Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I graduated high school in 1976. In those days, no one took prep courses. I didn't score the highest in my class in either math or verbal but I did get the highest composite score. I guess I was sort of a jack of all trades master of none sort of student. I went to a small private college preparatory school in Phoenix from first grade through twelve and my graduating class had 25 students. 5 of us went East, two to Columbia, one to Princeton, one to Wesleyan, and one to the pre-medical program at Johns Hopkins. The rest went to California, one to Stanford, one to what was then called Claremont Men's College, and I don't remember where the rest went. I don't think money mattered in those days since, as far as I know, there were no prep courses. If money matters now, it's a terrible shame.
Uh, you went to a private prep school? Presumably you or your classmates were wealthy or on financial aid (i.e. Someone wealth was supporting your tuition). How can you not infer money mattered??
This is a very odd post, myopic to the point of dementia? Am I misreading it?