Difference between revisions of "Barack Obama"
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'''Barack Obama''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1983|83]] is a US Senator from [[w:Illinois|Illinois]] and a Democratic party candidate for the 2008 presidential election. | '''Barack Obama''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1983|83]] is a US Senator from [[w:Illinois|Illinois]] and a Democratic party candidate for the 2008 presidential election. | ||
− | Many Columbia students are audaciously hoping he'll win his primary and the national election. If he does, he will not only be the first partially black president, but the first attendee of [[Columbia College]], and the first graduate of any Columbia school, to occupy the Oval Office. | + | Many Columbia students are [[w:The Audacity of Hope|audaciously hoping]] he'll win his primary and the national election. If he does, he will not only be the first partially black president, but the first attendee of [[Columbia College]], and the first graduate of any Columbia school, to occupy the Oval Office. |
Obama, however, tends to forget/ignore his Columbia affiliation, preferring to mention the fact he attended [[Harvard]]'s law school. | Obama, however, tends to forget/ignore his Columbia affiliation, preferring to mention the fact he attended [[Harvard]]'s law school. |
Revision as of 12:54, 3 March 2008
- See also Wikipedia's article about "Barack Obama".
Barack Obama CC '83 is a US Senator from Illinois and a Democratic party candidate for the 2008 presidential election.
Many Columbia students are audaciously hoping he'll win his primary and the national election. If he does, he will not only be the first partially black president, but the first attendee of Columbia College, and the first graduate of any Columbia school, to occupy the Oval Office.
Obama, however, tends to forget/ignore his Columbia affiliation, preferring to mention the fact he attended Harvard's law school.
Columbia years
Obama transferred to CC from Occidental College which (poor place) is also rarely mentioned by the young senator. At Occidental, Obama had been into partying and drugs. He hoped the move to New York, and Columbia, would put him on a more serious track.
While at Columbia, he lived off campus. He claims to have spent his first night sleeping in an alley near the corner of 109th and Amsterdam Avenue and washing with the homeless next to an open fire hydrant. He eventually moved into a walkup on E. 94th St., in East Harlem, where he would "chat with his Puerto Rican neighbors about...the sound of gunfire at night".
When he was on campus, he concentrated on academic work, spending most of his time in Butler Library "like a monk", and made few friends. He also took up jogging and "stopped getting high". The racist and anti-Semitic graffiti he sometimes encountered on bathroom walls on campus helped him form his ideas about race and class. He wrote of "the almost mathematical precision with which America’s race and class problems joined; the depth, the ferocity, of resulting tribal wars; the bile that flowed freely not just out on the streets but in the stalls of Columbia’s bathrooms as well".
Obama claims to have participated to some extent in anti-apartheid activities with the Black Students Organization, but no one is quite sure.
He majored in PoliSci, and claims to have concentrated in "International Relations," a designation which does not exist at Columbia. Sources differ on whether he wrote his senior thesis on Soviet nuclear disarmament[1] or the North-South debate on trade and the "new international economic order"[2]. Obama's professors and classmates, including former international politics professor Michael L. Baron and current MTV president Michael Wolf, confirm that he was a brilliant, standout student and that he was an active participant in seminars. Despite this, he continually declines requests to release his transcript.
After graduating, Obama hoped to become a community organizer, but could not get a job as one. He went to work for a small consulting firm instead. In his memoir, he portrays this as a big corporate job, and claims it prompted fears he was becoming a sellout.