Paul Greenberg, a syndicated columnist for Tribune Media Services, is the editorial page editor of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

In households across America this time of year, there is a sense of expectation. And dread. Families await the arrival of that all-important letter, the one that will determine the kid's future. Everything depends on the admissions office at Harvard. Or Yale. Or some perfect college that looks like a Currier and Ives engraving.

Getting into the right school is no longer just a matter of having top grades and filling out the application form. The applicant has to wonder whether the accompanying essay struck the right balance between idealism and realism, confidence and humility, sufficient knowledge or sounding like a know-it-all, a healthy self-respect or just adolescent self-absorption.

Few waits are so wearing for kids - or their parents.

Take comfort. It's not the end of the world if the kid doesn't make it in or, for that matter, the beginning of the world if he does.

Somebody ought to compile a list of all the now-famous people who were rejected by the college or university of their choice. The Wall Street Journal has started to. Not too long ago it ran a story about some of the country's more illustrious college rejects, beginning with Warren Buffett.

The future master investor was turned down by a couple of the best business schools in the country, including Harvard's. Which turned out to be Harvard's mistake. The financier explained why being rejected can be a good thing: "The truth is, everything that has happened in my life . . . that I thought was a crushing event at the time has turned out for the better."

The rejection by Harvard certainly turned out well for Columbia University, which decided to accept his last-minute application. In 2008 alone, he gave more than $12 million to Columbia.

Among the other famous names mentioned in this roundup of rejects were Meredith Vieira of the "Today" show (Harvard); John Schlifske, president of Northwestern Mutual (Yale); Tom Brokaw of NBC (Harvard again); and Ted Turner (Princeton and Harvard).

Then there's the Nobel laureate in medicine, Harold Varmus, now president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, who was rejected by Harvard's medical school - twice. He still recalls a dean there who, in his interview, called him "inconstant and immature" - and suggested he join the military. As if the military needed the inconstant and immature.

It's restorative, thinking of some of those whose futures were supposed to be forever blighted because they didn't get into, for overrated example, Harvard. It's something to keep in mind, young people, when one of those thin rejection letters arrives in the mailbox from your first-choice college, rather than the thick letter of acceptance you were looking for.

Years ago, I saw a moving little film called "Ballad of a Soldier," a kind of Russian "Red Badge of Courage" about the adventures of a young soldier in the late unpleasantness with the Germans, 1941-45. At one point, he's on a train headed home on leave with an older comrade who's lost his leg in battle.

Rather than return to his fiancee maimed, that soldier has decided to stay on the train, maybe to the end of the line - which in Russia can be a long, long trans-Siberian way. "But where will you go?" our young hero asks him. The older soldier just shrugs. "Russia is a big country," he explains.

So is America. Opportunity still beckons here. It comes in all kinds of places and ways. Sometimes it comes in the form of a rejection.

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited Digital AccessOnly 25¢for 6 months

ACT NOWSALE ENDS SOON | CANCEL ANYTIME