10-year-old college sophomore credits ‘willpower’

<p>If “eminence” is defined as someone who is significantly above the rest of the pack and truly does something to “change the world”, I would think that the number of truly “eminent” people is quite low, so no one high school would graduate many people who rise to this definition of “eminence”. Since the base rate of people who meet this definition would be extremely low anyway (how many “eminent” people are there??) it is unlikely that any one high school would crank out a high percentage of these folks. However, I would strongly suspect that many high schools graduate people who become very successful, personally, vocationally and/or financially. “Eminence” does not equal success, IMO.</p>