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October 21, 2012Admitted, but Left OutWHEN Ayinde Alleyne arrived at the Trinity School, an elite independent school on the Upper West Side in Manhattan, he was eager to make new friends. A brainy 14-year-old, he was the son of immigrants from Trinidad and Tobago, a teacher and an auto-body repairman, in the South Bronx. He was soon overwhelmed by the privilege he saw. Talk of fancy vacations and weekends in the Hamptons rankled -- "I couldn't handle that at that stage of my life," said Mr. Alleyne, now a sophomore at the University of Pennsylvania -- and he eventually found comfort in the school's "minority corner," where other minority students, of lesser means, hung out.Posted by Jim Zellmer at October 21, 2012 1:14 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: ![]() Comments
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