Difference between revisions of "Franklin Delano Roosevelt"
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− | '''Franklin Delano Roosevelt''', President of the United States, was a [[Columbia Law School]] dropout, as was his relative [[Theodore Roosevelt]] before him. Though he had spent over two years at the school, FDR did not pursue his degree after passing the bar exam in [[1907]]. | + | '''Franklin Delano Roosevelt''', President of the United States, was a [[Columbia Law School]] dropout, as was his relative [[Theodore Roosevelt]] before him. Though he had spent over two years at the school, FDR did not pursue his degree after passing the bar exam in [[1907]]. He did, however, keep up his law school contacts, appointing former classmate [[William Joseph Donovan]] head of US intelligence during the Second World War. |
− | Years later, as President, Roosevelt would summon a group of mostly Columbia professors as his "[[Brain Trust]]" to help solve the problems of the Great Depression. | + | Years later, as President, Roosevelt would also summon a group of mostly Columbia professors as his "[[Brain Trust]]" to help solve the problems of the Great Depression. |
[[Category:Drop outs|Roosevelt, Franklin Delano]] | [[Category:Drop outs|Roosevelt, Franklin Delano]] | ||
[[Category:U.S. Presidents|Roosevelt, Franklin Delano]] | [[Category:U.S. Presidents|Roosevelt, Franklin Delano]] |
Revision as of 18:00, 15 July 2007
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President of the United States, was a Columbia Law School dropout, as was his relative Theodore Roosevelt before him. Though he had spent over two years at the school, FDR did not pursue his degree after passing the bar exam in 1907. He did, however, keep up his law school contacts, appointing former classmate William Joseph Donovan head of US intelligence during the Second World War.
Years later, as President, Roosevelt would also summon a group of mostly Columbia professors as his "Brain Trust" to help solve the problems of the Great Depression.