University High School, Melbourne and Early life and career of Barack Obama: Difference between pages

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{{For|other schools of the same name|University High School}}
'''[[Barack Obama]]''' was born on [[August 4]] [[1961]] in [[Honolulu, Hawaii]] to [[Barack Obama, Sr.]] (1936&ndash;1982) (born in [[Nyang’oma Kogelo]], [[Siaya District]], [[Nyanza Province]], [[Kenya]],<ref name="genealogy">[http://genealogy.about.com/od/aframertrees/p/barack_obama.htm Ancestry of Barack Obama]</ref> of [[Luo (Kenya and Tanzania)|Luo]] ethnicity) and [[Ann Dunham]] (1942–1995) (born in [[Fort Leavenworth]], [[Kansas]]).<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS234607+29-Jan-2008+BW20080129 Gov. Kathleen Sebelius Endorses Barack Obama - January 29, 2008 - Obama Press Office via businesswire via reuters.com]</ref><ref>{{cite news | title=Meet Barack | url=http://www.barackobama.com/about/ | work=BarackObama.com | accessdate=2008-01-04}} {{cite news | title=Saving the World in His Spare Time | date=[[January 12]] [[2008]] | url=http://www.economist.com/world/na/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10498963&CFID=10486835&CFTOKEN=e3e42d3f4995ef60-DABCCCC1-B27C-BB00-0127FF9D64797FC4 | work=The Economist | accessdate=2008-02-02}} See also: Obama (1995), Chapter 1.</ref>
{{Infobox Aust school
| name = The University High School
| image = [[Image:UniversityHighLogo.jpg|150px|University High School Logo]]
| motto = ''{{lang|la|Strenue Ac Fideliter}}''<br>([[Latin]]:"With Zeal and Loyalty")
| established = 1910<ref name=Profile/>
| type = [[Public school|Public]], [[Co-educational]], [[Secondary school|Secondary]], [[Day school]]
| principal = Mr. Robert H. Newton
| city = [[Parkville, Victoria|Parkville]]
| state = [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]]
| country = [[Australia]] {{flagicon|Australia}}
| coordinates = {{coord|37|47|50|S|144|57|19|E|display=inline,title}}
| campus = [[Parkville]]
| enrolment = ~1,200 (7-12)<ref name=Schoolsonline>{{cite web |url=http://www.education.vic.gov.au/schoolsonline/Details.asp?LocationID=01840501&PG=1&PGD=1&SN=University%20High%20School&SS=&SP=&SR=-1&SG=-1&SNM=&ST=&SAW=&SEP=&SOW=&SPH=Default.asp:Home:Search.asp:Search:Results.asp:Results&StartWith=A&SDI= |title=University High School |accessdate=2008-02-24 |work=Schools Online |publisher=Victorian Government Schools}}</ref>
| colours = White, Black & Green {{color box|#FFFFFF}}{{color box|#000000}}{{color box|#008000}}
| homepage = [http://www.unihigh.vic.edu.au/main.htm www.unihigh.vic.edu.au]
}}


== Education at a glance ==
The '''University High School''', (UHS or Uni High) is a [[Public school|public]], [[co-educational]] [[high school]], located in [[Parkville, Victoria|Parkville]], a suburb of [[Melbourne]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], [[Australia]].


{| class="wikitable"
Established at [[Carlton, Victoria|Carlton]] in 1910,<ref name=Profile>{{cite web|url = http://www.unihigh.vic.edu.au/profile.htm|title = School Profile |accessdate = 2008-02-24 |work=Profile |publisher = University High School}}</ref> the school currently caters for approximately 1,200 students <ref name=Schoolsonline/> and is one of the highest-scoring state schools in Australia,and one of the highest performing non-selective state schools in Victoria.
|'''School'''||'''Years'''||'''Location'''||'''Final degree'''||'''Notes'''
|-
|St. Francis Assisi Catholic||First through third grade||[[Jakarta, Indonesia]]||
|-
|[[State Elementary School Menteng 01]]||Fourth grade||Jakarta, Indonesia||
|-
|[[Punahou School]]||Fifth through 12th grade||[[Honolulu, Hawaii]]||[[High school diploma]]
|-
|[[Occidental College]]||Freshman and sophomore years||[[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]]||&nbsp;||Transferred to Columbia
|-
|[[Columbia College of Columbia University|Columbia University]]||Junior and senior years||[[New York City]]||[[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]]||[[Political science]] major with [[international relations]] focus
|-
|[[Harvard Law School]]||Three-year program||[[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]||[[Juris Doctorate|J.D.]] ''[[Latin honors|magna cum laude]]''||President, ''[[Harvard Law Review]]''
|}


== Childhood through high school==
In 2001, ''[[The Sun-Herald]]'' ranked University High tenth in Australia's top ten schools for the education of girls, based on the number of its female [[alumni]] mentioned in the ''[[Who's Who in Australia]]''.<ref name=WhosWho>{{cite news| first = Frank| last = Walker| title = The ties that bind| url = http://newsstore.smh.com.au/apps/viewDocument.ac?page=1&sy=smh& WTF??WTF??kw=%22presbyterian+ladies+college%22&pb=all_ffx&dt=selectRange&dr=entire&so=relevance&sf=author&sf=headline&sf=text&rc=10&rm=200&sp=nrm&clsPage=1&docID=SHD01072295GNI6E8E6E| work = Sunday Life| publisher = The Sun-Herald| page = 16| date = 2001-07-22| accessdate = 2007-09-12}}</ref>{{Ref_label|a|a|none}}
[[Image:Barack Obama Sr Jr.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Obama (right) with [[Barack Obama, Sr.|his father]] in [[Hawaii]]. ca. 1971.]]
Throughout his early years the winner of the 2008 presedential race Obama was known at home and at school as "Barry."<ref name="not-so-simple">{{cite news | first=Kirsten | last=Scharnberg | coauthors=Kim Barker | title=The Not-So-Simple Story of Barack Obama's Youth | date=[[March 25]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-070325obama-youth-story,0,5069625.story | work=Chicago Tribune | accessdate=2008-01-14}} </ref> Obama's parents met while both were attending the [[University of Hawaii at Manoa]], where his father was enrolled as a [[international student|foreign student]].<ref>Obama (1995), pp. 9–10. For book excerpts, see {{cite news | title=Barack Obama: Creation of Tales|date=[[November 1]] [[2004]] | url=http://www.nationmedia.com/EastAfrican/01112004/Features/PA2-2212.html | work=East African | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref> They separated when he was two years old and later divorced.<ref>Obama (1995), pp. 125–126. See also: {{cite news | first=Tim | last=Jones | title=Obama's Mom: Not Just a Girl from Kansas | date=[[March 27]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-0703270151mar27,1,3372079.story?coll=chi-news-hed | work=Chicago Tribune | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref> His father received a Masters degree in [[Economics]] from [[Harvard University]], then returned to Kenya, where he became a finance minister before dying in an automobile accident in 1982.<ref name=Butterfield>{{cite news | first=Fox | last=Butterfield | title=First Black Elected to Head Harvard's Law Review | date=[[February 6]] [[1990]] | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE2DC1631F935A35751C0A966958260&n=Top%2FReference%2FTimes%20Topics%2FPeople%2FO%2FObama%2C%20Barack | work=New York Times | accessdate=2008-01-04}} See also: {{cite news | first=Jodi | last=Kantor | title=In Law School, Obama Found Political Voice | date=[[January 28]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/us/politics/28obama.html | work=New York Times | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref><ref name=ObamaSr> {{cite news | first=Kevin | last=Merida | title=The Ghost of a Father | date=[[December 14]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2007/12/13/ST2007121301893.html | work=Washington Post | accessdate=2008-01-04}} See also: {{cite news | first=Philip | last=Ochieng | title=From Home Squared to the US Senate: How Barack Obama Was Lost and Found | date[[November 1]] [[2004]] | url=http://www.nationmedia.com/EastAfrican/01112004/Features/PA2-11.html | work=East African | accessdate=2008-01-04}} Obama (1995), pp. 5–11 and 62–71. In [[August 2006]], Obama flew his wife and two daughters from Chicago to join him in a visit to his father's birthplace, a village near [[Kisumu]] in rural western Kenya. {{cite news | first=Nico | last=Gnecchi | title=Obama Receives Hero's Welcome at His Family's Ancestral Village in Kenya | date=[[August 27]] [[2006]] | url=http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2006-08/2006-08-27-voa17.cfm | work=Voice of America | accessdate=2008-01-04}} See also: {{cite news | first=Ellis | last=Cose | title=Walking the World Stage | date=[[September 11]] [[2006]] | url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/45558 | work=Newsweek | accessdate=2008-01-04}} {{cite news | first=Michela | last=Wrong | title=Africa: Kenya Glimpses a New Kind of Hero | date=[[September 11]] [[2006]] | url=http://www.newstatesman.com/200609110024 | work=New Statesman | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref> His mother married another foreign student, [[Lolo Soetoro]], and the family moved to Soetoro's home country of [[Indonesia]] in 1967.<ref>Obama's stepfather and Ann Dunham divorced in the late 1970s, and he died of a [[liver]] ailment in 1987. {{cite news | first=Scott | last=Fornek | title=Lolo Soetoro | date=[[September 9]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/familytree/545455,BSX-News-wotreegg09.stng | work=Chicago Sun-Times | accessdate=2008-01-04}} They had one daughter together, [[Maya Soetoro-Ng|Maya Soetoro]], Obama's half-sister. On his father's side, Obama has two half-sisters and five surviving half-brothers. {{cite news | first=Michael | last=Sheridan | coauthors=Sarah Baxter | title=Secrets of Obama Family Unlocked | date=[[January 28]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article1267352.ece | work=Sunday Times (UK) | accessdate=2008-01-04}} See also: Obama (1995), Chapter 2 and Chapters 15–19 (Part 3: Kenya).</ref> Obama attended local schools in [[Jakarta]], from ages 6 to 10, where classes were taught in the [[Indonesian language]]. He first attended St. Francis Assisi Catholic school for almost three years, where he received weekly lessons in that [[Christian]] faith.<ref name="barkermadrassa">{{cite news | first=Kim | last=Barker | title=Obama Madrassa Myth Debunked | date=[[March 25]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-070325obama-islam-story,0,7180545.story | work=Chicago Tribune | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |author=Staff writer |title=Obama debunks claim about Islamic school |url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16813267/ |work=[[Associated Press]] |publisher=[[MSNBC]] |date=2007-01-25 |accessdate=2008-04-08 }}</ref> When his family moved to a new neighborhood, [[Menteng]],<ref name=bbc2> {{cite news |first=Lucy|last=Williamson|title=Jakarta classmates recall 'Barry' Obama |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7350775.stm|work= [[BBC News]] |publisher= |date=2008-19-20 |accessdate=2008-04-20}}</ref> he attended the [[secular]], government-run [[State Elementary School Menteng 01|SDN Menteng 1]] school for his fourth year.<ref name=bbc2/><ref name="barkermadrassa"/><ref name="baltimore"/><ref>{{cite news | first=Kirsten | last=Scharnberg | coauthors=Kim Barker | title=The Not-So-Simple Story of Barack Obama's Youth | date=[[March 25]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-070325obama-youth-story,0,5069625.story | work=Chicago Tribune | accessdate=2008-01-04}} {{cite news | first=Trish | last=Anderton | title=Obama's Jakarta Trail | date=June 2007 | url=http://www.thejakartapost.com/weekender/6reporter.asp | work=Jakarta Post |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070626112725/http://www.thejakartapost.com/weekender/6reporter.asp | archivedate=2007-06-26| accessdate=2008-01-04}} For Obama's published accounts of his schooling in Indonesia, see: Obama (1995), p. 154, and Obama (2006), p. 274.</ref><ref>Citing comments made by Indonesia's ambassador to the U.S., [[TIME magazine|''Time'']] reported in [[December 2007]] that Obama "still speaks passable Bahasa, the language spoken in Indonesia and Malaysia." {{cite news |first=Jay |last=Newton-Small |title=Obama's Foreign-Policy Problem |url=http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1695803,00.html |work=Time |date=[[December 18]] [[2007]] |accessdate=2008-01-03}}</ref> Obama's stepfather was "not religious", and "never went to prayer services except for big communal events", according to Obama's sister, [[Maya Soetoro-Ng]].<ref name="baltimore">{{cite news |first=Paul |last=Watson |title=Islam an unknown factor in Obama bid |url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nation/bal-te.obama16mar16,0,5594729.story |work=Balitmore Sun |date =2007-03-16 | accessdate=2008-03-16}}</ref> When Obama was in third grade he wrote an essay saying that he wanted to become president. His teacher later told the ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' that she was not sure what country he wanted to become president of but that he said that his reason for becoming president was that he wanted to make everybody happy.<ref name="not-so-simple" />


[[Image:BarackObamaCertificationOfLiveBirthHawaii.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Obama's birth certificate]]
==History==
Founded in 1893 from a disused Teachers College, the privately owned "University High School" was situated on the corner of Swanston and Grattan Streets, [[Carlton, Victoria|Carlton]]. In 1900 the school was moved to Victoria Street and then in 1912 it was closed down. In 1910, the "University Practising School" was opened in a former [[primary school]] on the corner of Lygon and Lytton Streets, Carlton. In 1913, it changed its name to "The University High School" after the closure of the [[private school]].
[[Image:UniversityHS1949.jpg|thumb|right|220px|University High School at Story Street, 1949]]
Since 1930, the University High School has occupied a site in Story Street, Parkville, adjacent to the [[Royal Melbourne Hospital]] and in close proximity to the [[Royal Children's Hospital]], newly built [[Royal Women's Hospital]], [[University of Melbourne]] and the [[Melbourne city centre|Central Business District]].


Obama returned to Honolulu to live with his maternal grandparents while attending [[Punahou School]], a private college preparatory school, from the fifth grade until his graduation in 1979.<ref>Obama writes: "For my grandparents, my admission into Punahou Academy heralded the start of something grand, an elevation in the family status that they took great pains to let everyone know." Obama (1995), Chapters 3 and 4. See also: {{cite news | first=Fred | last=Mann | title=Kansas Roots Show in Obama, Say Relatives | date=[[February 2]] [[2008]] | url=http://www.kansas.com/news/state/story/299520.html | work=Wichita Eagle | accessdate=2008-02-11}}</ref> Obama's mother, Ann, died of [[ovarian cancer]] and [[uterine cancer]] a few months after the publication of his 1995 [[memoir]], ''[[Dreams from My Father]]''.<ref>Obama (1995), Preface to the 2004 Edition, p. xi. See also: {{cite news | first=Julia | last=Suryakusuma | title=Obama for President... of Indonesia | date=[[November 29]] [[2006]] | work=Jakarta Post | url=http://www.thejakartapost.com/yesterdaydetail.asp?fileid=20061129.F03 | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref>
During [[World War II]], the [[United States Army]] set up a camp on the school oval. Additionally, 240 extra students from [[MacRobertson Girls High School]] transported to UHS for schooling as their buildings were also seized by the military.


In the memoir, Obama describes his experiences growing up in his mother's [[American middle class|middle class]] family. His knowledge about his African father, who returned once for a brief visit in 1971, came mainly through family stories and photographs.<ref name=ObamaSr /> Of his early childhood, Obama writes: "That my father looked nothing like the people around me &mdash; that he was black as pitch, my mother white as milk &mdash; barely registered in my mind."<ref>Obama (1995), pp. 9–10.</ref> The book describes his struggles as a young adult to reconcile social perceptions of his [[multiracial]] heritage.<ref>Obama (1995), Chapters 4 and 5. See also: {{cite news | first=Richard A | last=Serrano | title=Obama's Peers Didn't See His Angst | format=paid archive | date=[[March 11]] [[2007]] | url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/1230439131.html?dids=1230439131:1230439131&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Mar+11%2C+2007&author=Richard+A.+Serrano&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&edition=&startpage=A.20&desc=THE+NATION | work=Los Angeles Times | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref> He wrote that he used [[alcoholic beverage|alcohol]], [[cannabis (drug)|marijuana]], and [[cocaine]] during his teenage years to "push questions of who I was out of my mind".<ref>{{cite news | title=Obama Gets Blunt with N.H. Students | date=[[November 21]] [[2007]] | publisher=Boston Globe | url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2007/11/21/obama_gets_blunt_with_nh_students/ | work=Associated Press | accessdate=2008-01-04}} In ''Dreams from My Father'', Obama writes: "Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it." Obama (1995), pp. 93–94. For analysis of the political impact of the quote and Obama's more recent admission that he smoked marijuana as a teenager ("When I was a kid, I inhaled."), see: {{cite news | first=Lois | last=Romano | title=Effect of Obama's Candor Remains to Be Seen | date=[[January 3]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/02/AR2007010201359.html | work=Washington Post | accessdate=2008-01-04}} {{cite news | first=Katharine Q | last=Seelye | title=Obama Offers More Variations From the Norm | date=[[October 24]] [[2006]] | url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D07E2DB173FF937A15753C1A9609C8B63&sec=&spon=&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink | work=New York Times | accessdate=2008-01-04}}</ref> Obama has said that it was a seriously misguided mistake. At the Saddleback Civil Presidential Forum Barack Obama identified his high-school drug use as his greatest moral failure.<ref>http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/08/16/warren.forum/</ref> Obama has stated he has not used any illegal drugs since he was a teenager.<ref>Schoenburg, Bernard. [http://www.mapinc.org/newsnorml/v03/n1786/a06.html "Frank Talk About Drug Use in Obama’s 'Open Book'"], [[The State Journal-Register]] via the Media Awareness Project ([[2003-11-16]]). Retrieved [[2008-08-23]].</ref>
The recent completion of the $AUD7 million upgrade of the school facilities was completed in 1997. The school experienced major disruption and change during the previous years through dislocation of classes and staff. The completion of the works has given the school modern facilities with appropriate specialist rooms.


Some of his fellow students at Punahou School later told the ''[[Honolulu Star-Bulletin]]'' that Obama was mature for his age as a high school student and that he sometimes attended parties and other events in order to associate with [[African American]] college students and military service people. Reflecting later on his formative years in Honolulu, Obama wrote: "The opportunity that Hawaii offered &mdash; to experience a variety of cultures in a climate of mutual respect &mdash; became an integral part of my world view, and a basis for the values that I hold most dear."<ref>{{cite news | first=B. J | last=Reyes | title=Punahou Left Lasting Impression on Obama | date=[[February 8]] [[2007]] | url=http://starbulletin.com/2007/02/08/news/story02.html | work=Honolulu Star-Bulletin | accessdate=2008-01-04}} "As a teenager, Obama went to parties and sometimes sought out gatherings on military bases or at the University of Hawaii that were mostly attended by blacks."</ref>
===Principals===
* Mr. A. Wrigley (1910 - 1914)
* Mr. Matthew Stanton Sharman (1915 - 1941)
* Mr. L.R. Brookes (1941 - 1951)
* Mr. E. Harrison (1950 - 1951)
* Mr. R.E. Chapman (1952 - 1960)
* Mr. G.S. Ellis (1961 - 1968)
* Mr. G.R. McRae Williamson (1969)
* Mr. G. Hayter (1970 - 1971)
* Mr. J.E. Clark (1972 - 1985)
* Mr. P.D.A. Bryce (1985 - 1996)
* Ms. Bronwyn Valente (1997 - 2005)
* Mr. Robert Newton (2005 - )


== College and living in New York City ==
==Enrolment==
The University High School caters for approximately 1,200 students<ref name=Schoolsonline/>, most of whom reside in the local area. A proportion of the school's enrolment comes from further afield, either to participate in special programs like music, the Acceleration Program or as a result of sibling claims. The population is socio-economically, [[cultural]]ly and [[ethnicity|ethnically]] diverse and claims a commitment to tolerance and to this diversity.


Following high school, Obama moved to [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]], where he studied at [[Occidental College]] for two years.<ref>{{cite web | title=Oxy Remembers "Barry" Obama '83 | date=[[January 29]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.oxy.edu/x2526.xml | publisher=Occidental College | accessdate=2008-04-13}}</ref> He then transferred to [[Columbia College of Columbia University|Columbia University]] in [[New York City]], where he majored in [[political science]] with a specialization in [[international relations]].<ref>{{cite news | url=http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct_archive/jan05/cover.php | title=Barack Obama '83 | work=Columbia College Today | author=Boss-Bicak, Shira | date=January 2005 | accessdate=2008-06-09}}</ref> In 1982, Obama's father, [[Barack Obama, Sr.]], died in Kenya. Obama graduated with a [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] from Columbia in 1983, then worked at [[Business International Corporation]] and [[New York Public Interest Research Group]].<ref name="Who's Who 2008">{{cite book |author=Chassie, Karen (ed.) |year=2007 |title=Who's Who in America, 2008 |url=http://www.marquiswhoswho.com/products/WAprodinfo.asp |location=New Providence, NJ |publisher=Marquis Who's Who |isbn=9780837970110 |page=p. 3468 |accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Janny | last=Scott | title=Obama's Account of New York Years Often Differs from What Others Say | date=[[October 30]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/30/us/politics/30obama.html | work=The New York Times | accessdate=2008-04-13}} Obama (1995), pp. 133–140; Mendell (2007), pp. 62–63.</ref>
==School structure==
The school is structured within a 7 to 10 vertical sub-school framework and a [[Victorian Certificate of Education|VCE]] sub-school, consisting of Years 11 and 12. This vertical structure does not extend to the delivery of curriculum which is based on a horizontal year level program.


== Early years as a community organizer in Chicago ==
Years 7 to 10 have three sub-schools, Brookes (Red), Sharman (Blue) and Chapman (Green), named after previous [[Principal (school)|Principals]] of the school. Students in Year 7 enter a sub-school and stay with this cohort for their management and pastoral care until year 10. Each of these units has a Head of sub-school and three sub-school Co-ordinators, to look after approximately 250 students. The Sharman sub-school was named after Mr Matthew Stanton Sharman, the Brookes sub-school is named after Mr L. R. Brookes, and the Chapman sub-school is named after Mr R.E. Chapman.


After four years in New York City, Obama moved to [[Chicago]] where he was hired as a community organizer. "What really inspired me," Obama told [[Ryan Lizza]], a writer for ''[[The New Republic]]'' in 2007, "was the [[Civil Rights movement|civil rights movement]]. And if you asked me who my role model was at that time, it would probably be [[Bob Moses]], the famous SNCC [ [[Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee]] ] organizer. … Those were the folks I was really inspired by—the [[John Lewis]]es, the Bob Moseses, the [[Fannie Lou Hamer]]s, the [[Ella Baker]]s."<ref name=rltnr>{{cite news | first=Ryan | last=Lizza | title=The Agitator: Barack Obama's unlikely political education | format=alternate link | date=2007-03-19 | url=http://www.tnr.com/story_print.html?id=a74fca23-f6ac-4736-9c78-f4163d4f25c7 | work =New Republic | accessdate=2008-07-16}}</ref>
=== Bryce ===
The Bryce sub-school is named after Mr P.D.A. Bryce, and consists of over 450 VCE students in years 11 & 12. The Head of the Bryce VCE sub-school works with a team of seven sub-school Co-ordinators and with the Work Education Co-ordinator. The sub-school's colour is yellow.


Before Obama came, the organization was made up of three white men (two of them Jewish), which was only working with Catholic parishes up to that point. Yet the black pastors looked on them with suspicion and sometimes disdain as outsiders. The organization wanted a young black man to help the group ally with black churches in the South Side. He worked for three years from June 1985 to May 1988 as director of the Developing Communities Project (DCP), a church-based community organization originally comprising eight Catholic parishes in Greater Roseland ([[Roseland, Chicago|Roseland]], [[West Pullman, Chicago|West Pullman]], and [[Riverdale, Chicago|Riverdale]]) on Chicago's far [[South Side (Chicago)|South Side]].<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/><ref>{{cite news |author=Secter, Bob; McCormick, John |date=2007-03-30 |title=Portrait of a pragmatist |url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0703300121mar30,1,6651421,full.story |work=Chicago Tribune |page=1 |accessdate=2008-06-06}} Obama (1995), pp. 140–295; Mendell (2007), pp. 63–83.</ref><ref name=rltnr/> Around this time Obama joined the [[Trinity United Church of Christ]], a predominantly black church on the southeast side.<ref>[http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/981141,obama053108.article Barack Obama quits Trinity United Church of Christ, June 1, 2008]</ref>
==Curriculum==
====VELS====
Victorian Essential Learning Standards (VELS) is the state standard curriculum framework for students in Year 7 to Year 10 at the school. The School provides sequential curriculum across the eight Key Learning Areas as listed :


The job focused on helping poor blacks agitate with the city government to get benefits for their communities such as job banks and asbestos removal. The small organization taught him a style of organizing developed by [[Saul Alinsky]], a radical, University of Chicago-trained social scientist. Alinsky's method centers on the idea of "agitation" &mdash; encouraging people to get angry enough about the horrible state of their lives in order to get them to take action. Alinsky had described the organizer's role as an effort to "rub raw the sores of discontent." According to Mike Kruglik, a fellow organizer at that time, Obama was the best student he had ever had in his 10 years of training organizers. In 2007, Ryan Lizza, a journalist writing for ''[[The New Republic]]'', described Kruglik's assessment of Obama: "He was a natural, the undisputed master of agitation, who could engage a room full of recruiting targets in a rapid-fire Socratic dialogue, nudging them to admit that they were not living up to their own standards. […] [H]e could be aggressive and confrontational. With probing, sometimes personal questions, he would pinpoint the source of pain in their lives, tearing down their egos just enough before dangling a carrot of hope that they could make things better."<ref name=rltnr/>
*English
*Mathematics
*The Arts
*Science
*Languages Other Than English (LOTE)
*Technology Studies
*Studies of Society and the Environment (SOSE)
*Health, Sport and Physical Education


Obama came to believe that although Alinsky's concentration on self-interest as a motivating factor is a "critical" insight, he told Lizza, "Alinsky understated the degree to which people's hopes and dreams and their ideals and their values were just as important in organizing as people's self-interest."<ref name=rltnr/>
====Victorian Certificate of Education====
The school offers classes to gain [[Victorian Certificate of Education]] credentials once students commence Year 10 until they finish Year 12. The school offers a variety of VCE subjects including a number of Vocational Education and Training (VET) subjects as follows<ref>{{cite web|url = http://schlprv.vcaa.vic.edu.au/schoolsstudiessearch/default.asp|title = Any Studies Being Offered By A School |accessdate = 2008-07-17 |publisher = VCAA}}</ref>:


During his three years as the DCP's director, its staff grew from 1 to 13 and its annual budget grew from $70,000 to $400,000, with accomplishments including helping set up a job training program, a college preparatory tutoring program, and a tenants' rights organization in [[Altgeld Gardens, Chicago|Altgeld Gardens]].<ref>{{cite news |author=Matchan, Linda |date=1990-02-15 |title=A Law Review breakthrough |url=http://search.boston.com/local/Search.do?s.sm.query=&s.author=Linda+Matchan&s.tab=globe&s.si%28simplesearchinput%29.sortBy=-articleprintpublicationdate&docType=&date=&s.startDate=1990-02-15&s.endDate=1990-02-15 |format=paid archive |work=The Boston Globe |page=29 |accessdate=2008-06-06}} {{cite news |author=Corr, John |date=1990-02-27 |title=From mean streets to hallowed halls |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PI&p_theme=pi&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_trackval=PI&s_search_type=customized&s_dispstring=Author(John%20Corr)%20AND%20date(02/27/1990%20to%2002/27/1990)&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=02/27/1990%20to%2002/27/1990)&p_field_advanced-0=Author&p_text_advanced-0=(John%20Corr)&xcal_numdocs=20&p_perpage=10&p_sort=_rank_:D&xcal_ranksort=4&xcal_useweights=yes |format=paid archive |work=The Philadelphia Inquirer |page=C01 |accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref> Obama was modest about the accomplishment of these years. "[F]or the most part I would say I wasn’t wildly successful," Obama said in a 2007 interview. "The victories that we achieved were extraordinarily modest: you know, getting a job-training site set up or getting an after-school program for young people put in place."<ref name=rlny>Lizza, Ryan, [http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/07/21/080721fa_fact_lizza?printable=true "Making It: How Chicago Shaped Obama"], ''[[The New Yorker]]'', [[July 21]], [[2008]], retrieved [[July 16]], [[2008]]</ref>
<table border="0" width="100%" cellpadding="10">
<tr>


Obama also worked as a consultant and instructor for the [[Gamaliel Foundation]], a community organizing institute.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Obama, Barack |month=August-September |year=1988 |title=Why organize? Problems and promise in the inner city |journal=Illinois Issues |volume=14 |issue=8–9 |pages=40–42 |accessdate=2008-06-06}} reprinted in: {{cite book |year=1990 |pages=pp. 35–40 |author=Knoepfle, Peg (ed.) |title=After Alinsky: community organizing in Illinois |location=Springfield, IL |publisher=Sangamon State University |isbn=0962087335 |accessdate=2008-06-06}} {{cite news |author=Tayler, Letta; Herbert, Keith |date=2008-03-02 |title=Obama forged path as Chicago community organizer |url=http://www.newsday.com/news/printedition/nation/ny-usobam025598601mar02,0,7841545,full.story |work=Newsday |page=A06 |accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref> In mid-1988, he traveled for the first time to Europe for three weeks then Kenya for five weeks where he met many of his Kenyan relatives for the first time.<ref>Obama (1995), pp. 299–437.</ref>


==Harvard Law School==
<td width="50%" valign="top">
[[Image:hls langdell hall.jpeg|thumb|right|Langdell Hall, home of the [[Harvard Law School]] library]]
*Accounting
Obama entered [[Harvard Law School]] in late 1988 and at the end of his first year was selected as an editor of the law review based on his grades and a writing competition.<ref name="Harvard Law 2007">{{cite news |author=Levenson, Michael; Saltzman, Jonathan |date=2007-01-28 |title=At Harvard Law, a unifying voice |url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2007/01/28/at_harvard_law_a_unifying_voice/?page=full |work=The Boston Globe |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Kantor, Jodi |date=2007-01-28 |title=In law school, Obama found political voice |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/us/politics/28obama.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all |work=The New York Times |page=1 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Kodama, Marie C |date=2007-01-19 |title=Obama left mark on HLS |url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=516664 |work=The Harvard Crimson |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Mundy, Liza |title=A series of fortunate events |date=2007-08-12 |url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/08/AR2007080802038_pf.html |work=The Washington Post |page=W10 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite journal |author=Heilemann, John |title=When they were young |date=October 22, 2007 |url=http://www.printthis.clickability.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=When+They+Were+Young&expire=&urlID=24417790&fb=Y&url=http%3A%2F%2Fnymag.com%2Fnews%2Ffeatures%2F39321%2F&partnerID=73272 |journal=New York |volume=40 |issue=37 |pages=32–7, 132–3 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} Mendell (2007), pp. 80–92.</ref> In his second year he was elected president of the law review, a full-time volunteer position functioning as editor-in-chief and supervising the law review's staff of 80 editors.<ref name="Harvard Law 1990"> {{cite news |author=Butterfield, Fox |date=1990-02-06|title=First black elected to head Harvard's Law Review |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE2DC1631F935A35751C0A966958260 |work=The New York Times |page=A20 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Ybarra, Michael J |date=1990-02-07 |title=Activist in Chicago now heads Harvard Law Review |url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/28797353.html?dids=28797353:28797353&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT |format=paid archive |work=Chicago Tribune |page=3 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Matchan, Linda |date=1990-02-15 |title=A Law Review breakthrough |url=http://search.boston.com/local/Search.do?s.sm.query=&s.author=Linda+Matchan&s.tab=globe&s.si%28simplesearchinput%29.sortBy=-articleprintpublicationdate&docType=&date=&s.startDate=1990-02-15&s.endDate=1990-02-15 |format=paid archive |work=The Boston Globe |page=29 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Corr, John |date=1990-02-27 |title=From mean streets to hallowed halls |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PI&p_theme=pi&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_trackval=PI&s_search_type=customized&s_dispstring=Author(John%20Corr)%20AND%20date(02/27/1990%20to%2002/27/1990)&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=02/27/1990%20to%2002/27/1990)&p_field_advanced-0=Author&p_text_advanced-0=(John%20Corr)&xcal_numdocs=20&p_perpage=10&p_sort=_rank_:D&xcal_ranksort=4&xcal_useweights=yes |format=paid archive |work=The Philadelphia Inquirer |page=C01 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Drummond, Tammerlin |date=1990-03-12 |title=Barack Obama's Law; Harvard Law Review's first black president plans a life of public service |url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/60017156.html?dids=60017156:60017156&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT |format=paid archive |work=Los Angeles Times |page=E1 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Pugh, Allison J. (Associated Press) |date=1990-04-18 |title=Law Review's first black president aims to help poor |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=MH&p_theme=realcities2&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_site=miami&s_trackval=MH&s_dispstring=Title(Law%20Review's%20first%20black%20president%20aims%20to%20help%20poor)%20AND%20date(04/18/1990%20to%2004/18/1990)&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=04/18/1990%20to%2004/18/1990)&p_field_advanced-0=title&p_text_advanced-0=(Law%20Review's%20first%20black%20president%20aims%20to%20help%20poor)&xcal_numdocs=20&p_perpage=10&p_sort=_rank_:D&xcal_ranksort=4&xcal_useweights=yes |format=paid archive |work=The Miami Herald |page=C01 |accessdate=2008-06-15}}</ref> Obama's election in February 1990 as the first black president of the ''[[Harvard Law Review]]'' was widely reported and followed by several long, detailed profiles.<ref name="Harvard Law 1990"/> He got himself elected by convincing a crucial swing bloc of conservatives that he would protect their self-interests if they supported him. Building up that trust was done with the same kind of long listening sessions he had used in the poor neighborhoods of South Side, Chicago. [[Richard Epstein]], who later taught at the University of Chicago Law School when Obama later taught there, said Obama was elected editor "because people on the other side believed he would give them a fair shake."<ref name=rltnr/>
*Biology
*Business (VCE VET)
*Business Management
*Chemistry
*Classical Societies and Cultures
*Clothing Products (VCE VET)
*Community Recreation (VCE VET)
*Community Services Work (VCE VET)
*Cultural Recreation Entertainment (VFE)
*Design and Technology
*Drama
*Economics
*Engineering Studies (VCE VET)
*English
*English (ESL)
*English Language
*French
*Furnishing (VCE VET)
*Further Mathematics
*General Mathematics
*Geography
*German
*Health and Human Development
*History: 20th Century (1900-1945)
*History: 20th Century (Since 1945)
</td>


While in law school he worked as an associate at the law firms of [[Sidley Austin|Sidley & Austin]] in 1989, where he met his wife, Michelle, and where [[Newton N. Minow]] was a managing partner. Minow later would introduce Obama to some of Chicago's top business leaders.<ref name=rlny/> In the summer of 1990 he worked at Hopkins & Sutter.<ref>{{cite news |author=Aguilar, Louis |date=1990-07-11 |title=Survey: Law firms slow to add minority partners |url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/28774085.html?dids=28774085:28774085&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT |format=paid archive |work=Chicago Tribune |page=1 (Business) |quote=Barack Obama, a summer associate at Hopkins & Sutter in Chicago |accessdate=2008-06-15}}</ref> Also during his law school years, Obama spent eight days in Los Angeles taking a national training course on Alinsky methods of organizing.<ref name=rltnr/> He graduated with a [[Juris Doctor|J.D.]] [[Latin honors|''magna cum laude'']] from Harvard in 1991 and returned to Chicago.<ref name="Harvard Law 2007"/>
<td width="50%" valign="top">
*History: Revolutions
*Hospitality - Operations (VCE VET)
*Information Technology
*Information Technology (VCE VET)
*International Politics
*International Studies
*Latin
*Legal Studies
*Literature
*Mathematical Methods (CAS)
*Multimedia (VCE VET)
*Music (VCE VET)
*Music Industry (VCE VET)
*Music Industry - Tech Prod (VCE VET)
*Music Performance
*Music Solo performance
*Music Styles
*National Politics
*Philosophy
*Physical Education
*Physics
*Psychology
*Specialist Mathematics
*Studio Arts
*Visual Communication and Design
*Wholesale Retail Personal Services (VFE)
</td>


==Settling down in Chicago==
</tr>
</table>


The publicity from his election as the first black president of the ''Harvard Law Review'' led to a contract and advance to write a book about race relations.<ref name="Scott 2008a"> {{cite news |author=Scott, Janny |date=2008-05-18 |title=The story of Obama, written by Obama |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/18/us/politics/18memoirs.html?pagewanted=all |work=The New York Times |page=1 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} Obama (1995), pp. xiii–xvii.</ref> In an effort to recruit him to their faculty, the [[University of Chicago Law School]] provided Obama with a fellowship and an office to work on his book.<ref name="Scott 2008a"/> He originally planned to finish the book in one year, but it took much longer as the book evolved into a personal memoir. In order to work without interruptions, Obama and his wife, Michelle, traveled to [[Bali]] where he wrote for several months. The manuscript was finally published as ''[[Dreams from My Father]]'' in mid-1995.<ref name="Scott 2008a"/>
=== Acceleration Program ===
[[Image:UniversityHS1930.jpg|thumb|right|220px|University High School students in a History class, 1930s]]
University High School has a scheme for willing, academically able students which allows them to potentially complete their high schooling in 5 years. The curriculum of years 7-10 is completed in 3 years, which approximately corresponds to one year's worth of curriculum completed every 3 terms. In reality, different subjects are accelerated different amounts. In particular, almost all students complete the pre-VCE Mathematics curriculum in the first two years (normally completed in four). AP students are also the only students to take three years of Latin. For simplicity, they are considered to have done years 7, 9 and 10. After their third year at UHS, they graduate into VCE and complete years 11 and 12 as part of the main stream. To partake in this program, a student must undertake a test in their final year of primary schooling (usually grade 6). The sub-school chosen to house the accelerated students is rotated each year between Chapman, Sharman, and Brookes; once VCE is reached all students are housed into Bryce. Acceleration program students are better known as 'the Taskies', as the program was formerly called the 'Task Force Program'. From 2006, the school began to take on two acceleration classes per year.


He married [[Michelle Obama|Michelle Robinson]] in 1992<ref name=MOHSMOMF>{{cite news | first=Scott | last=Fornek | title=Michelle Obama: 'He Swept Me Off My Feet' | date=[[October 3]] [[2007]] | url=http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/585261,CST-NWS-wedding03.stng | work=Chicago Sun-Times | accessdate=2007-12-02}}</ref> and settled down with her in [[Hyde Park, Chicago|Hyde Park]], a liberal, integrated, middle-class Chicago neighborhood with a history of electing reform-minded politicians independent of the Daley political machine.<ref name=jbcdnyt/> The couple's first daughter, Malia Ann, was born in 1998; their second, Natasha (known as Sasha), in 2001.<ref name="groundsupport"> {{cite news |author=Springen, Karen and Jonathan Darman |date=2007-01-29 |title=Ground Support |url=http://www.newsweek.com/id/70165 |work=Newsweek | |accessdate=2008-07-25}}</ref>
==Co-Curricular Activities==
===Musicals===
The school annually produces school musicals. Each musical usually begins in August of each year. The school chooses from a variety of musicals, as shown below.


One effect of the marriage was to bring Obama closer to other politically influential Chicagoans. One of Michelle's best friends was [[Jesse Jackson]]'s daughter, Sanita, later the godmother of the Obamas' first child. Michelle herself had worked as an aide to Mayor [[Richard M. Daley]]. Marty Nesbitt, a young, successful black businessman (who played basketball with Michelle's brother, [[Craig Robinson (basketball coach)|Craig Robinson]]), became Obama's best friend and introduced him to other African-American business people. Before the marriage, according to Craig, Obama talked about his political ambitions, even saying that he might run for president someday.<ref name=rlny/>
*2009: [[Of Mice and Men]]
*2008: [[Oliver!]]
*2007: [[Jesus Christ Superstar]]
*2006: [[Les Misérables (musical)|Les Misérables]]
*2005: [[Hello, Dolly! (musical)|Hello, Dolly!]]
*2004: [[Fiddler on the Roof]]
*2003: [[Hot Mikado]]
*2002: [[The Pajama Game]]


==Buildings==
==Project Vote==
Obama directed Illinois [[Project Vote]]! from April to October 1992, a voter registration drive, officially nonpartisan, that helped [[Carol Moseley Braun]] become the first black woman ever elected to the Senate.<ref name=rltnr/> He headed up a staff of 10 and 700 volunteers that achieved its goal of registering 150,000 of 400,000 unregistered African Americans in the state, leading ''Crain's Chicago Business'' to name Obama to its 1993 list of "40 under Forty" powers to be.<ref name="Illinois Blue Book 2000">{{cite book |author=White, Jesse (ed.) |year=2000 |title=Illinois Blue Book, 2000, Millennium ed. |url=http://www.sos.state.il.us/bb/toc.html |location=Springfield, IL |publisher=Illinois Secretary of State |oclc=43923973 |page=p. 83 |accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Anderson, Veronica |month=September 27-October 3, |year=1993 |title=40 under Forty: Barack Obama, Director, Illinois Project Vote |journal=[[Crain Communications Inc.|Crain's Chicago Business]] |volume=16 |issue=39 |accessdate=2008-06-06 |pages=43}}</ref><ref name="voteofconfidence"> {{cite news |author=Reynolds, Gretchen |date=1993-01-01 |title=Vote of Confidence |url=http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/January-1993/Vote-of-Confidence/ |work=Chicago Magazine | |accessdate=2008-07-25}}</ref><ref name=pswp>Slevin, Peter, [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/12/AR2007111201945_pf.html "For Obama, a Handsome Payoff in Political Gambles: Presidential Hopeful Has Friends, Successes and Precious Few Battle Scars"], article, ''[[The Washington Post]]'', [[November 13]], [[2007]], page A3, retrieved [[July 18]], [[2008]]</ref> Although fundraising was not required for the position when Obama was recruited for the job, he started an active campaign to raise money for the project. According to Sandy Newman, who founded Project Vote, Obama "raised more money than any of our state directors had ever done. He did a great job of enlisting a broad spectrum of organizations and people, including many who did not get along well with one another."<ref name=pswp/>
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:UHS.PNG|thumb|left|400px|Bird's eye view of the school]] -->
The University High School is divided into 10 sectors: West, North, South, East, Music, Hall, Gymnasium, Quadrangle, Oval, and GTAC.


The fundraising brought Obama into contact with the wealthy, liberal elite of Chicago, some of whom became supporters in his future political career. Through one of them he met [[David Axelrod]], who later headed Obama's campaign for president.<ref name=rlny/> The fundraising committee was chaired by John Schmidt, a white former chief of staff to Mayor Richard M. Daley, and John W. Rogers Jr., a young black money manager and founder of Ariel Capital Management.<ref name=pswp/> Obama also met much of the city's black political leadership, although he didn't always get along with the older politicians, with friction sometimes developing over Obama's reluctance to spend money and his insistence on results.<ref name=rlny/> "He really did it, and he let other people take all the credit", Schmidt later said. "The people standing up at the press conferences were [[Jesse Jackson]] and [[Bobby Rush]] and I don't know who else. Barack was off to the side and only the people who were close to it knew he had done all the work."<ref name=pswp/>
The North building was constructed in 1930 during the [[Great Depression]]. Because of this, no additional facilities were constructed and therefore assemblies were held in other venues. The north building has four levels, and contains the rooms numbered 108 through 401.


==Career 1992-1996==
The South Building is the next largest building containing the Library and VCE centre. The East Building is primarily used for Art and Technology classes and is the third largest of the four buildings. The West Wing is the smallest of the buildings, but is conjoined with the Music Wing.
The Music Wing was developed, planned, constructed and funded by ex-students and ex-teachers, including Mrs. Stella Langford and Mr. J. Economo.


Obama taught [[constitutional law]] at the [[University of Chicago Law School]] for twelve years, as a Lecturer for four years (1992–1996), and as a Senior Lecturer for eight years (1996–2004).<ref>{{cite web |author=University of Chicago Law School |date=2008-03-27 |title=Statement regarding Barack Obama |publisher=University of Chicago Law School |url=http://www.law.uchicago.edu/media/index.html |accessdate=2008-06-10}} {{cite web |author=Miller, Joe |date=2008-03-28 |title=Was Barack Obama really a constitutional law professor?|publisher=FactCheck.org |url=http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/was_barack_obama_really_a_constitutional_law.html |accessdate=2008-06-10}} {{cite web |author=Holan, Angie Drobnic |date=2008-03-07 |title=Obama's 20 years of experience |url=http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/article/2008/mar/07/obamas-20-years-experience |publisher=PolitiFact.com |accessdate=2008-06-10}}</ref> During this time he taught courses in due process and equal protection, voting rights, and racism and law. He published no legal scholarship, and turned down tenured positions, but served eight years in the Illinois Senate during his twelve years at the university.<ref>{{cite web |author=Jodi Cantor |date=2008-07-30 |title=Teaching Law, Testing Ideas, Obama Stood Slightly Apart |publisher=New York Times |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/30/us/politics/30law.html?_r=1&oref=slogin |accessdate=2008-09-10}}</ref>
Early in 2004, a new Gene Technology Access Centre (GTAC) was opened for use by staff and students from across the state. This allows students from throughout Victoria to have direct exposure to cutting edge research in the genetics field.


In 1993 Obama joined Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland, a 12-attorney law firm specializing in civil rights litigation and neighborhood economic development, where he was an [[associate (business rank)|associate]] for three years from 1993 to 1996, then [[of counsel]] from 1996 to 2004, with his law license becoming inactive in 2002.<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/><ref>{{cite news |author=Robinson, Mike (Associated Press) |date=2007-02-10 |title=Obama got start in civil rights practice |url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2007/02/20/obama_got_start_in_civil_rights_practice |work=The Boston Globe |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author=Pallasch, Abdon M |date=2007-12-17 |title=As lawyer, Obama was strong, silent type; He was 'smart, innovative, relentless,' and he mostly let other lawyers do the talking |url=http://www.suntimes.com/news/politics/obama/700499,CST-NWS-Obama-law17.article |work=Chicago Sun-Times |page=4 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author= |date=1993-06-27 |title=People |url=http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/24302659.html?dids=24302659:24302659&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT |format=paid archive |work=Chicago Tribune |page=9 (Business) |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite news |author= |date=1993-07-05 |title=Business appointments |url=http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=CSTB&p_theme=cstb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_dispstring=(Business%20appointments)%20AND%20date(7/5/1993%20to%207/5/1993)&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=7/5/1993%20to%207/5/1993)&p_field_advanced-0=&p_text_advanced-0=(Business%20appointments)&xcal_numdocs=20&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no |format=paid archive |work=Chicago-Sun-Times |page=40 |accessdate=2008-06-15}} {{cite web |author=Miner, Barnhill & Galland |year=2008 |title=About Us |url=http://www.lawmbg.com/index.cfm/PageID/2711 |publisher=Miner, Barnhill & Galland - Chicago, Illinois |accessdate=2008-06-15}} Obama (1995), pp. 438–439, Mendell (2007), pp. 104–106.</ref> The firm was well-known among influential Chicago liberals and leaders of the black community, and the firm's Judson H. Miner, who met with Obama to recruit him before Obama's 1991 graduation from law school, had been counsel to former Chicago Mayor [[Harold Washington]], although the law firm often clashed with the administration of Mayor [[Richard M. Daley]]. The 29-year-old law student made it clear in his initial interview with Miner that he was more interested in joining the firm to learn about Chicago politics than to practice law.<ref name=jbcdnyt>Becker, Jo and Drew, Christopher, [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/11/us/politics/11chicago.html?_r=1&sq=ACORN%20Chicago%20Obama&st=cse&scp=1&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin "Pragmatic politics, forged on the South Side"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', [[May 11]], [[2008]], retrieved [[July 16]], [[2008]]</ref>
An extension of the canteen was completed in the last quarter of 2006 which connected it with the Sharman Hall.


Obama was a founding member of the board of directors of [[Public Allies]] in 1992, resigning before his wife, Michelle, became the founding executive director of Public Allies Chicago in early 1993.<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/><ref>{{cite web |author=Public Allies |year=2008 |title=Fact Sheet on Public Allies' History with Senator Barack and Michelle Obama |url=http://www.publicallies.org/site/c.liKUL3PNLvF/b.3960231/ |publisher=[[Public Allies]] |accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref> He served on the board of directors of the [[Woods Fund of Chicago]], which in 1985 had been the first foundation to fund Obama's DCP, from 1993–2002, and served on the board of directors of The [[Joyce Foundation]] from 1994–2002.<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/> Membership on the Joyce and Wood foundation boards, which gave out tens of millions of dollars to various local organizations while Obama was a member, helped Obama get to know and be known by influential liberal groups and cultivate a network of community activists that later supported his political career.<ref name=jbcdnyt/> Obama served on the board of directors of the [[Chicago Annenberg Challenge]] from 1995–2002, as founding president and chairman of the board of directors from 1995–1999.<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/> He also served on the board of directors of the [[Chicago Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law]], the [[Center for Neighborhood Technology]], and the [[Lugenia Burns Hope Center]].<ref name="Who's Who 2008"/>
A fourth level extension to the South Wing was completed early in 2007 and was named the VCE Study Centre. The extension was made for VCE students. It has classrooms specifically for VCE students and the Bryce Sub-school Offices are located in the centre.


In 1995, Obama's mother, [[Ann Dunham]], died. In that year Obama also announced his [[Illinois Senate career of Barack Obama|candidacy for a seat in the Illinois state Senate]].
The Music Wing will undergo further extensions and redesign in 2008.


==Victoria School of Languages==
== See also ==
* [[Family of Barack Obama]]
The University High School is one of a number of schools that facilitate the Victorian School of Languages on weekends.


==Notable alumni==
== References ==
<table border="0" width="100%" cellpadding="10">
<tr>

<td width="50%" valign="top">
;Academics
* Professor [[Elizabeth Blackburn]], (Biology and Physiology)
* Sarah Boyd, (Bioinformatics)
* Professor Suzanne Cory, (Medical Biology)
* Professor Ruth Curtain, (Mathematics)
* Professor H. A. J. Ford, (Law)
* Professor Samuel Goldberg, (English)
* Emeritus Professor Norman Greenwood, (Chemistry)
* Professor Frank Oberklaid OAM, (Paediatrics)
* Melissa Raine, (Medieval History)
* Dean [[A. T. S. Sissons]], (Chemistry)
* Professor [[Gillian Triggs]], (Law)
* Professor [[Geoffrey Watson]], (Statistics)

;Business
* [[Richard Pratt]], businessman

;Media, entertainment and the arts
* [[Graeme Blundell]], actor & writer
* [[Peter Faiman]], producer & director
* Max Fairchild, actor
* Warwick Holt, television writer
* Garrie Hutchinson, writer & editor
* [[Sam Lipski]] AM, journalist
* Louis Macklin, keyboard & percussionist in rock band, [[67 Special]]
* Molly McCaffrey, actress
* [[Olivia Newton-John]], actor & singer
* Eric Phillips, composer & musician
* Ruby Rose, current MTV Australia VJ
* [[Hristijan Spirovski]], singer & pianist
* [[Noah Taylor]], actor
* [[Judah Waten]], author
* [[David Williamson]], playwright
* [[Sweeney Young]], actor

;Other
* [[Clifford William King Sadlier]] [[Victoria Cross|VC]], winner of the [[Victoria Cross]]
</td>


<td width="50%" valign="top">

;Politics and the law
* Jean Baker OAM, former mayor of [[Heidelberg, Victoria]]
* [[Helen Buckingham]], current member of the [[Victorian Legislative Council]]
* Ivan Deveson, former Lord Mayor of [[Melbourne, Victoria|Melbourne]]
* Dorothy Goble, former member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
* [[Joan Kirner]], first female [[Premier of Victoria]]
* Major General [[Herbert William Lloyd]], member of the [[New South Wales Legislative Assembly]]
* [[John So]], Lord Mayor of Melbourne
* [[David White]], [[Victoria, Australia|Victorian]] Minister of State
* [[Ralph Willis]], former Australian Federal Treasurer
* [[Neil Brown]], Q.C., former MHR for Diamond Valley and Federal Minister

;Science
* James Murray, astronomer at [[NASA]]
* David Oblerklaid, (Medicine)

;Sport
* [[Judy Amoore]], [[Olympic Games|Olympic]] medallist
* [[Allen Aylett]], former chairman of the [[Australian Football League|VFL]]
* [[Harry Beitzel]], [[Australian Football League|VFL]] field umpire
* [[Fraser Brown]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Peter Carey]], former AFL umpire
* Harry Caspar, [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[John Coleman (Australian footballer)|John Coleman]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Adrian Gallagher]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Aaron Henneman]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Corey Jones]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* Ray Johnston, [[North Melbourne Football Club]] footballer
* Arthur Karanicolas, [[North Melbourne Football Club]] footballer
* [[Bob Keddie]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[James Kelly]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Pam Kilborn]], Olympic medallist
* [[Michael Klim]], Olympic medallist
* [[Jason McCartney]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* Viv Peterson, [[North Melbourne Football Club]] footballer
* [[Ben Reid]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
* [[Ian Robinson (AFL umpire)]]
* [[Greg Sewell]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer, President of [[Essendon Football Club]]
* [[Shannon Watt]], [[Australian Football League|AFL]] footballer
</td>

</tr>
</table>

==Notes==
{{note_label|a|a|none}} Who's Who of girls' school rankings: 1.[[Presbyterian Ladies' College, Melbourne|PLC Melbourne]], 2.[[SCEGGS Darlinghurst]], 3.[[Methodist Ladies' College, Melbourne|MLC Melbourne]], 4.[[Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney|PLC Sydney]], 5.[[Melbourne Girls Grammar School]], 6.[[Mac.Robertson Girls' High School]], 7.[[North Sydney Girls High School]], 8.[[Sydney Girls High School]], 9.[[MLC School|MLC Sydney]], 10.[[University High School, Melbourne]]

==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{reflist|2}}


==See also==
==External links==
*[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16456639/ MSNBC slideshow] from childhood to party leader
*[[List of schools in Victoria]]
*[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/08/22/AR2008082201679.html?hpid=topnews Family biography of Obama from ''The Washington Post'']
*[[List of high schools in Victoria]]
{{Barack Obama}}
*[[List of schools in Victoria, Australia according to 2005 VCE results]]
*[[List of Victoria Crosses by School]]


<!-- don't use {{DEFAULTSORT:Obama, Barack}} as it doesn't work for the Barack Obama category -->
==External links==
*[http://www.unihigh.vic.edu.au/main.htm University High School website]


[[Category:High schools in Victoria (Australia)]]
[[Category:Barack Obama]]
[[Category:Schools in Melbourne]]
[[Category:Early lives by individual|Obama, Barack]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1910]]
[[Category:Public schools in Victoria (Australia)]]

Revision as of 00:59, 14 October 2008

Barack Obama was born on August 4 1961 in Honolulu, Hawaii to Barack Obama, Sr. (1936–1982) (born in Nyang’oma Kogelo, Siaya District, Nyanza Province, Kenya,[1] of Luo ethnicity) and Ann Dunham (1942–1995) (born in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas).[2][3]

Education at a glance

School Years Location Final degree Notes
St. Francis Assisi Catholic First through third grade Jakarta, Indonesia
State Elementary School Menteng 01 Fourth grade Jakarta, Indonesia
Punahou School Fifth through 12th grade Honolulu, Hawaii High school diploma
Occidental College Freshman and sophomore years Los Angeles   Transferred to Columbia
Columbia University Junior and senior years New York City B.A. Political science major with international relations focus
Harvard Law School Three-year program Cambridge, Massachusetts J.D. magna cum laude President, Harvard Law Review

Childhood through high school

File:Barack Obama Sr Jr.jpg
Obama (right) with his father in Hawaii. ca. 1971.

Throughout his early years the winner of the 2008 presedential race Obama was known at home and at school as "Barry."[4] Obama's parents met while both were attending the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where his father was enrolled as a foreign student.[5] They separated when he was two years old and later divorced.[6] His father received a Masters degree in Economics from Harvard University, then returned to Kenya, where he became a finance minister before dying in an automobile accident in 1982.[7][8] His mother married another foreign student, Lolo Soetoro, and the family moved to Soetoro's home country of Indonesia in 1967.[9] Obama attended local schools in Jakarta, from ages 6 to 10, where classes were taught in the Indonesian language. He first attended St. Francis Assisi Catholic school for almost three years, where he received weekly lessons in that Christian faith.[10][11] When his family moved to a new neighborhood, Menteng,[12] he attended the secular, government-run SDN Menteng 1 school for his fourth year.[12][10][13][14][15] Obama's stepfather was "not religious", and "never went to prayer services except for big communal events", according to Obama's sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng.[13] When Obama was in third grade he wrote an essay saying that he wanted to become president. His teacher later told the Chicago Tribune that she was not sure what country he wanted to become president of but that he said that his reason for becoming president was that he wanted to make everybody happy.[4]

Obama's birth certificate

Obama returned to Honolulu to live with his maternal grandparents while attending Punahou School, a private college preparatory school, from the fifth grade until his graduation in 1979.[16] Obama's mother, Ann, died of ovarian cancer and uterine cancer a few months after the publication of his 1995 memoir, Dreams from My Father.[17]

In the memoir, Obama describes his experiences growing up in his mother's middle class family. His knowledge about his African father, who returned once for a brief visit in 1971, came mainly through family stories and photographs.[8] Of his early childhood, Obama writes: "That my father looked nothing like the people around me — that he was black as pitch, my mother white as milk — barely registered in my mind."[18] The book describes his struggles as a young adult to reconcile social perceptions of his multiracial heritage.[19] He wrote that he used alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine during his teenage years to "push questions of who I was out of my mind".[20] Obama has said that it was a seriously misguided mistake. At the Saddleback Civil Presidential Forum Barack Obama identified his high-school drug use as his greatest moral failure.[21] Obama has stated he has not used any illegal drugs since he was a teenager.[22]

Some of his fellow students at Punahou School later told the Honolulu Star-Bulletin that Obama was mature for his age as a high school student and that he sometimes attended parties and other events in order to associate with African American college students and military service people. Reflecting later on his formative years in Honolulu, Obama wrote: "The opportunity that Hawaii offered — to experience a variety of cultures in a climate of mutual respect — became an integral part of my world view, and a basis for the values that I hold most dear."[23]

College and living in New York City

Following high school, Obama moved to Los Angeles, where he studied at Occidental College for two years.[24] He then transferred to Columbia University in New York City, where he majored in political science with a specialization in international relations.[25] In 1982, Obama's father, Barack Obama, Sr., died in Kenya. Obama graduated with a B.A. from Columbia in 1983, then worked at Business International Corporation and New York Public Interest Research Group.[26][27]

Early years as a community organizer in Chicago

After four years in New York City, Obama moved to Chicago where he was hired as a community organizer. "What really inspired me," Obama told Ryan Lizza, a writer for The New Republic in 2007, "was the civil rights movement. And if you asked me who my role model was at that time, it would probably be Bob Moses, the famous SNCC [ Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee ] organizer. … Those were the folks I was really inspired by—the John Lewises, the Bob Moseses, the Fannie Lou Hamers, the Ella Bakers."[28]

Before Obama came, the organization was made up of three white men (two of them Jewish), which was only working with Catholic parishes up to that point. Yet the black pastors looked on them with suspicion and sometimes disdain as outsiders. The organization wanted a young black man to help the group ally with black churches in the South Side. He worked for three years from June 1985 to May 1988 as director of the Developing Communities Project (DCP), a church-based community organization originally comprising eight Catholic parishes in Greater Roseland (Roseland, West Pullman, and Riverdale) on Chicago's far South Side.[26][29][28] Around this time Obama joined the Trinity United Church of Christ, a predominantly black church on the southeast side.[30]

The job focused on helping poor blacks agitate with the city government to get benefits for their communities such as job banks and asbestos removal. The small organization taught him a style of organizing developed by Saul Alinsky, a radical, University of Chicago-trained social scientist. Alinsky's method centers on the idea of "agitation" — encouraging people to get angry enough about the horrible state of their lives in order to get them to take action. Alinsky had described the organizer's role as an effort to "rub raw the sores of discontent." According to Mike Kruglik, a fellow organizer at that time, Obama was the best student he had ever had in his 10 years of training organizers. In 2007, Ryan Lizza, a journalist writing for The New Republic, described Kruglik's assessment of Obama: "He was a natural, the undisputed master of agitation, who could engage a room full of recruiting targets in a rapid-fire Socratic dialogue, nudging them to admit that they were not living up to their own standards. […] [H]e could be aggressive and confrontational. With probing, sometimes personal questions, he would pinpoint the source of pain in their lives, tearing down their egos just enough before dangling a carrot of hope that they could make things better."[28]

Obama came to believe that although Alinsky's concentration on self-interest as a motivating factor is a "critical" insight, he told Lizza, "Alinsky understated the degree to which people's hopes and dreams and their ideals and their values were just as important in organizing as people's self-interest."[28]

During his three years as the DCP's director, its staff grew from 1 to 13 and its annual budget grew from $70,000 to $400,000, with accomplishments including helping set up a job training program, a college preparatory tutoring program, and a tenants' rights organization in Altgeld Gardens.[31] Obama was modest about the accomplishment of these years. "[F]or the most part I would say I wasn’t wildly successful," Obama said in a 2007 interview. "The victories that we achieved were extraordinarily modest: you know, getting a job-training site set up or getting an after-school program for young people put in place."[32]

Obama also worked as a consultant and instructor for the Gamaliel Foundation, a community organizing institute.[33] In mid-1988, he traveled for the first time to Europe for three weeks then Kenya for five weeks where he met many of his Kenyan relatives for the first time.[34]

Harvard Law School

Langdell Hall, home of the Harvard Law School library

Obama entered Harvard Law School in late 1988 and at the end of his first year was selected as an editor of the law review based on his grades and a writing competition.[35] In his second year he was elected president of the law review, a full-time volunteer position functioning as editor-in-chief and supervising the law review's staff of 80 editors.[36] Obama's election in February 1990 as the first black president of the Harvard Law Review was widely reported and followed by several long, detailed profiles.[36] He got himself elected by convincing a crucial swing bloc of conservatives that he would protect their self-interests if they supported him. Building up that trust was done with the same kind of long listening sessions he had used in the poor neighborhoods of South Side, Chicago. Richard Epstein, who later taught at the University of Chicago Law School when Obama later taught there, said Obama was elected editor "because people on the other side believed he would give them a fair shake."[28]

While in law school he worked as an associate at the law firms of Sidley & Austin in 1989, where he met his wife, Michelle, and where Newton N. Minow was a managing partner. Minow later would introduce Obama to some of Chicago's top business leaders.[32] In the summer of 1990 he worked at Hopkins & Sutter.[37] Also during his law school years, Obama spent eight days in Los Angeles taking a national training course on Alinsky methods of organizing.[28] He graduated with a J.D. magna cum laude from Harvard in 1991 and returned to Chicago.[35]

Settling down in Chicago

The publicity from his election as the first black president of the Harvard Law Review led to a contract and advance to write a book about race relations.[38] In an effort to recruit him to their faculty, the University of Chicago Law School provided Obama with a fellowship and an office to work on his book.[38] He originally planned to finish the book in one year, but it took much longer as the book evolved into a personal memoir. In order to work without interruptions, Obama and his wife, Michelle, traveled to Bali where he wrote for several months. The manuscript was finally published as Dreams from My Father in mid-1995.[38]

He married Michelle Robinson in 1992[39] and settled down with her in Hyde Park, a liberal, integrated, middle-class Chicago neighborhood with a history of electing reform-minded politicians independent of the Daley political machine.[40] The couple's first daughter, Malia Ann, was born in 1998; their second, Natasha (known as Sasha), in 2001.[41]

One effect of the marriage was to bring Obama closer to other politically influential Chicagoans. One of Michelle's best friends was Jesse Jackson's daughter, Sanita, later the godmother of the Obamas' first child. Michelle herself had worked as an aide to Mayor Richard M. Daley. Marty Nesbitt, a young, successful black businessman (who played basketball with Michelle's brother, Craig Robinson), became Obama's best friend and introduced him to other African-American business people. Before the marriage, according to Craig, Obama talked about his political ambitions, even saying that he might run for president someday.[32]

Project Vote

Obama directed Illinois Project Vote! from April to October 1992, a voter registration drive, officially nonpartisan, that helped Carol Moseley Braun become the first black woman ever elected to the Senate.[28] He headed up a staff of 10 and 700 volunteers that achieved its goal of registering 150,000 of 400,000 unregistered African Americans in the state, leading Crain's Chicago Business to name Obama to its 1993 list of "40 under Forty" powers to be.[42][43][44][45] Although fundraising was not required for the position when Obama was recruited for the job, he started an active campaign to raise money for the project. According to Sandy Newman, who founded Project Vote, Obama "raised more money than any of our state directors had ever done. He did a great job of enlisting a broad spectrum of organizations and people, including many who did not get along well with one another."[45]

The fundraising brought Obama into contact with the wealthy, liberal elite of Chicago, some of whom became supporters in his future political career. Through one of them he met David Axelrod, who later headed Obama's campaign for president.[32] The fundraising committee was chaired by John Schmidt, a white former chief of staff to Mayor Richard M. Daley, and John W. Rogers Jr., a young black money manager and founder of Ariel Capital Management.[45] Obama also met much of the city's black political leadership, although he didn't always get along with the older politicians, with friction sometimes developing over Obama's reluctance to spend money and his insistence on results.[32] "He really did it, and he let other people take all the credit", Schmidt later said. "The people standing up at the press conferences were Jesse Jackson and Bobby Rush and I don't know who else. Barack was off to the side and only the people who were close to it knew he had done all the work."[45]

Career 1992-1996

Obama taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School for twelve years, as a Lecturer for four years (1992–1996), and as a Senior Lecturer for eight years (1996–2004).[46] During this time he taught courses in due process and equal protection, voting rights, and racism and law. He published no legal scholarship, and turned down tenured positions, but served eight years in the Illinois Senate during his twelve years at the university.[47]

In 1993 Obama joined Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland, a 12-attorney law firm specializing in civil rights litigation and neighborhood economic development, where he was an associate for three years from 1993 to 1996, then of counsel from 1996 to 2004, with his law license becoming inactive in 2002.[26][48] The firm was well-known among influential Chicago liberals and leaders of the black community, and the firm's Judson H. Miner, who met with Obama to recruit him before Obama's 1991 graduation from law school, had been counsel to former Chicago Mayor Harold Washington, although the law firm often clashed with the administration of Mayor Richard M. Daley. The 29-year-old law student made it clear in his initial interview with Miner that he was more interested in joining the firm to learn about Chicago politics than to practice law.[40]

Obama was a founding member of the board of directors of Public Allies in 1992, resigning before his wife, Michelle, became the founding executive director of Public Allies Chicago in early 1993.[26][49] He served on the board of directors of the Woods Fund of Chicago, which in 1985 had been the first foundation to fund Obama's DCP, from 1993–2002, and served on the board of directors of The Joyce Foundation from 1994–2002.[26] Membership on the Joyce and Wood foundation boards, which gave out tens of millions of dollars to various local organizations while Obama was a member, helped Obama get to know and be known by influential liberal groups and cultivate a network of community activists that later supported his political career.[40] Obama served on the board of directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge from 1995–2002, as founding president and chairman of the board of directors from 1995–1999.[26] He also served on the board of directors of the Chicago Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the Center for Neighborhood Technology, and the Lugenia Burns Hope Center.[26]

In 1995, Obama's mother, Ann Dunham, died. In that year Obama also announced his candidacy for a seat in the Illinois state Senate.

See also

References

  1. ^ Ancestry of Barack Obama
  2. ^ Gov. Kathleen Sebelius Endorses Barack Obama - January 29, 2008 - Obama Press Office via businesswire via reuters.com
  3. ^ "Meet Barack". BarackObama.com. Retrieved 2008-01-04. "Saving the World in His Spare Time". The Economist. January 12 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) See also: Obama (1995), Chapter 1.
  4. ^ a b Scharnberg, Kirsten (March 25 2007). "The Not-So-Simple Story of Barack Obama's Youth". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-01-14. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ Obama (1995), pp. 9–10. For book excerpts, see "Barack Obama: Creation of Tales". East African. November 1 2004. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ Obama (1995), pp. 125–126. See also: Jones, Tim (March 27 2007). "Obama's Mom: Not Just a Girl from Kansas". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ Butterfield, Fox (February 6 1990). "First Black Elected to Head Harvard's Law Review". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) See also: Kantor, Jodi (January 28 2007). "In Law School, Obama Found Political Voice". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ a b Merida, Kevin (December 14 2007). "The Ghost of a Father". Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) See also: Ochieng, Philip. "From Home Squared to the US Senate: How Barack Obama Was Lost and Found". East African. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Text "dateNovember 1 2004" ignored (help) Obama (1995), pp. 5–11 and 62–71. In August 2006, Obama flew his wife and two daughters from Chicago to join him in a visit to his father's birthplace, a village near Kisumu in rural western Kenya. Gnecchi, Nico (August 27 2006). "Obama Receives Hero's Welcome at His Family's Ancestral Village in Kenya". Voice of America. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) See also: Cose, Ellis (September 11 2006). "Walking the World Stage". Newsweek. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Wrong, Michela (September 11 2006). "Africa: Kenya Glimpses a New Kind of Hero". New Statesman. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ Obama's stepfather and Ann Dunham divorced in the late 1970s, and he died of a liver ailment in 1987. Fornek, Scott (September 9 2007). "Lolo Soetoro". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) They had one daughter together, Maya Soetoro, Obama's half-sister. On his father's side, Obama has two half-sisters and five surviving half-brothers. Sheridan, Michael (January 28 2007). "Secrets of Obama Family Unlocked". Sunday Times (UK). Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) See also: Obama (1995), Chapter 2 and Chapters 15–19 (Part 3: Kenya).
  10. ^ a b Barker, Kim (March 25 2007). "Obama Madrassa Myth Debunked". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ Staff writer (2007-01-25). "Obama debunks claim about Islamic school". Associated Press. MSNBC. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
  12. ^ a b Williamson, Lucy (2008-19-20). "Jakarta classmates recall 'Barry' Obama". BBC News. Retrieved 2008-04-20. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  13. ^ a b Watson, Paul (2007-03-16). "Islam an unknown factor in Obama bid". Balitmore Sun. Retrieved 2008-03-16.
  14. ^ Scharnberg, Kirsten (March 25 2007). "The Not-So-Simple Story of Barack Obama's Youth". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) Anderton, Trish (June 2007). "Obama's Jakarta Trail". Jakarta Post. Archived from the original on 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2008-01-04. For Obama's published accounts of his schooling in Indonesia, see: Obama (1995), p. 154, and Obama (2006), p. 274.
  15. ^ Citing comments made by Indonesia's ambassador to the U.S., Time reported in December 2007 that Obama "still speaks passable Bahasa, the language spoken in Indonesia and Malaysia." Newton-Small, Jay (December 18 2007). "Obama's Foreign-Policy Problem". Time. Retrieved 2008-01-03. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  16. ^ Obama writes: "For my grandparents, my admission into Punahou Academy heralded the start of something grand, an elevation in the family status that they took great pains to let everyone know." Obama (1995), Chapters 3 and 4. See also: Mann, Fred (February 2 2008). "Kansas Roots Show in Obama, Say Relatives". Wichita Eagle. Retrieved 2008-02-11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. ^ Obama (1995), Preface to the 2004 Edition, p. xi. See also: Suryakusuma, Julia (November 29 2006). "Obama for President... of Indonesia". Jakarta Post. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  18. ^ Obama (1995), pp. 9–10.
  19. ^ Obama (1995), Chapters 4 and 5. See also: Serrano, Richard A (March 11 2007). "Obama's Peers Didn't See His Angst" (paid archive). Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  20. ^ "Obama Gets Blunt with N.H. Students". Associated Press. Boston Globe. November 21 2007. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) In Dreams from My Father, Obama writes: "Pot had helped, and booze; maybe a little blow when you could afford it." Obama (1995), pp. 93–94. For analysis of the political impact of the quote and Obama's more recent admission that he smoked marijuana as a teenager ("When I was a kid, I inhaled."), see: Romano, Lois (January 3 2007). "Effect of Obama's Candor Remains to Be Seen". Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Seelye, Katharine Q (October 24 2006). "Obama Offers More Variations From the Norm". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  21. ^ http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/08/16/warren.forum/
  22. ^ Schoenburg, Bernard. "Frank Talk About Drug Use in Obama’s 'Open Book'", The State Journal-Register via the Media Awareness Project (2003-11-16). Retrieved 2008-08-23.
  23. ^ Reyes, B. J (February 8 2007). "Punahou Left Lasting Impression on Obama". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 2008-01-04. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) "As a teenager, Obama went to parties and sometimes sought out gatherings on military bases or at the University of Hawaii that were mostly attended by blacks."
  24. ^ "Oxy Remembers "Barry" Obama '83". Occidental College. January 29 2007. Retrieved 2008-04-13. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  25. ^ Boss-Bicak, Shira (January 2005). "Barack Obama '83". Columbia College Today. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Chassie, Karen (ed.) (2007). Who's Who in America, 2008. New Providence, NJ: Marquis Who's Who. p. p. 3468. ISBN 9780837970110. Retrieved 2008-06-06. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help); |page= has extra text (help)
  27. ^ Scott, Janny (October 30 2007). "Obama's Account of New York Years Often Differs from What Others Say". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) Obama (1995), pp. 133–140; Mendell (2007), pp. 62–63.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g Lizza, Ryan (2007-03-19). "The Agitator: Barack Obama's unlikely political education" (alternate link). New Republic. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
  29. ^ Secter, Bob; McCormick, John (2007-03-30). "Portrait of a pragmatist". Chicago Tribune. p. 1. Retrieved 2008-06-06.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Obama (1995), pp. 140–295; Mendell (2007), pp. 63–83.
  30. ^ Barack Obama quits Trinity United Church of Christ, June 1, 2008
  31. ^ Matchan, Linda (1990-02-15). "A Law Review breakthrough" (paid archive). The Boston Globe. p. 29. Retrieved 2008-06-06. Corr, John (1990-02-27). "From mean streets to hallowed halls" (paid archive). The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. C01. Retrieved 2008-06-06.
  32. ^ a b c d e Lizza, Ryan, "Making It: How Chicago Shaped Obama", The New Yorker, July 21, 2008, retrieved July 16, 2008
  33. ^ Obama, Barack (1988). "Why organize? Problems and promise in the inner city". Illinois Issues. 14 (8–9): 40–42. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help) reprinted in: Knoepfle, Peg (ed.) (1990). After Alinsky: community organizing in Illinois. Springfield, IL: Sangamon State University. pp. pp. 35–40. ISBN 0962087335. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); |author= has generic name (help); |pages= has extra text (help) Tayler, Letta; Herbert, Keith (2008-03-02). "Obama forged path as Chicago community organizer". Newsday. p. A06. Retrieved 2008-06-06.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  34. ^ Obama (1995), pp. 299–437.
  35. ^ a b Levenson, Michael; Saltzman, Jonathan (2007-01-28). "At Harvard Law, a unifying voice". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2008-06-15.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Kantor, Jodi (2007-01-28). "In law school, Obama found political voice". The New York Times. p. 1. Retrieved 2008-06-15. Kodama, Marie C (2007-01-19). "Obama left mark on HLS". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 2008-06-15. Mundy, Liza (2007-08-12). "A series of fortunate events". The Washington Post. p. W10. Retrieved 2008-06-15. Heilemann, John (October 22, 2007). "When they were young". New York. 40 (37): 32–7, 132–3. Retrieved 2008-06-15. Mendell (2007), pp. 80–92.
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