Come to think of it, there are a couple of friends I wouldn't mind getting into an alcohol-addled susceptibility.

Worryingly, the more I think about it, the more I'm attracted to the idea.
Taking the topic back to schools, BBC News was today talking about the 11+ exams - oh, I'm sorry, I mean SATs - and it seems that once again standards have betrayed government targets, and once again we are promised education in the U.K. will be transformed from a great system to an outstanding system (the actual adjectives used fail me). I don't know what great system they're talking about
:
When I was in middle school and my parents first suggested the idea of me going to Norwich School to my teachers, they apparently were upset. See, I was too naive to realise it at the time, but my intelligence was being used to help more disruptive and slower pupils. Fine enough, but for one thing I was given no consultation on this strategy, and for another thing it would have vastly hindered my own progress if I'd have stayed on in state high school. So instead of setting apart those that need more help for remedial lessons, let's integrate everyone and end up with a mediocre but acceptable pupil population.
That's the great system we have. It's lucky, in many ways, that natural youth groupings segregate according to intelligence - at least in an environment where everyone's a Townie.