I know I can submit a PR for this, but I feel the need to bring this up here since it was posted here for discussion.
In Chapter 2, 5th paragraph, these are the phrases you chose to bold:
> the high school I went to, again, was a Lutheran high school
> one of my teachers was a little bit prejudiced against blacks
You state earlier that the bolds are for the purpose of "pull(ing) out the main topics of each paragraph."
These two phrases you've chosen, if read together, totally misrepresent the point of the paragraph. Donald is making the point that he had a very positive experience in this Lutheran school and that it was "absolutely not the case" that "church schools are place where they teach intolerance" and that he had a "very good experience." Then he admits to one exception to his point and emphasizes that this exception was not worth paying any attention to.
I'm curious as to why you felt it was the right thing to focus on the one exception rather than the main point of this paragraph.
In Chapter 2, 5th paragraph, these are the phrases you chose to bold:
> the high school I went to, again, was a Lutheran high school
> one of my teachers was a little bit prejudiced against blacks
You state earlier that the bolds are for the purpose of "pull(ing) out the main topics of each paragraph."
These two phrases you've chosen, if read together, totally misrepresent the point of the paragraph. Donald is making the point that he had a very positive experience in this Lutheran school and that it was "absolutely not the case" that "church schools are place where they teach intolerance" and that he had a "very good experience." Then he admits to one exception to his point and emphasizes that this exception was not worth paying any attention to.
I'm curious as to why you felt it was the right thing to focus on the one exception rather than the main point of this paragraph.