Difference between revisions of "Julia Kite"

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'''Julia Kite''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '07 is obsessed with pigeons. She was known for being the most vehement hater of [[Matthew Fox]], and was the sole graduating senior singled out by him and by [[Prezbo]] on [[Class Day]] in [[2007]].
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'''Julia Kite''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '07 was an urban studies and writing major who attained minor fame at [[Class Day]] when speaker Matthew Fox singled her out for her comment to the [[Spectator]], "I've never heard of this guy." She was the sole graduating senior to be mentioned by name by both Fox and [[PrezBo]].
  
She is from Chicago and will study at LSE in the upcoming year.
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She gave the John Jay Scholar speech at the 2007 [[John Jay Awards]] Dinner held at Cipriani on 42nd Street.
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Kite has written for the BBC, [[''Quarto'']], [[''The Birch'']], and the now-defunct ''Collection''. She is obsessed with pigeons and while at Columbia could frequently be found observing nests of baby birds. She also co-founded the Polish Students Society and performed with a Polish folk dance group based in Brooklyn.
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Her senior thesis in urban studies and sociology was about sectarianism and soccer violence in Scotland. She received the Seymour Brick Memorial Prize for a play set in Glasgow that dealt with sectarian issues.
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She will enter the London School of Economics as a postgraduate in fall of 2007.
  
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Kite]]
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Kite]]

Revision as of 17:02, 4 June 2007

Julia Kite CC '07 was an urban studies and writing major who attained minor fame at Class Day when speaker Matthew Fox singled her out for her comment to the Spectator, "I've never heard of this guy." She was the sole graduating senior to be mentioned by name by both Fox and PrezBo.

She gave the John Jay Scholar speech at the 2007 John Jay Awards Dinner held at Cipriani on 42nd Street.

Kite has written for the BBC, ''Quarto'', ''The Birch'', and the now-defunct Collection. She is obsessed with pigeons and while at Columbia could frequently be found observing nests of baby birds. She also co-founded the Polish Students Society and performed with a Polish folk dance group based in Brooklyn.

Her senior thesis in urban studies and sociology was about sectarianism and soccer violence in Scotland. She received the Seymour Brick Memorial Prize for a play set in Glasgow that dealt with sectarian issues.

She will enter the London School of Economics as a postgraduate in fall of 2007.