Presidential Candidates and their Colleges

<p>Academic achievement in college doesn’t necessarily correlate with success in the Oval Office...</p>

<p>Can we learn something from looking at a candidate’s college days?</p>

<p>"Hillary Clinton: Arrived at Wellesley in 1965 as a Goldwater supporter, even assuming the presidency of the college Republicans in her freshman year. By the time she graduated in 1969, however, Hillary Rodham had gone over to the other side, spurred largely by her support for civil rights and antiwar presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy. Her academic performance, though, remained solid, and she graduated with honors." </p>

<p>"Barack Obama: Started at Occidental College in 1979 as a less serious student who, according to his autobiography, hung out with “Marxist professors and structural feminists and punk-rock performance poets.” Obama’s mother worried that he was turning into a “good-time Charlie.” Two years later, though, Obama was a diligent transfer student at Columbia University. Obama would later recall his time there as “an intense period of study,” during which “I didn’t socialize that much. I was like a monk.” "</p>

<p>"Rudy Giuliani: Ardently supported JFK (and, later, RFK) and, as an undergraduate at Manhattan College, wrote a column in the school paper calling Barry Goldwater an “incompetent, confused and sometimes idiotic man.” By the late 1960s, Giuliani was even farther to the left. Republican Congressman Peter King told the New York Times about getting to know Rudy in 1967: “That summer, there were riots in Newark and Detroit, and Rudy was very sympathetic to the rioters … He told me he had gone to a bar and started in on a black guy because he wasn’t radical enough. Rudy said before the conversation was over he’d turned him into a Black Power guy.” Giuliani’s academic performance was strong enough to land him in law school at NYU, from where he would graduate cum laude."</p>

<p>"Chris Dodd: Likes to say that he’d be “the first president from Providence College,” at which he imbibed “idealism, values, and commitment that have sustained and motivated me.” If Dodd managed to soak up a belief system at Providence, however, he nevertheless neglected to soak up much in the way of textbooks. A recent article in the Cowl, the Providence College newspaper, describes Dodd “lightheartedly acknowledging that he may not have been a shining example of academic excellence.”" </p>

<p>"Joe Biden: Never got too involved in student activism or 1960s counterculture at the University of Delaware (“I’m not big on flak jackets and tie-dyed shirts, you know, that’s not me,” he recounted to the St. Petersburg Times), but he was “very concerned about the civil-rights movement.” While political moderation has always been a Biden trait, academic achievement is another story: Biden graduated 506th out of 688 in 1965. (Later, at Syracuse Law, he managed to rank seventy-sixth in a class of eighty-five.) Never known for being the quiet type, however, Biden received high marks from a professor for his “command of English language.”"</p>

<p>"John Edwards: Hoped to parlay his high-school-golden-boy status into a football scholarship at Clemson College. Edwards made the team as a walk-on but didn’t get the scholarship, so he transferred to North Carolina State, majoring in “textile studies” and graduating with honors in 1974. He later attended law school at the University of North Carolina, from which he graduated cum laude. Edwards remained mostly uninterested in politics until well into his career as a trial attorney."</p>

<p>"John McCain: Arrived at the Naval Academy with a famous name, since both his grandfather and father had attended the academy and gone on to distinguished military careers. Any interest McCain had in academics, however, was overshadowed by his interest in having a good time. McCain’s rebellious antics earned him the nickname “John Wayne” McCain and entrance to the Century Club, a group for students with more than 100 demerits. McCain’s academic performance placed him at 790 out of 795 students. He was not yet politically active." </p>

<p>"Fred Thompson: Had been a notorious class clown in high school, but his college career at Memphis State University marked his entrance to adulthood. Though he entered the Tennessee GOP machine soon after leaving school, Thompson kept his head in books long enough to win admission to Vanderbilt Law School, where he earned a JD in 1967."</p>

<p>"Mitt Romney: Didn’t fit in so well with the countercultural movement already sweeping Stanford in 1965 and, according to the Boston Globe, was mocked as a square. (And not because of his presidential jaw.) Romney befriended fellow traditionalists, though, and managed to keep favoring LDS over LSD. After completing his missionary work, Romney would transfer to Brigham Young, graduating as valedictorian in 1971." </p>

<p>"Tommy Thompson: Was inspired by Barry Goldwater’s “Conscience of a Conservative” and found himself rebelling against the liberalism at the University of Wisconsin. Starting college as an introvert, Thompson struggled to become more socially confident. A former classmate of Thompson’s told the New York Times that Thompson would approach strangers and say, “I’m Tommy Thompson, and I appreciate your vote and support,” although he was not actually running for office. Thompson eventually gained a reputation as an outgoing partier and graduated with grades good enough to gain him admission into the University of Wisconsin’s law school, from which he earned a JD in 1967."</p>

<p>Any future presidential hopefuls among the CC contigent?</p>

<p>source: <a href="http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2007/0709.tms.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2007/0709.tms.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>