• Mike Huckabee attended Hope High School, in Hope, Arkansas
• In 1973, Huckabee attended Ouachita Baptist University in
Arkadelphia, Arkansas and graduated magna cum laude, completing
his four-year bachelor's degree in Religion in just
two-and-a-half years.
• Following his graduation, he enrolled at the Southwestern
Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas for one
academic year after which he had to drop out of seminary in order
to take up a job in Christian broadcasting.
• He worked for several years for televangelist James Robinson
and later served as a minister at Baptist churches in Pine Bluff
and Texarkana, Arkansas, and as President of two Christian TV
operations.
• Huckabee has two honorary doctoral degrees: the Doctor of
Humane Letters received from John Brown University in 1991 and
the Doctor of Laws from Ouachita Baptist University in 1992.
• This Pastor-turned-Politician is also an Honorary Member of
Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
• While in college, Huckabee worked during the week as a rock
'n roll DJ at the local Radio station in Hope and then spent the
weekends preaching at a Baptist Church.
• As a young man, Huckabee dreamed of a career in media or
public service. It was by accident that he became a pastor for 12
years. Huckabee remembers, "In 1980, a church in Arkansas asked
me to come and speak for them, and I did. Then they asked me to
come back and speak again, and I did. And after about four
months, they said, why don't you just stay? And that's how I
became a pastor"
Obama began his education at the Noelani Elementary School in
Woodlawn Drive, Honolulu, in 1966. After the move with his mother
to Indonesia in 1967, his stepfather, Lolo Soetoro, enrolled him
in SD Fransiscus Asisi (St. Francis of Asisi), a Catholic primary
school under the auspices of the St. Francis of Asisi Church in
Jakarta. He spent three years there before being transferred to
the government-run Menteng State Elementary School in 1970 for
his darjah empat dan lima (fourth and fifth grade).
Upon returning to Hawaii in 1971, his grandparents sent him to
the exclusive Punahou School in Honululu, which is also the
biggest private school in the country. Obama was a popular
student there, participating in various extra-curricular
activities whilst maintaining a respectable grade. The pinnacle
of his achievement at Punahou was playing for the school
basketball team that finished as State Champions in 1979. He
would recount later in his book, Dreams From My Father, how the
emerging questions about his identity, his self, pushed him
towards alcohol, drugs and parties, and for a brief period of
time, threatened to extinguish his potential.
“Junkie. Pothead. That’s where I’d been headed: the
final, fatal role of the young would-be black man. Except the
highs hadn’t been about that, me trying to prove what a down
brother I was. Not by then, anyway. I got high for just the
opposite effect, something that could push questions of who I was
out of my mind, something that could flatten out the landscape of
my heart, blur the edges of my memory. I had discovered that it
didn’t make any difference whether you smoked reefer in the
white classmate’s sparkling new van, or in the dorm room of
some brother you’d met down at the gym, or on the beach with a
couple of Hawaiian kids who had dropped out of school and now
spent most of their time looking for an excuse to brawl…”
“It was at the start of my senior year in high school; she was
back in Hawaii, her field work completed, and one day she had
marched into my room, wanting to know the details of Pablo’s
arrest. I had given her a reassuring smile and patted her hand
and told her not to worry, I wouldn’t do anything stupid. It
was usually an effective tactic, another one of those tricks I
had learned: People were satisfied so long as you were courteous
and smiled and made no sudden moves…”
“Except my mother hadn’t looked satisfied. She had just sat
there, studying my eyes, her face as grim as a hearse. “Don’t
you think you’re being a little casual about your future?”
she said. “What do you mean?” “You know exactly what I
mean. One of your friends was just arrested for drug possession.
Your grades are slipping. You haven’t even started on your
college applications. Whenever I try to talk to you about it you
act like I’m just this great big bother.”
I didn’t need to hear all this. It wasn’t like I was flunking
out. I started to tell her how I’d been thinking about maybe
not going away for college, how I could stay in Hawaii and take
some classes and work part-time. She cut me off before I could
finish. I could get into any school in the country, she said, if
I just put in a little effort. “Remember what that’s like?
Effort? Damn it, Bar, you can’t just sit around like some
good-time Charlie, waiting for luck to see you
through…”
Dreams From My Father, page
54-55
Obama was at Punahou for a total of eight years until his
graduation in 1979. He moved to Eagle Rock in Los Angeles a
couple of months later after his application to Occidental
College, one of the most highly regarded liberal arts colleges in
the country, was accepted. It was his two years at Occidental
that proved to be the catalyst of his birth into the world of
politics.
The culture of student activism there drew out the simmering
sense of alienation that has accompanied Obama throughout his
young adult life. It was here also that the idea of public
service, a notion long espoused by his mother, began to take
shape within him. The quiet junior from Haines Hall gradually
participated in a number of initiatives organized by the
students. The Iranian hostage crisis, the apartheid policy of
South Africa and the nation’s economic upheavals all proved to
resonate deeply with Obama. In his sophomore year, on Feb. 18,
1981, Obama made his first public speech, calling for the
trustees of the college to divest from South Africa.
August 25, 2008, From the Boston Globe, by Scott
Helman
However, he felt a need to experience something bigger, and in
the summer of 1981, Obama engineered a transfer to Columbia
University of New York. He graduated from Columbia in 1983 with a
BA in Political Science, majoring in International Relations.
After graduation, Obama worked as a financial writer for over a
year at Business International Corporation, a New York-based
international consulting firm.
After almost four years studying and working in New York, Obama
moved to Chicago in 1985. The seeds that his mother had planted
in him finally bloomed, and after an exhaustive job hunt, Obama
decided to accept the position of Director for the Developing
Communities Project in Roseland and Altgeld Gardens in
Chicago’s South Side.
“… by the time I graduated from college, I was possessed
with a crazy idea — that I would work at a grassroots level to
bring about change. I wrote letters to every organization in the
country I could think of. And one day, a small group of churches
on the South Side of Chicago offered me a job to come work as a
community organizer in neighborhoods that had been devastated by
steel plant closings.
My mother and grandparents wanted me to go to law school. My
friends were applying to jobs on Wall Street. Meanwhile, this
organization offered me $12,000 a year plus $2,000 for an old,
beat-up car. And I said yes. Now, I didn’t know a soul in
Chicago, and I wasn’t sure what this community organizing
business was all about. I had always been inspired by stories of
the Civil Rights Movement and JFK’s call to service, but when I
got to the South Side, there were no marches, and no soaring
speeches. In the shadow of an empty steel plant, there were just
a lot of folks who were struggling. And we didn’t get very far
at first.
I still remember one of the very first meetings we put together
to discuss gang violence with a group of community leaders. We
waited and waited for people to show up, and finally, a group of
older people walked into the hall. And they sat down. And a
little old lady raised her hand and asked, “Is this where the
bingo game is?”
May 25, 2008, Barack Obama’s speech
at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut
By his third year there, Obama realized that enabling change in
such a disadvantaged community would necessitate a higher level
of involvement from both the private and public sector. To better
equip himself to meet these challenges, as well as fulfilling his
mother’s wish, he applied to Harvard Law School in
Massachusetts. In 1988, Obama left his job in Chicago after being
accepted into Harvard Law. Armed with experience and driven by
desire, he became a star student there. He achieved the
distinction of becoming the first ever black Editor and
subsequently, President, of the Harvard Law Review, which is the
most respected and widely cited student law review in the
country. He obtained his Juris Doctor in 1991, graduating Magna
Cum Laude.