<p>mine's about two pages, is that alright?</p>
<p>2 pages? I thought we all got generic ones. I guess not. my was about a page.</p>
<p>If you've sent it, you have to live with it. Two pages seems long for the love letter itself unles the two pages includes updates.</p>
<p>or did you mean the one we will/have sent to reiterate OUR love? Maybe that's what you meant. Sorry about that.</p>
<p>I wrote one and a half pages single-spaced (I don't do double-spacing; I hate it).</p>
<p>I'm sending it Friday, that's not too late you think, right?</p>
<p>mine was one paragraph. you guys go overboard. adding extra materials they don't want seems desperate.</p>
<p>I wrote 3 paragraphs; one to express my continued interest in Yale, one for updates, and a closing.</p>
<p>And I think as long as you send it before or around the same time as your mid-year report, you're fine.</p>
<p>Oh, about ten--no, make that eleven pages.</p>
<p>I wrote ten pages to follow the example of that guy who was featured in a news article about UPenn admissions...wait...that was...1998......oops...</p>
<p>Nah, mine was about a page, discounting the address stuff.</p>
<p>who did you guys address your letter to?
your regional admin officer?
or just the admissions office in general?</p>
<p>should we mail it or e-mail it to our admissions officer?</p>
<p>I mailed it and put my admissions officer's name on it.</p>
<p>Same, mailed it with my regional admissions officer name.</p>
<p>I wasn't deferred but I did write an "update letter" that was one page with bullets of exciting things that have happened to me since January. They are pretty major things which is why I sent it in in the first place. I didn't know I had to write my admissions officer's name on it though! Oops.</p>