Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jonathan Safran Foer, who graduated from GDS 20+ years ago.
And Murch. He is also a Murch grad. Let's try to pull Murch into this development discussion now [/sarcasm]
Anonymous wrote:Jonathan Safran Foer, who graduated from GDS 20+ years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Just this week there are all sorts of press reports (NYT, NPR, etc.) about the most recent best seller of an acclaimed author who is a GDS alum. GDS has nothing to be shy about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
Probably there are both: neighborhood trolls and tone deaf school boosters.
and Harvard Hypers
That's definitely a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
Probably there are both: neighborhood trolls and tone deaf school boosters.
and Harvard Hypers
That's definitely a troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
Probably there are both: neighborhood trolls and tone deaf school boosters.
and Harvard Hypers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
Probably there are both: neighborhood trolls and tone deaf school boosters.
Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.
The first post today was just the tenacious anti-GDS troll back from his or her August vacation and out to stir the pot by resuscitating this chain---this time with faux boosterism. It's getting a little old, isn't it?
Anonymous wrote:The neighbors vote too. As nice as GDS tradition may be, it does not help the neighborhood -- which worries about more practical issues such as traffic, public school crowding etc.
And although I think GDS is a fine school, the people using this language about history are either trolling or tone deaf. You won't get what you want by saying GDS should get special treatment under the zoning rules.