The Fourth R by George Oliver Smith
page 80 of 268 (29%)
page 80 of 268 (29%)
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who disliked him would not stand for the bully's beating up a smaller
child. But in other ways they picked on him. Jimmy reasoned out his own relationship between intelligence and violence. He had yet to learn the psychology of vandalism--but he was experiencing it. Finding no enjoyment out of play periods, Jimmy took to staying in. The permissive school encouraged it; if Jimmy Holden preferred to tinker with a typewriter instead of playing noisy games, his teacher saw no wrong in it--for his Third Grade teacher was something of an intellectual herself. In April, one week after his sixth birthday, Jimmy Holden was jumped again. Jimmy entered Fourth Grade to find that his fame had gone before him; he was received with sullen glances and turned backs. But he did not care. For his birthday, he received a typewriter from Paul Brennan. Brennan never found out that the note suggesting it from Jimmy's Third Grade teacher had been written after Jimmy's prompting. So while other children played, Jimmy wrote. He was not immediately successful. His first several stories were returned; but eventually he drew a winner and a check. Armed with superior knowledge, Jimmy mailed it to a bank that was strong in advertising "mail-order" banking. With his first check he opened a pay-by-the-item, no-minimum-balance checking account. |
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