<p>e a private bathroom with only a few other people? By private I mean, like it is not a bathroom with stalls or anything but a normal household bathroom (With one toilet, one sink, and one shower) and that I can close + lock the door?</p>
<p>I visited Cornell recently and the thought of having to share a bathroom with a good portion of the floor disgusts me...I mean I can't imaging brushing my teeth while someone is doing #2.</p>
<p>Also, I don't necessarily have to live alone but I would like to. If I have a roommate, the room should be a little spacious.</p>
<p>Cost is not a factor.</p>
<p>So would townhouses be good? or does Cornell have suites or what?</p>
<p>The best you can do is request a single in a co-ed dorm. College is going to expand your horizons, man. This is a good thing.</p>
<p>My senior year I lived in the master bedroom of a house that had a bathroom with a dual entry -- both from my room as well as from the hallway. I often left the door to the bathroom open so I could grab a glass of water, etc. When I was working on a paper, it was pretty funny to just have a roommate walk in and start to do their business without closing their door. </p>
<p>College!</p>
<p>The bathroom also had a dual shower, which was a lot of fun as we could pass shampoo and soap back and forth while chatting.</p>
<p>If brushing your teeth is an issue just brush them in your room and spit out the window.</p>
<p>yes there are rooms that would accomodate your scenario...a single in a suite-style dorm. but theres also a high likelihood if you request a co-ed single, you'll get dickson...which means youre sharing a bathroom with like 35 people. i suppose if you submit your housing form by mail you could write on there that you prefer suite-style and maybe they'll give it to you. you could also call housing if the idea of non-suite style housing really upsets you....they may be willing to accomodate you.</p>
<p>or the townhouses would be good. but you would have to share a bedroom with someone else. but the good thing is if you request the townhouses you're reallyyyy likely to get them and then you're guaranteed not to have the bathroom problem you're worried about.</p>
<p>Don't take this the wrong way, but I have heard otherwise. Friends of mine who have traveled through China and India have told me that the public rest facilities in those countries are absolutely disgusting... unless you are upper class. But I had the same experience in my travels through Eastern Europe. So it's probably just a second world -- developing country thing.</p>
<p>I was a Wilderness Reflections guide for four years. We took freshman out into the woods and taught them all sorts of great things about life. Like not showering for a day will not kill you. And that a lot of the product people put on their bodies is actually bad for you. The best was when students actually thought that there would be rest facilities along the trail. Our rest facility was a trowel. You dig your own port a potty and find yourself a nice clump of moss.</p>
<p>If it is really going to be an issue, I would suggest including a note with your housing application. They should be able to accommodate. And worse comes to worse, it's not hard to change dorms or rooms within six weeks or so of the start of school.</p>
<p>I would actually recommend that you look into doing a POST or a WR trip, SplinterCell, it will really help you transition to college life.</p>
<p>Thanks for the advice man. Also, these may be weird questions but:</p>
<p>1.) Are animals allowed in the townhouse or suites/dorms? (I hope not...I hate animals.)</p>
<p>2.) Can I choose a preference for what type of roommate I want..like race, religion, interest, etc.?</p>
<p>3.) How hard is it to get a single-suite style room? And does anyone have pictures of the inside of a town house or even the outside becuae the RA tours at Cornell didn't cover this.</p>
<p>No one is automatically accostumed to this. I grew up in a house sharing the bathroom w/ only my parents or having my own bathroom. This is just a facet of college life. I'm not sure what you're talking about with only white people being used to this. I've used the bathrooms in China and Africa. Most bathrooms don't have toilet paper. Heck, in Africa, there are people SELLING toilet paper right outside the public bathrooms. Many times the "toilet" is just a hole in the ground. I think I prefer American bathrooms.</p>
<p>There are a couple of options to choose from. I think that one or another should be mandatory for all entering freshman. They basically are at Harvard, Princeton, and Dartmouth.</p>
<p>
[quote]
1.) Are animals allowed in the townhouse or suites/dorms? (I hope not...I hate animals.)
[/quote]
</p>
<p>You're not supposed to have pets. Sometimes people keep small pets illegally. Some girl in Balch kept a rat and it got loose while I was over there and caused quite a raucous. </p>
<p>
[quote]
2.) Can I choose a preference for what type of roommate I want..like race, religion, interest, etc.?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Dude, seriously?</p>
<p>
[quote]
3.) How hard is it to get a single-suite style room? And does anyone have pictures of the inside of a town house or even the outside becuae the RA tours at Cornell didn't cover this.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Hope you get a townhouse. I think you'll either need to share a bedroom or a bathroom. I don't think there are any scenarios where you have your own bedroom (a single) and a private bathroom.</p>
<p>Alright then thanks for the info. I shall look into this matter promptly.</p>
<p>Oh and I have asked this question before but no one has answer it clearly. If someone does, then I will never have to ask it again.</p>
<p>What is the difference between a direct transfer (internally) and an internal transfer (division)?</p>
<p>Which one takes longer? I heard the ITD can happen after your first semester. Heck I met a girl while I visited who was in this...she was transfering from CALS to CAS.</p>
<p>Does Direct transfer occur after 1st semester of freshmen year?</p>
<p>ElectronicError, you are disappointing. You are criticizing me for wanting privacy and thus maximizing my potentinal for learning. Ironically, you, at one point, wanted a single with a private bath (at U of Chicago). Thus, your comments paint you as a hypocrite.</p>
<p>And Cayuga, curses about the ecology housing. If only I could live off campus then. Is that possible?</p>
<p>Splinter - I think you're setting yourself up for failure. You've already kind of established that you think you're superior to (or at least deserving of more prestige) than a lot of the people you'll be in classes with, and now you want to isolate yourself from the riff-raff altogether.</p>
<p>College is about aculturation into adulthood, not just cramming grades. You might be surprised what you learn living in close quarters with lesser mortals. I know I was.</p>