Difference between revisions of "David Paterson"

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'''David A. Paterson''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1977|77]] is the lieutenant governor of New York. He will become governor pending the resignation of Eliot Spitzer, and will be the state's first black governor and the first legally blind governor of any state.
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'''David A. Paterson''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1977|77]] is the lieutenant governor of New York. He will become governor pending the resignation of [[wp:Eliot Spitzer|Eliot Spitzer]], and will be the state's first black governor and the first legally blind governor of any state.
  
 
Paterson was precocious, and entered Columbia at age 16, majoring in history. Due to his sight disability, his performance varied widely, going from [[Dean's List]] to nearly failing out. On the advice of a professor, he left for a year to fight for a job, before returning and graduating.<ref>http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2006/oct2006_profile_01.htm</ref>
 
Paterson was precocious, and entered Columbia at age 16, majoring in history. Due to his sight disability, his performance varied widely, going from [[Dean's List]] to nearly failing out. On the advice of a professor, he left for a year to fight for a job, before returning and graduating.<ref>http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2006/oct2006_profile_01.htm</ref>

Revision as of 16:57, 12 March 2008

See also Wikipedia's article about "David Paterson".

David A. Paterson CC '77 is the lieutenant governor of New York. He will become governor pending the resignation of Eliot Spitzer, and will be the state's first black governor and the first legally blind governor of any state.

Paterson was precocious, and entered Columbia at age 16, majoring in history. Due to his sight disability, his performance varied widely, going from Dean's List to nearly failing out. On the advice of a professor, he left for a year to fight for a job, before returning and graduating.[1]

As a state senator, he pled with President Bollinger for recognition of the GSEU.[2] Paterson is now also an adjunct professor at SIPA. He won a John Jay Award in 2007.

References