Obama's Years at Columbia Are a Mystery
He Graduated Without Honors
By ROSS GOLDBERG, Special to the Sun | September 2, 2008
 

VOTE REPUBLICANS!
 



Obam"s life story, from his humble roots, to his rise to Harvard Law School, to 
his passion as a community organizer in Chicago, has been at the center of his 
presidential campaign. But one chapter of the tale remains a blank — his 
education at Columbia College, a place he rarely speaks about and where few 
people seem to remember him.

Contributing to the mystery is the fact that nobody knows just how well Mr. 
Obama, unlike Senator McCain and most other major candidates for the past two 
elections, performed as a student.
The Obama campaign has refused to release his college transcript, despite an 
academic career that led him to Harvard Law School and, later, to a lecturing 
position at the University of Chicago. The shroud surrounding his experience at 
Columbia contrasts with that of other major party nominees since 2000, all whom 
have eventually released information about their college performance or seen it 
leaked to the public.
For better or worse, voters have taken an interest in candidates' grades since 
1999, when the New Yorker published President Bush's transcript at Yale and 
disclosed that he was a C student. Mr. Bush had never portrayed himself as a 
brain, but many were surprised to learn the next year that his opponent, Vice 
President Gore, did not do much better at Harvard despite his intellectual 
image. When Senator Kerry's transcript surfaced, reporters found that he 
actually had a slightly lower average at Yale than Mr. Bush did.
Some political observers cite such disclosures as proof that candidates' 
intelligence cannot be judged solely by their political careers or the schools 
they attended. Grades provide a rare measure of intellect that is immune to 
political spin, proponents say.
"We like to pretend IQ doesn't matter, but it really does with a lot of jobs, 
including the presidency," a professor at Smith College who studies the effects 
of human intelligence on the economy, James Miller, said. "We can't trust the 
information that candidates give us, so it's important to look for objective 
data that they can't falsify or distort."
Mr. Miller acknowledged that Mr. Obama displayed academic achievement at 
Harvard, where he graduated magna cum laude and led the Harvard Law Review. 
Still, Mr. Miller said, he would like to see information about how Mr. Obama 
performed in various subjects at Columbia.
That view is not shared by other election observers, including some who have 
themselves indulged the public's interest in candidates' academic records.. One 
of them is Geoffrey Kabaservice, a political historian who in 2000 published 
Senator Bradley's relatively low score of 485 on the verbal SAT. Mr.. Bradley, 
a Rhodes Scholar who was a star basketball player at Princeton, was running for 
the Democratic presidential nomination.
"It's awfully hard to correlate anything, really, about a person on the basis 
of their grades," Mr. Kabaservice said, explaining that he published Mr. 
Bradley's score to highlight limitations in intelligence testing. He said he 
doubted that candidates' grades have affected the outcome of any recent 
presidential elections.
"For people who didn't like George W. Bush, for example, the grade aspect only 
confirmed what they thought about him," Mr. Kabaservice said. "And for 
everybody else, it made him more of a regular guy."
The Obama campaign declined to comment for this article and did not offer an 
explanation for why his transcript has not been released. But observers 
speculated that one reason might be the racially charged nature of the 
election. Mr. Obama has acknowledged benefiting from affirmative action in the 
past, and details about his academic performance might open him up to critics 
eager to accuse him, probably unfairly, of receiving a free ride, Mr. 
Kabaservice said.
"Anyone who is a minority and who's come up partially through the meritocracy — 
getting into good colleges, and subsequently good law schools — is going to 
come under suspicion that there was some kind of affirmative action boost," he 
said. "I suspect this is an area of discomfort for Obama."
In contrast with the rest of Mr. Obama's life story, little is known about his 
college experience. He attended Occidental College in Los Angeles for two years 
before transferring to Columbia in 1981. The move receives only a mention in 
Mr. Obama's 1995 memoir, "Dreams from My Father," which instead devotes that 
chapter to his impressions of race and class struggles in New York.
An article in a Columbia University publication, Columbia College Today, 
reported that Mr. Obama has portrayed Columbia as a period of buckling down 
following a troubled adolescence. He did not socialize much, he has said, 
instead spending a lot of time in the library, "like a monk." He has also 
stated that he was involved to some extent with the Black Students Organization.
Federal law limits the information that Columbia can release about Mr. Obama's 
time there. A spokesman for the university, Brian Connolly, confirmed that Mr. 
Obama spent two years at Columbia College and graduated in 1983 with a major in 
political science. He did not receive honors, Mr. Connolly said, though 
specific information on his grades is sealed. A program from the 1983 
graduation ceremony lists him as a graduate.
More is known about Mr. McCain's experience at the United States Naval Academy, 
where he was a self-described troublemaker and graduated in the bottom 1% of 
his class. The McCain campaign has declined to release his transcript, saying 
that his performance at the academy can only be viewed in the context of his 
larger military career.
"His record stands on its own," a McCain spokesman, Peter Feldman, said. "His 
time spent in college was part of the transformative years that made him who he 
was."

--- On Tue, 9/2/08, In Camdisc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: In Camdisc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Obama vs McCain ?
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, September 2, 2008, 10:40 AM







 
VOTE REPUBLICANS!
 


      
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to