International Students who need financial aid





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College Discussion Forums: College Search and Selection: January 2004 Archive: International Students who need financial aid
By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Wednesday, December 17, 2003 - 08:43 pm: Edit

Because I frequently get emails or see posts here from international students who are looking to go to a U.S. college but need financial aid, I have done some research that I thought I'd share.

First, while Harvard, MIT, and other well-known name schools do give financial aid to international students these top schools are difficult to get into and, more importantly, are NOT THE ONLY SCHOOLS that give financial aid packages to internationals. If your goal is to study in the U.S. you must look beyond these schools to schools that are less selective and also give a large number of international students financial aid. Second, don't just apply to the most expensive schools in the U.S. and expect a free ride - you need to find the schools that are less expensive to begin with PLUS that meet financial need for international students.

So, what are those schools? Here are some worth looking at:

Let's start with Berea College in Kentucky - they accept 30 international students each year and tuition is FREE - you will pay for your room and board, expected to be about $3500 a year. In exchange for free tuition you --- and everyone on campus -will have to work in a campus job during the school year. You will also, as a Berea student be able to work over the summer for pay to help meet your living expenses. Berea is a decent liberal arts college with some excellent programs. The main drawback for some may be that it a "Christian" college, although it is not affiliated with any particular religion and welcomes students of every faith.

Barry University in Florida - This school gives financial aid to almost all of its 173 international students (7%of the student body is international). Barry's strongest programs are in business administration, education, psychology, and computer sciences.

Eckerd College in Florida - another good smaller liberal arts college with a beautiful waterfront campus. Has 102 international students, gives financial aid to nearly all of them who need it.
Strong programs in biology, oceanography, business, psychology.

College of Wooster in Ohio - a very good liberal arts school. All students must complete a research project and Wooster has good grad school placement rates. Has about 133 international students (7%of student body), gives financial aid to almost all who need it. 38% of all students also receive substantial merit awards. Strong programs in history, biology.

Marquette University in Wisc. Has 143 international students - gives financial aid to nearly every one of them who require it. Marquette is a larger university (7000 students) that is affiliated withthe Roman Catholic church but you do not have to be Catholic to attend. Strong programs in engineering, nursing,business, biomedical sciences.

Illinois Institute of Technology - Small technically oriented school with good enginering, computer sciene, and science programs. Has 380 international students, gives financial aid to about half.

Clark University (Mass) This university is strong in pychology, business, biology - has 152 students and gives financial aid to nearly every one of them who needs it.

I could go on --- but here are some other schools worth looking at if you are an international and need financial aid:
University of Rochester, Eastern Michigan University, Macalester, University of Bridgeport, Ohio Wesleyan, Mount Holyoke, Grinnell, University of South Florida, Oberin, Slippery Rock University, Texas Christian Univrsty, University of Miami, Florida Inst. of Technology, Calvin College,Alleghey College, Beloit, Denison University, Lawrence University, Lewis & Clark, St. Lawrence University, Trinity College (CT), Lake Forest College. All of these schools give financial aid to a substantial portion of accepted international students - even better, many are excellent schools that are relatively easy to get into.

I hope this will help increase the chances of studying in the U.S for some international students.

By Ria (Ria) on Thursday, December 18, 2003 - 02:22 am: Edit

Thank you, Carolyn. It's a great list! I've acually looked at most of the schools on your list and talked to a man from Illinois Institute of Technology at a college fair and he was really optimistic about my chances of getting aid. He also said that they look more at the GPA then the SAT scores because they understand that it might be hard to get a top verbal score.

By Ria (Ria) on Thursday, December 18, 2003 - 11:20 am: Edit

Btw, Carolyn, do you know any (good) engineering schools that offer aid besides Illinois Institute of Technology? :)

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Thursday, December 18, 2003 - 12:58 pm: Edit

Yes, here are three others you might consider:
University of Rochester, Florida Institute of Technology, and Marquette. All three give financial aid to a large proportion of their international students. Another possibility is Arizona State University - gives quite a few financial aid packages to international students.

By Ria (Ria) on Thursday, December 18, 2003 - 02:35 pm: Edit

Thank you, I'll check them out! :)

By Saccharine (Saccharine) on Thursday, December 18, 2003 - 02:58 pm: Edit

Thank you Carolyn for the info :).

It's too late for me now to benefit from it but I know it'll be very useful for other international students.

I guess I was the lucky one. As most int'l students, I knew only about Harvard, Yale, MIT and Princeton giving fin aid so I decided to apply only there.

I did Princeton ED and just got in with a huge grant. But I realize that with such a risky approach I could have ended up being accepted nowhere and would really regret not applying to some less competitive (in terms of admissions) colleges like those from your list. Fortunately, it didn't happen :).

By Pawli (Pawli) on Sunday, December 21, 2003 - 03:08 pm: Edit

Hey Saccharine, where are you from? I'd like to hear about International students who got in really good schools, i don't know any so i don't really know what it takes to get in a very good school.
Carolyn, you seem to know so much about this.
I'm interested in going to school in the US, but i would really love it more if it was in California. I want to apply to 2 schools in California and 2 other somewhere else. I need a huge help with financial aid, I'm from Chile by the way. I was checking the schools you listed, they are so many. Is any of them in an urban area?I'm a city girl.
I'd appreciate any help please please
Thank you. :)

By Pawli (Pawli) on Sunday, December 21, 2003 - 10:08 pm: Edit

please help me

By Saccharine (Saccharine) on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 06:03 am: Edit

Pawli,

I'm from Poland. A funny thing is that I don't know too what it takes to get to Ivy League or other good colleges; I was expecting a rejection.

Good luck with your admissions! If you think I can help you in any way, my email is in my profile :).

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 10:32 am: Edit

Carolyn, i m just wondering if the universities give same priority to internationals who have beeen living in the US for many yrs with thier families ( like me) than true internationals who want to come to the US to study

By Mshell (Mshell) on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 11:23 am: Edit

carolyn, it's really nice of you to make a list. thanx.

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 08:13 pm: Edit

First, Saccharine - congratulations. that is a real accomplishment. The Ivy schools: Harvard, Yale, Brown, etc. are wonderful for international students who have exceptional grades and test scores so you must have done something right!

Pawli - in Southern California, look at Occidental College - it is on the edge of LA and is fairly good about financial aid for internationals and is a very good school as well. If it's warm weather you're looking for, check out Barry College in Florida. I don't really know of any other schools that are really good for international financial aid in Southern Calif. -Other schools that are in or near urban areas include the University of Rochester, Lake Forest College (not too far from Chicago), Trinity College (CT - in a small city not far from NYC),and Macalester (in Minneapolis-St. Paul).

Becks - I really don't know the answer to your question. It may depend on the school itself.

By Pawli (Pawli) on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 10:03 pm: Edit

Thanks for the advice, i had just checked on Occidental College and it seems they do have financial aid for international students. What about Whittier? it sounded nice, but how good are those schools? I wouldn't like to just go to the US and leave everything here to go to a just ok school. Do you know if when it comes to a deadline, if i send my papers before it then it's all ok? for example , let's say that the deadline is december 31st and i send the papers december 30th, if the stamp has a date not after the deadline, is it ok even if it doesn't really get exactly there before the deadline? did i even explain that right? lol
Well, thanks for your help, my scores are only ok so I'll try to blow them away with my essays.
Adios and Happy Holidays

By Sidis (Sidis) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 11:31 am: Edit

I'm still worried about some colleges deadline... it has to be POSTMARKED before Jan 1st (example) or it has to be received? Williams says "On our admissions office by Jan 1st"...

What if I miss the deadline???

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 12:54 pm: Edit

Occidental is an excellent school and would be worth coming to the U.S. for, in my opinion.
Whittier is a few notches down academically.

Postmarked means the envelope must be stamped by your local post office with the date. The deadline date is the LAST postmark date. It is fine, even preferrable, to send it sooner. The Best bet is NOT to wait until the last day and take it to the post office yourself. Explain that the postmark date must be clear on the envelope. Or, even better, splurge and send it via Federal Express or another overnight or two-day delivery service if one is available. I would get it in the mail ASAP however. If you have specific questions, it is best to email the international admissions counselor. However, keep in mind that with Christmas this week and New Year's next week, many people in the U.S. will not be in their offices very much.

By Curious42886 (Curious42886) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 12:58 pm: Edit

Renkle shenkle

By Chrisy (Chrisy) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 01:33 pm: Edit

hi carolyn: my cousins are international students who would to come and study here. can you suggest some schools that are not super competitve? they are very intelligent but do not have the perfect scores students on this board have :) thanks! one is currently in college and looking for a business school (need financial aid), the other is in high school and looking for a college with a great chemistry department(can afford a higher tuition and has more impressive stats: first place chemistry in the city and first place in a worldwide contest for drawing "children of the world unite"). i have made a rough list for the younger one but you know more than i do about colleges.. etc.
My list:
reach- sarah lawrence college
reach- rutgers-new brunswick
match- hampshire college
match- Hoftra U
saftey- u of bridgeport
saftey- long island university- southampton
superreach-NYU supersafety- CUNY- hunter
all of these schools are within 3 hr. driving distance from our home (on long island). can you suggest eastern schools? thanks.

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 02:35 pm: Edit

Does it have to be within a three hour drive of Long Island? If not, the College of Wooster in Ohio has an EXCELLENT chemistry program. In fact, they are one of the top ten schools in terms of sending chem majors on for phds. Other possibilities: University of Rochester, Clark, Clarkson, Trinity College (CT). Vassar might also be a good one to look at for chemistry.

For the student who needs more financial aid and is interested in business, the University of Bridgeport is a good choice. Ithaca College in upstate NY would be a step up academically, has good business programs, and is fairly good with financial aid for internationals. In Maryland, Western Maryland College has a good business program and good financial aid. If Tulane wouldn't be too far, would also be a good choice for financial aid and business.

By Chrisy (Chrisy) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 03:15 pm: Edit

thanks, i was just looking at clark, clarkson, vassar, and trinity!

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 03:43 pm: Edit

i would rather take loans and goto a good college than attend those mentioned by Carolyn

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 03:57 pm: Edit

Becks, sorry you feel that way. How much do you really know about the schools I mentioned?
While it is true that they vary in selectivity, all of them are good schools and some are exceptionally good. If you did some research you'd learn that schools like Occidental, U of Rochester, Wooster, etc. are quite good academically and well-regarded.

Not everyone has the grades to go to Harvard and most international students are simply not able to qualify for enough loans to pay full tuition and other costs. These schools - where financial aid is available for internationals - are good options.

Sigh. I really do get tired of people who think that every school that isn't a "prestige" name is worthless.

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 05:18 pm: Edit

Yeah...maybe ur right Carolyn

but i just feel that theres something wrong with going to a college with just over a 1000 students....or to a college whose campus is non-existant( Illinois inst tech-few miles from my home)......or to a college whose name my friends and relatives have never heard of-- Especially when everyone around you is thinking of the big ones like michigan and illinois.

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 05:29 pm: Edit

And i m pretty sure internationals like me living in the US for several yrs feel the same too!

By Chrisy (Chrisy) on Tuesday, December 23, 2003 - 06:09 pm: Edit

i think becks you shouldn't stress so much on reputation and what others think :) some of those schools are known mostly by a scholary groups.

By Pawli (Pawli) on Wednesday, December 24, 2003 - 07:00 am: Edit

Carolyn, thank you so much for the information, it is very helpful for international students who know nothing about which school is good, there are so many!!!
What about a school in Boston? Is Suffolk good? or what other school near downtown Boston is good? and of course, have financial aid for international students and Is the University of Chicago too hard to get in? I'm surely going to apply to Occidetal now, thanks again!

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Thursday, December 25, 2003 - 03:03 pm: Edit

Becks, I understand what you're saying. Yes, for some people a small school isn't the right choice.
But, for other people, a smaller school where you can get personalized attention and participate in more discussion type classes instead of sitting in big lectures and having little contact with professors, is a better choice. Some people like the anonymity of big classes - others want smaller classes. I also think that for some international students, a smaller school can be a better choice: they may receive more support and be able to get help from professors - not just teaching assistants - if they need it. But again, for some people a larger school may be just the ticket. As long as you think about what will work best for you before you pick a school, you are on the road to finding the right school for YOU. Limiting your choices only to schools your friends and relatives have heard of does just that: it limits your choices.

Think about it this way: when you're planning to go out to dinner in a restaurant, do you automatically choose the most expensive and well-known restaurant because your friends and relatives have heard of it? Or do you consider what type of food you like to eat, what type of atmosphere you want, what price you want and can pay, the service you'll receive etc.? Yes, the well-known restaurant might be what you are looking for but there are other options that can be satisfying too --- perhaps even more satisfying for your needs and desires. If you automatically choose the restaurant that everyone has heard of simply because of its name, you might very well miss out on a wonderful experience. Searching for the right college shouldn't be any different.

In any case, everyone needs to do their homework on any school they're considering: find out the percentage of classes that are large, medium, small. Look at the catalog of courses that are available in your major (you can find this at the school's web site) or areas you are interested in possibly studying. Read the bio's of the teachers in the department and try to get a feel for how many classes the "star" professors really teach (at some schools, these professors may do more research than teaching). Find out about internships, opportunities to study off campus, etc. I also think it's a good idea to see if schools you're considering has its student newspaper on the web site - most schools do. Read a few back issues in the archives about what students think, what they do, what the issues on campus are - and you'll start to get a sense of whether this is a place where you'll fit in.

Pawli, I don't know anything about Suffolk - sorry. If you're an international who needs financial aid, Clark University in Mass. is not too far from Boston. If you're female, Mt. Holyoke, Smith, and Wellseley are all near Boston and are decent about financial aid for internationals. If financial aid isn't much of an issue, Boston University, Boston College, and Northeastern are good but there are many other schools within an easy drive of Boston as well.

The University of Chicago is an excellent school with a very intellectual atmosphere. It is a very selective school but easier to get into than schools like Harvard, Yale, Stanford.

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Thursday, December 25, 2003 - 04:44 pm: Edit

The perfect fit for me would be U illinois---Where i can get the big U feel I always wanted and i can even get the instate tuition rates

By Wjk323 (Wjk323) on Friday, December 26, 2003 - 09:13 am: Edit

Just wanted to say thanks for all the help you give to this board and especially to us, international students. You have composed an awesome list...

-wonjoonkim03-

By Pawli (Pawli) on Friday, December 26, 2003 - 03:06 pm: Edit

Hey Carolyn, if you gave me your email address, could you help me make some decisions? i could tell you my status and all that? you seem to be someone who knows enough to help me, I'd appreciate it.
Thanks again!

Pawli from Chile

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Friday, December 26, 2003 - 04:02 pm: Edit

Becks - well, there you have it. U of Illinois is a great school --- I hope your plans work out!

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Friday, December 26, 2003 - 11:04 pm: Edit

Thanks Carolyn!

By Piquant77 (Piquant77) on Monday, December 29, 2003 - 10:26 am: Edit

this is a great post.

By Jamimom (Jamimom) on Monday, December 29, 2003 - 07:17 pm: Edit

bump

By Skyhawk (Skyhawk) on Monday, December 29, 2003 - 08:28 pm: Edit

Tsk Tsk Jamimom - you know bumping is frowned upon at CC. Instead, try asking a question to keep the conversation going. -Moderator Skyhawk

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Monday, December 29, 2003 - 09:26 pm: Edit

The college so easily seperate " permananent residents" from "international students". I hope they no how hard it is nodays to get a green card, especially after 9/11. The process is slow as a snail. Heck, it took 3 months just to validate my info for my drivers license.

And for those who dont know, a single job change/ job layoff, which are so frequent in todays economy results in the restart of the green card process.

My friend from Korea came to the US 6-7 yrs back and doesnt have a GC yet for the same reason. His Dad just had to pay 30k last yr for his brother at u wisconsin. and he obviously cant afford another 30k. But hes afraid to ask for fin.aid coz he thinks it may hurt his chances.

By Vortex (Vortex) on Tuesday, December 30, 2003 - 06:01 pm: Edit

Dear Carolyn, you seem to pssess an incredible base of knowledge about US education and International students headaches:) Any way... I really want to ask you if there is a way for me to contact you for I ave a specific problems. I would understand if you deny as I know that time is precious. Thank you in advance.

Yours Boris

By Pinetree85 (Pinetree85) on Thursday, January 01, 2004 - 11:03 pm: Edit

I found out that U. Rochester doesn't really offer need-based financial aids to int'l students. What it says is "While need-based aid is not available to international students at the University of Rochester, merit-based scholarships and grants are awarded to students who demonstrate outstanding academic achievement and potential.... Unfortunately, merit-based awards typically do not exceed $10,000 per year....we are unable to fully fund international students seeking to further their education."

well.. in my case, i can't still afford $40,000 costs even if they offer me $10,000 scholarship.

i hope this might help.

By Jamimom (Jamimom) on Thursday, January 01, 2004 - 11:32 pm: Edit

Sorry Skyhawk, won't do it again. Carolyn's post just seemed to be the perfect response. Glad to see you are "hawkeyed" on the job. Love this site--would not want to be bumped off of it. A very Happy New Year to you an yours!
Jamie

By Elrohir (Elrohir) on Friday, January 02, 2004 - 03:41 pm: Edit

Wow, this is a great thread... and I very much regret not seeing it earlier.

Carolyn:

I'm dead set on majoring in Economics... and continuing on - God willing - to a prestigious PhD program in Economics. My dad can finance half of the $40k fees at college, and I will obviously be on my own after college. I figure.. I have a much better chance of getting into a top-notch graduate program, with a teaching assistantship or something, if I go to a college like UChicago or HYPS. Am I very wrong about this?

Now I'm feeling rather nervous because all the places I've applied to are in the "very very selective" category: UChicago, HYPS, Williams and Carleton. Honestly, I wasn't even considering most of them, until I got a 1600 in my SAT... apparently it isn't too common where I live, and my friends think I'm crazy when say "it'll be tough for me to get into Harvard". But the SAT (obviously) is not all colleges want... now I'm worried: Am I putting too much at risk here, or should I have a solid chance with my stats??

Stats:

1600
SAT II's in Jan
Straight A's in 9 GCE O-levels, and 2 A-levels (predicted A's in two more A-levels)
EC's: v. good considering what is available here (with the exception of sports, bit of table-tennis though).. but v. v. average considering what ppl on this board have. No international olympaids or anything.. didn't have the opportunity :(

I don't have a safety in the US, but I will be applying to McGill this week (I know people who've got in from my school with lower stats, so it should be a safety). Plus, I've applied to the UK and got conditional offers from three prestigous unis (at least well known in the UK): Warwick, Durham, and UCL.

Yup, I'm a rather confused chap. I dunno where should be better for me, considering my plans post-college. UK initially attracted me, because of the focused nature of their degrees (plus I'm scared stiff about getting rejected for a US Visa: I'm Muslim, lived all my life in an Arab country. Doesn't look too good, huh?). But now, I'm in love with the flexibility offered by US unis... I'd love to study philosophy, political science, and physics (to name a few), together with a lot of economics. And there seem to be so many more opportunities (namely opportunities for research!) in the US.

After all that rambling (thank you for reading so far, btw)... where do I stand, i.e. do I have a good chance at the places I've applied to (keeping in mind that I'm applying for financial aid)?

(Side note: I'm in love with University of Chicago... the atmosphere just seems so perfect, I want to be in a place like that. Then again, it's tougher for internationals who ask for financial aid. It would be so amazing to get a full merit scholarship, but I don't know how often they give these to internationals.)

If you think I should have another safety (i.e. McGill not sufficient), could you recommend any place with a great economics program? Possibly keeping in mind that I want to be thoroughly challenged.. challenged as in, I'd like to take graduate courses at college in my senior year (where that's possible, of course), and possibly double-major in economics and maths. In addition to trying out an insane number of activities and sports, of course.

Thank you so much, any advice would be very much appreciated.

By Sm1980 (Sm1980) on Tuesday, January 06, 2004 - 01:14 pm: Edit

Intl students face unique situations when entering U.S colleges and financial aid is one of them. I attended a junior college in Va and have now been accepted into Penn State at University Park. My dad, who was my primary source of funds, died 4 months ago. I don't have the money to attend college and the thought of going back to my country without graduating kills me. But for some reason or another I'm convinced that there are some private scholarships and/or grants for intl undergrad economics major. I just don't know where to find them. In most cases Intls pay a higher rate the instate students and don't qualify for fed/sate finacial aid. If anyone has any suggestions please help.

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Tuesday, January 06, 2004 - 08:48 pm: Edit

Elrohir - I don't think your logic is faulty at all. You certainly have the stats to be in the running for places like UChicago and HYP - of course, you have to keep in mind that Harvard, et. al, are so competitive that they are lotteries for even the best qualified students. U of Chicago is a bit less selective and I think you may have a good chance there -- if you get in, you really can't do better for economics in the U.S., in my opinion. McGill seems like a reasonable back up plan. Other possibilities in the U.S. that might make decent back ups for you that are still taking applications (double check on this): Vanderbilt University, U of Wisconsin-Madison, U of Texas-Austin, Texas A&M. They all have decent economics departments. Vanderbilt is probably the top of this group in terms of academics. Good luck.

By Carolyn (Carolyn) on Tuesday, January 06, 2004 - 08:51 pm: Edit

Sm1980 - try this site: www.edupass.org You might also do a search at www.fastweb.com and see if anything turns up. I know what you mean about it being difficult for international students to get aid.
I think you'll enjoy Penn State, however, and once you're enrolled perhaps they will be able to steer you towards some ideas as well. Best of luck!

By Becks777 (Becks777) on Tuesday, January 06, 2004 - 09:45 pm: Edit

That is so sad Sm1980...I think many colleges keep some kind of an emergency aid for internationals ( Michigan for sure does, donno about penn state)....And u may qualify for thAT

By Sm1980 (Sm1980) on Wednesday, January 07, 2004 - 09:55 am: Edit

Thanks for the info guys. Here's a great website for educational scholarships and grants for international students http://www.foundationcenter.org
I paid $10 for a month’s access and have found useful info for intl students from Europe, South America and Asia but not much on undergrad students from Africa (I'm from Zimbabwe). I even went to one of their libraries in D.C and found loads of info pertinent to intl students from Asia, Europe and South America.

By Elrohir (Elrohir) on Wednesday, January 07, 2004 - 01:47 pm: Edit

Sm1980: I'm very sorry about your predicament. Thanks for the website, and I hope you find a way to finance your way through this! Penn State is a great place, I was intersted in the honours college there, but no aid for intls :(

Definitely check out hardship funds at Penn State or perhaps low-interest loans that you could apply for. If you aren't able to find a scholarship, you might want to look at a loan.

Carolyn: Thank you for the advice! Vanderbilt looks great (they have fin aid, though limited, and scholarships for intls), but the deadline was Jan 2. What do you think about Emory University? The deadline's Jan 15, but they don't have financial aid for internationals - I've sent them an email asking whether they have any merit scholarships for internationals, waiting for a reply.

Could you recommend a possible backup university that accepts the Common Application, because I've got my SAT II's coming up very soon, plus school exams that I need to concentrate on. I've spent some time on my Common App essays, and I think they're decent.

By Fusionreactor (Fusionreactor) on Friday, January 09, 2004 - 07:01 am: Edit

hi guys, i'm planning 2 do my masters in bioengineering in the US... i'm from india, and am desperately going 2 need fin. aid, is it true that i can get fin. aid only after the 1st sem is over, could i get it earlier if i gave my GRE now?
could u plz reccomend some goog colleges for a masters in bioengineering that would give aid as well i'm a bit lost,

By Fusionreactor (Fusionreactor) on Friday, January 09, 2004 - 07:44 am: Edit

u know any good colleges for bioengineering that provide financial aid, i'm from india

By Binarystar (Binarystar) on Friday, January 16, 2004 - 02:58 am: Edit

Sm1980, can you share some of the information you have for South American students with me? I'll email you if you don't mind.

By Bharatchoragudi (Bharatchoragudi) on Sunday, February 15, 2004 - 10:10 am: Edit

I'm From INDIA. I'm looking for a good engineering college near Arizona as my father visits Phoenix frequently. I require Financial Aid also. Can you help me Carolyn!

By Jinarusha (Jinarusha) on Thursday, March 11, 2004 - 02:17 am: Edit

Just wanted to say that Carolyn, you are an angel.

By Westmonster (Westmonster) on Monday, May 03, 2004 - 10:26 am: Edit

Hi Carolyn.
I am from Uzbekistan.
If possible I would like to contact you by e-mail regarding problem of financing my study. Thus, if not secret could you give me your mail address.
Thanx in advance.


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