p>
<p>I'd take citygirlsmom's advice and do both, though you should express that you're sending a hard copy because you're worried your email may get lost in the shuffle.</p>