Difference between revisions of "Benjamin Apfel"
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|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel | |Name=Benjamin E. Apfel | ||
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994 | |Birth Date=March 10, 1994 | ||
− | |School=[[Columbia College]] | + | |School=[[Columbia College]], [[Columbia Law School]] |
|Graduation Year=2018 | |Graduation Year=2018 | ||
− | |Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor | + | |Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor |
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law | |Occupation= Philosophy/Law | ||
− | |Family= Parents: Howard CC ' | + | |Family= Parents: Howard CC '85, Naomi CC '86. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21. Uncles: Mark Apfel CC '83, Stuart Apfel CC '81. |
|}} | |}} | ||
− | Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, | + | Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent a year at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity. |
Latest revision as of 07:03, 30 June 2022
Benjamin E. Apfel | |
Name: | Benjamin E. Apfel |
Birth Date: | March 10, 1994 |
School: | Columbia College, Columbia Law School |
Graduation Year: | 2018 |
Awards and Recognition: | Nominee for King's Crown Award, WikiCU editor |
Occupation: | Philosophy/Law |
Family: | Parents: Howard CC '85, Naomi CC '86. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21. Uncles: Mark Apfel CC '83, Stuart Apfel CC '81. |
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the Columbia Daily Spectator column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent a year at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.