Yes, Hill Harper graduated from Columbia University in 1983. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology. Additionally, he later obtained a J.D. from Harvard Law School. Harper is also known for his work as an actor and author.
He did not graduate from there. He left after two years and transferred to Columbia University, where he received a degree, in Political Science in 1983.
He graduated in 1983 with a degree in Political Science. Contrary to internet myths, several of the alumni and former professors remember him very well, and he was written about in Columbia's alumni magazine.
Barack Obama graduated from Columbia University in 1983. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science with a specialization in international relations. After Columbia, he went on to attend Harvard Law School, where he became the first Black president of the Harvard Law Review.
Yes he did, although it was called a college back then; he graduated from Columbia in 1983.
According to the Harvard University Archives, Barack Obama graduated from Harvard Law School with his Doctor of Laws degree on June 6, 1991; this was a Thursday. According to the archives of Columbia College (before it was known as Columbia University), Barack Obama graduated with his Bachelor's degree on May 16, 1983, which was a Monday.
He attended what was then called Columbia College in 1982-1983, having transferred from Occidental College in Los Angeles. He graduated from Columbia in 1983, with a degree in Political Science.
He received a degree in Political Science in 1983 from what is today called Columbia University in New York.
According to Wayne A. Root he is a 1983 graduate of Columbia University, the same year as Barry Soetoro, known now as Barack H. Obama.
President Barack Obama attended Columbia University and majored in political science. He spent two years there and graduated in 1983.
He transferred there from Occidental College in Los Angeles in 1981, and graduated from Columbia in 1983.
Columbia University began admitting women as undergraduate students in 1983, when it became fully coeducational. Prior to this, women had been admitted to certain graduate and professional schools since the late 19th century. The decision to admit women to the undergraduate college marked a significant shift in the university's policies regarding gender inclusion.
Yes, he received his Bachelor's degree from Columbia University in 1983.