Difference between revisions of "Dropouts"

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Some, (okay, maybe most) of Columbia's most famous students never actually graduated. That's right, a Columbia education is SO good, that you don't even need a full 4 years to take the world by storm!
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'''Dropouts''' are some (okay, maybe most) of Columbia's most famous students. That's right, a Columbia education is SO good that you don't even need a full 4 years to take the world by storm! Making it to [[Commencement]] is clearly overrated. Columbia is so proud of its long history of great dropouts, it printed a [http://books.google.com/books?id=Z8BBAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP5#v=onepage&q&f=false full length catalogue] of students who had failed to graduate, from [[1758]] through the date of publication in [[1897]].
  
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==Notable Dropouts==
 
* [[Alexander Hamilton]] (joined the Revolutionary War)
 
* [[Alexander Hamilton]] (joined the Revolutionary War)
* [[Lou Gehrig]] (Signed a contract with the Yankees and bolted)
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* [[Lou Gehrig]] (signed a contract with the Yankees and bolted)
* [[Langston Hughes]] (Mining- That's right, one of the great american poets was a [[SEAS]] drop-out...)
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* [[Langston Hughes]] (from the [[School of Mines]] - that's right, one of the great American poets was a [[SEAS]] drop-out...)
* [[Eudora Welty]] (Business)
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* [[w:Eudora Welty|Eudora Welty]] (from the [[Business School]], perhaps for obvious reasons)
* [[Jack Kerouac]]
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* [[Jack Kerouac]] (CC)
 
* [[Alicia Keys]]
 
* [[Alicia Keys]]
 
* [[Lauryn Hill]]
 
* [[Lauryn Hill]]
* [[Jake Gyllenhaal]]
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* [[Joseph Gordon-Levitt]] (GS)
* Isamu Noguchi (Famous Sculptor. Dropped out of CC's Premed program to sculpt full-time)
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* [[Jake Gyllenhaal]] (CC)
* José Raúl Capablanca (World Chess Champion, 1921-1927. Dropped out of Mining after one semester because he spent too much time playing chess)
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* [[w:Isamu Noguchi|Isamu Noguchi]] (dropped out of CC's premed program to sculpt full-time)
* [[Mortimer J. Adler]] (Spread the gospel of the [[Core Curriculum]] to the University of Chicago and St. John's College in Annapolis. Didn't bother to take the Swim test, and came back to teach Core classes with [[John Erskine]])
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* [[w:José Raúl Capablanca|José Raúl Capablanca]] (World Chess Champion, 1921-1927; dropped out of the School of Mines after one semester because he spent too much time playing chess)
* [[Theodore Roosevelt]] (Law School, elected to State Assembly)
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* [[Mortimer J. Adler]] (spread the gospel of the [[Core Curriculum]] to the [[University of Chicago]] and [[St. John's College]] in Annapolis. He didn't bother to take the [[Swim Test]], and came back to teach Core classes with [[John Erskine]])
* [[Franklin Roosevelt]] (Law School, passed the Bar)
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* [[Theodore Roosevelt]] (from the [[Law School]], after being elected to State Assembly)
* [[Utada Hikaru]]
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* [[Franklin Roosevelt]] (from the Law School, after passing the Bar)
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* [[w:Utada Hikaru|Utada Hikaru]]
 
*[[John Parke Custis]], [[George Washington]]'s stepson
 
*[[John Parke Custis]], [[George Washington]]'s stepson
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* [[Amelia Earhart]]
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* [[James Cagney]], dropped out after one semester in [[1918]] when his father died in the [[w:1918 flu pandemic|1918 flu pandemic]]
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==Honorable Mentions==
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* [[Benjamin Cardozo]] - dropped out of the Law School after graduating from the College
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* [[Oscar Hammerstein II]] - dropped out of the Law School after graduating from the College
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* [[Charles Henry Wharton]] - resigned as [[President of Columbia University|president of Columbia]] in [[1801]] without ever having actually shown up for the job after his appointment.
  
 
[[Category:Drop outs|*]]
 
[[Category:Drop outs|*]]
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[[Category:Traditions]]

Latest revision as of 18:40, 20 May 2013

Dropouts are some (okay, maybe most) of Columbia's most famous students. That's right, a Columbia education is SO good that you don't even need a full 4 years to take the world by storm! Making it to Commencement is clearly overrated. Columbia is so proud of its long history of great dropouts, it printed a full length catalogue of students who had failed to graduate, from 1758 through the date of publication in 1897.

Notable Dropouts

Honorable Mentions