Difference between revisions of "Langston Hughes"

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(New page: Famous Harlem Renaissance poet who was once a student in SEAS. Needless to say, poetry does not go well with problem sets, and he dropped out. Oh yeah, this may have had something to d...)
 
(The institutional racism is well documented not his trouble with problem sets. The poem was written 30 years later and is about a City College student not Columbia.)
 
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Famous Harlem Renaissance poet who was once a student in [[SEAS]]. Needless to say, poetry does not go well with problem sets, and he dropped out. Oh yeah, this may have had something to do with institutional racism too.
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[[Image:LangstonHughes.jpg|thumb|200px|Langston Hughes]]
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{{wp-also}}
  
[[Category:Drop outs]]
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'''Langston Hughes''' is a famous [[w:Harlem Renaissance|Harlem Renaissance]] poet who attended the School of Mines (now [[SEAS]]) at the urging of his father, an engineer, for the [[1921]]-[[1922]] year, during which he lived in [[Hartley Hall]]<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=-nt1xVR4SrAC&lpg=PA7&ots=r_eXPXbf4T&dq=columbia%20%22lived%20in%20livingston%22&pg=PA6#v=onepage&q&f=false The Beat Generation in NY, p. 6]</ref>. He dropped out, though the [[Office of Undergraduate Admissions|admissions department]] likes to tout him as an alum.<ref>[http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu/admissions/university/ Undergraduate Admissions - Intro to Columbia]</ref> His departure may have had something to do with institutional racism.
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== References ==
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<references />
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== External Links ==
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*[http://c250.columbia.edu/c250_celebrates/remarkable_columbians/langston_hughes.html C250 Columbians Ahead of their Time - Langston Hughes]
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[[Category:Drop outs|Hughes, Langston]]

Latest revision as of 23:08, 21 October 2012

Langston Hughes
See also Wikipedia's article about "Langston Hughes".

Langston Hughes is a famous Harlem Renaissance poet who attended the School of Mines (now SEAS) at the urging of his father, an engineer, for the 1921-1922 year, during which he lived in Hartley Hall[1]. He dropped out, though the admissions department likes to tout him as an alum.[2] His departure may have had something to do with institutional racism.


References

External Links