A Class Gift
By Marc Fenigstein | April 12, 2001The number of top-quality high school students attracted to our school is falling. We no longer impress the brightest, most creative, most interesting students as a place worth educating them.
The number of top-quality high school students attracted to our school is falling. We no longer impress the brightest, most creative, most interesting students as a place worth educating them.
Here's a hypothetical situation: Every year great big boulders come falling out of the sky and land in an area about 100 square feet.
The other night I was sitting at home, two in the morning, watching cable TV, because I have no friends and/or life.
This is a response both to the house editorial "But what do you really want?" (May 26th, Op-Ed), and to what I witnessed at the Student Assembly meeting on Tuesday night.
For an unknown reason the students of Dartmouth College have decided that they are not important and that they cannot make a difference.