Anuradha Pandey

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And as her fellow students continued to file into the precept room, KiKi was aware of another important difference between them and her. She was poor, and most of them were rich. They had spent their young lives in an expansive world of boarding schools and tennis camps and vacation homes, while KiKi’s childhood had been circumscribed by food stamps and subsidized housing and late car payments.
The Inequality Machine: How College Divides Us
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