Difference between revisions of "Allen Ginsberg"

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'''Allen Ginsberg''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1948|48]] was a gay [[Beat Generation]] poet who wrote ''Howl''.
 
'''Allen Ginsberg''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1948|48]] was a gay [[Beat Generation]] poet who wrote ''Howl''.
  
While at Columbia he wrote for ''[[Jester]]'' and was a member of the [[Philolexian Society]]. He was friends with fellow Beat writer [[Jack Kerouac]] and future historian [[Fritz Stern]]. He served as Stern's debate partner on the [[College Debate Council]] and founded the Roosevelt for President club with him in [[1944]]. Ginsberg was to prove influential in persuading Stern to enroll in humanities classes, which caused him to rethink his intended career in medicine.
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While at Columbia he wrote for ''[[Jester]]'' and was a member of the [[Philolexian Society]]. He was friends with fellow Beat writer [[Jack Kerouac]] and future historian [[Fritz Stern]]. He served as Stern's debate partner on the [[College Debate Council]] and founded the Roosevelt for President club with him in [[1944]]. Ginsberg was to prove influential in persuading Stern to enroll in humanities classes, which caused him to rethink his intended career in medicine. He was placed on disciplinary suspension for one year from the College after writing the graffiti "Butler has no balls" (referring to University President Nicholas Murray Butler) in the grime of his dorm room window in [[Hartley Hall]].
  
 
Ginsberg won a [[John Jay Award]] in [[1993]].
 
Ginsberg won a [[John Jay Award]] in [[1993]].

Revision as of 10:24, 5 June 2009

Allen Ginsberg standing on the roof of his 114th St. apartment in 1946 or 1947. Photo by "the guy who worked at the bookstore. Fat guy." [1]
See also Wikipedia's article about "Allen Ginsberg".

Allen Ginsberg CC '48 was a gay Beat Generation poet who wrote Howl.

While at Columbia he wrote for Jester and was a member of the Philolexian Society. He was friends with fellow Beat writer Jack Kerouac and future historian Fritz Stern. He served as Stern's debate partner on the College Debate Council and founded the Roosevelt for President club with him in 1944. Ginsberg was to prove influential in persuading Stern to enroll in humanities classes, which caused him to rethink his intended career in medicine. He was placed on disciplinary suspension for one year from the College after writing the graffiti "Butler has no balls" (referring to University President Nicholas Murray Butler) in the grime of his dorm room window in Hartley Hall.

Ginsberg won a John Jay Award in 1993.

Ginsberg presides over a group of friends in Riverside Park, circa 1948