Difference between revisions of "Jack N. Arbolino"

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Revision as of 22:26, 15 May 2013

Jack N. Arbolino CC '42 MA '57 is best known as the creator of high school Advanced Placement tests.

At Columbia, he studied English, played varsity football, and graduated Phi Beta Kappa. During his time fighting overseas during World War II, after graduation, he was a frequent correspondent with Mark Van Doren, who remembered him fondly in his autobiography. After the war, he returned to Columbia and earned his masters while working as an associate dean.

A member of the Columbia College Council, Arbolino received the Dean’s Award for “Outstanding Service to the College” as well as for service as chairman of the Columbia Alumni Trustee Nominating Committee.

Arbolino was later an advocate of the Columbia War Memorial, writing in support in a 1995 edition of Columbia College Today.

His son Philip Arbolino and grandson Jonathan Arbolino both also graduated from the college, in the classes of 1968 and 1993 respectively.