<p>Chillax88 ... here's suggestion from the peanut gallery ... please ask someone who you totally respect and trust (another kid, a parent, a CC moderator, your guidence couselor, someone) about the rules of ED. Breaking the agreement about ED can have serious reprecussions on all your applciations, your HS, and other kids from your HS who apply to the schools to which you apply ED. Before submitting multiple ED applications please discuss this with a trusted (and knowledgable) advisor.</p>
<p>nine- get in the ring (athletic/intellectual) and i guarentee you WILL get *<strong><em>ed up. dog, bitc hes aint *</em></strong></p>
<p>lol you're funny</p>
<p>haha </p>
<p>(OH, NOW I KNOW WhAT 10 chars means..) whenever i saw this, i wondered what the hell it meant. I tried to reply with just the haha, but it says the message must be at least 10 characters!</p>
<p>No I didn't go to belmar.</p>
<p>
<p>So Princeton is a SCEA thats binding and Upenn is a EA thats binding
I am not wrong. Essentially, for all intents and purposes, for the sake of being redundant, Penn is a binding EA (the binding means that you must go, and that you must notify other schools, while princeton is a SCEA thats binding.</p>
<p>upenn is ivy right?? then you might want to read the ivy sheet about admissions... it's posted on the princeton site i'm sure (and probably upenn as well) and it states something about it... though i read it at an absurd hour and can't really remember.</p>
<p>MIT and caltech are not SCEA</p>