A tribute to a great kid, who is now irked at the publicity: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/...
Unofficial (but Extraordinarily Informative) Bio of Dave MarcusIn more than two decades as a journalist, David L. Marcus has shown a knack for landing in the wrpmg place at the right time. Consider: He moved to Mexico City in the 1980s, as street crime soared. He got mugged and pistol-whipped inside a VW bug taxi… He was cowering in a van in the Yucatan peninsula when Hurricane Gilbert roared through (the van has been missing for years – apologies to Hertz)... In 1990, he opened the first American newspaper bureau in Colombia, just in time to see the horrors of car bombings and kidnappings as the Medellin cocaine cartel unleashed its fury… He reported from Israel in 1991 during the Gulf War as Scud missiles slammed into nearby buildings... He hop-scotched across Central Asia in the waning days of the Soviet Union, ending up amid a civil war in Tbilisi, Georgia... On a swing through western Africa, he found himself on the wrong end of an AK-47 held by a teenage soldier in Angola … Back to the beginning: Marcus wrote his first freelance story at age 17. It was a New York Times essay about applying to college headlined “Yale Loves Me; Yale Loves Me Not” (Yale didn’t love him, which is why they’ll never see a dime of his Social Security bonanza). Marcus started his career at the Miami Herald, where he covered education. He then headed to the Dallas Morning News, where he roved the US-Mexico border. Later, he served as a foreign correspondent, based in Mexico City, Bogota, and Rio de Janeiro, covering conflicts in Haiti, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Angola. Marcus shared the 1994 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for a series about violence against women around the world. Earlier, he was a member of a team of finalists for the 1990 Pulitzer in Explanatory Journalism, for “Hidden Wars,” a look at conflicts in Africa, Latin America and Asia. Back in the US, Marcus served as diplomatic correspondent of the Boston Globe. There he reported on human rights abuses of the Taliban, unrest in the Mideast, and global arms trafficking. In 1999, Marcus joined US News & World Report to return to his original beat, education. He took a sabbatical in a bucolic region of New England because he had an idea for a little book that involved following a group of so-called “troubled teenagers” as they went through a therapeutic program. Marcus stretched that into a four-year undertaking. Houghton Mifflin published the book, What It Takes to Pull Me Through. The subtitle is even longer: Why Teenagers Get in Trouble – And How Four of Them Got Out. You need to order that book now. It will change your life. Marcus son took on another nonfiction narrative: Acceptance. It has another unwieldy subtitle: A Legendary Guidance Counselor Helps Seven Kids Find the Right College – and Find Themselves. Penguin is the publisher, and it's now available in paperback. Everyone’s talking about it so buy several new copies today. Now, the academic background: Thanks to a computer glitch, Dave Marcus was admitted to Brown University, and generously pledged to donate hundreds of millions of dollars from his roommate’s hedge fund (Editor's Note: This line was written before the current Grand Depression, and was considered funny back then). Marcus was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. He also studied at the University of the Andes in Bogota, which he recommends to anyone with bodyguards and a chase car. Marcus honed his skills as an education journalist by working as a teacher. As the Wilson Fellow at Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts, he had the pleasure of re-immersing himself in Mark Twain, Fitzgerald and Hemingway, who should be read in high school and re-read by everyone over age thirty. Later, Marcus was the visiting scholar at Ithaca College’s Park School of Communications. where he witnessed a new generation of reporters training to do video, radio and print. Certain that newspapers would boom in the age of the Internet, Marcus joined Newsday in 2006. He roves around Long Island, writing about education, with an occasional feature on the world's oldest living dog (about to turn age 21). Over the years, Marcus has contributed freelance stories to Vanity Fair, GQ and the New York Times. He has jabbered on NPR’s “Morning Edition” and appeared scholarly on NBC’s “Today Show.” Marcus is available to speak about college admissions or struggling teens or other education topics to groups of educators, journalists, parents and others looking for a soporific experience. When he speaks about admissions, he’s often joined by Gwyeth Smith Jr. (“Smitty”), the former guidance director who is the subject of Acceptance. Details at www.DaveMarcus.com |
A tribute to a great kid, who is now irked at the publicity: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/...
Smitty and I weigh in -- "The Choice" blog of the New York Times: http://thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/08/smith/
The paperback of the book, out now, has practical pointers for college applicants.
It also has Smitty's list of "40 Overlooked Gems" - colleges that more students should consider.
Here's Smitty's comment on one of those colleges:
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