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Forbes Article on Stanford's Rise to Football Prominence
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<blockquote data-quote="Jean-Baptiste Rochambeau" data-source="post: 39114" data-attributes="member: 1017"><p>I made them up. Assume I am way off, that there are only 10 kids in 50 states, 500 overall. They are still out there--in what quantity, we'll have to debate. As you are a Notre Dame fan, you are already aware that one of their advantages over the years was they draw from the parochial schools very well. How many Catholic schools have very strong academics?? At the risk of being unscientific, and because my son went to Catholic middle school, I will say "90 % of all parochial schools" have superior academics to the general public schools" regardless of the community. Marist, St. Pius X, Aquinas, Benedictine in Georgia, Jesuit, Aquinas in Fort Lauderdale, John Bosco Prep in New Jersey, New Iberia in Louisiana, and on and on. The level of parental involvement required by the schools, plus the financial commitment by the family to education develops many outstanding athletes, in every major city in the country. Notre Dame and Boston College can't sign any more than we can. We did well in the DC area and Maryland. We just need half a dozen a year. If I were Paul Johnson, I'd convert to Catholicism immediately.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jean-Baptiste Rochambeau, post: 39114, member: 1017"] I made them up. Assume I am way off, that there are only 10 kids in 50 states, 500 overall. They are still out there--in what quantity, we'll have to debate. As you are a Notre Dame fan, you are already aware that one of their advantages over the years was they draw from the parochial schools very well. How many Catholic schools have very strong academics?? At the risk of being unscientific, and because my son went to Catholic middle school, I will say "90 % of all parochial schools" have superior academics to the general public schools" regardless of the community. Marist, St. Pius X, Aquinas, Benedictine in Georgia, Jesuit, Aquinas in Fort Lauderdale, John Bosco Prep in New Jersey, New Iberia in Louisiana, and on and on. The level of parental involvement required by the schools, plus the financial commitment by the family to education develops many outstanding athletes, in every major city in the country. Notre Dame and Boston College can't sign any more than we can. We did well in the DC area and Maryland. We just need half a dozen a year. If I were Paul Johnson, I'd convert to Catholicism immediately. [/QUOTE]
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