https://www.wikicu.com/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=BenjaminButton&feedformat=atomWikiCU - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T05:54:59ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.31.8https://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56754Sara Bernstein2022-06-30T12:06:57Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Father: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: [[Benjamin Apfel]] CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit [[Bloomingdale]]s (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=56753Benjamin Apfel2022-06-30T12:03:42Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]], [[Columbia Law School]] <br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '85, Naomi CC '86. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21. Uncles: Mark Apfel CC '83, Stuart Apfel CC '81.<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent a year at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Alexander_Hamilton_Medal&diff=56492Alexander Hamilton Medal2021-04-16T16:37:58Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Alexander Hamilton Medal''' is presented each year by the [[Columbia College Alumni Association]] to an alumnus/a or faculty member for distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of endeavor. The Alexander Hamilton Medal, first presented in [[1947]] to [[Nicholas Murray Butler]], is the highest tribute awarded to a member of the [[Columbia College]] community.<br />
<br />
Recently, [[Herman Wouk]]'s was [http://cgi.ebay.com/Fantastic-Rare-Columbia-University-Medal-Paperweight_W0QQitemZ7754432742QQcategoryZ39726QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem sold on eBay as a paperweight].<br />
<br />
==Past Winners==<br />
* [[1947]] - University President [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] CC 1882<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Frank Diehl Fackenthal]] CC 1906<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo]] CC 1909<br />
* [[1950]] - [[William Joseph Donovan]] CC 1905<br />
* [[1951]] - [[Harry James Carman]] (namesake of Carman Hall)<br />
* [[1952]] - [[Carlton Hayes]] CC 1904<br />
* [[1953]] - [[Arthur Hays Sulzberger]] CC 1913<br />
* [[1954]] - [[Frank Smithwick Hogan]] CC 1924<br />
* [[1955]] - Frederick Coykendall CC 1895<br />
* [[1955]] - [[Marcellus Hartley Dodge]] CC 1903<br />
* [[1956]] - [[Richard Rodgers]] CC 1923 and [[Oscar Hammerstein II]] CC 1916<br />
* [[1957]] - University President [[Grayson Kirk]]<br />
* [[1958]] - Edmund Prentis Mines 1906<br />
* [[1959]] - [[Mark Van Doren]] PhD 1920<br />
* [[1960]] - Ward Melville CC 1909<br />
* [[1961]] - The College honored its Nobel Laureates: Edward Calvin Kendall (CC 1908), [[Polykarp Kusch]], Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr., Joshua Lederberg (CC 1944), Herman Joseph Miller (CC 1910), John Howard Northrop (CC 1912), [[Isidor Isaac Rabi]], Harold Clayton Urey <br />
* [[1975]] - [[Meyer Schapiro]] CC '24<br />
* [[1979]] - University President [[William McGill]]<br />
* [[1980]] - [[Herman Wouk]] CC '34<br />
* [[1983]] - [[Franklin Thomas]]<br />
* [[1986]] - [[Joseph Mankiewicz]]<br />
* [[1989]] - [[Robert Pollack]] CC '61<br />
* [[1991]] - [[John Kluge]] CC '37<br />
* [[1994]] - Core Curriculum Faculty: Honoring the 75th Anniversary of the [[Core Curriculum]] by awarding the 75 tenured faculty teaching Core Classes. Accepted on their behalf by [[Jacques Barzun]] CC '27<br />
* [[1995]] - Columbia Science [[Nobel Prize]] Winners since [[1961]]: Leon N. Cooper `51 (Physics 1972), Roald Hoffmann `58 (Chemistry 1981), Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. `35 (Physics 1989), Melvin Schwartz `53 (Physics 1988) Julian S. Schwinger `36 (posthumously) (Physics 1965)<br />
* [[1997]] - [[Alfred Lerner]] CC '55<br />
* [[1998]] - [[Roone Arledge]] CC '52<br />
* [[1999]] - Columbia Professors: [[William Theodore de Bary]], CC'41, [[James Shenton]], CC'49, [[Richard Axel]], CC'67<br />
* [[2000]] - [[William Campbell]], CC '62<br />
* [[2003]] - [[Emanuel Ax]] CC '70<br />
* [[2004]] - [[Robert Kraft]] CC '63<br />
* [[2005]] - [[Richard Witten]] CC '75<br />
* [[2006]] - [[Bob Berne]] CC '60 BUS '60<br />
* [[2007]] - [[Mark E. Kingdon]] CC '71<br />
* [[2008]] - Columbia College Dean [[Austin Quigley]]<br />
* [[2009]] - [[Conrad H. Lung]] CC '72<br />
* [[2010]] - [[Michael Rothfeld]] CC '69 J'71 SIPA '71 Business '71<br />
* [[2011]] - [[Gerry Lenfest]] Law '58<br />
* [[2012]] - [[Jonathan Schiller]] '69, '73LAW<br />
* [[2013]] - [[Joel I. Klein]] CC '67<br />
* [[2014]] - [[Phillip M. Satow]] CC '63<br />
* [[2015]] - [[Eric H. Holder]] CC '73, LAW '76<br />
* [[2016]] - Columbia Professors [[Eric Foner]] CC '63, GSAS '69, [[Ronald Breslow]], [[Kenneth T. Jackson]]<br />
* [[2017]] - [[Jonathan S. Lavine]] CC '88<br />
* [[2018]] - [[Lisa L. Carnoy]] CC '89<br />
* [[2019]] - [[Dr. George D. Yancopoulos]] CC '80, GSAS '86, PS '87<br />
Previous winners also include Columbia President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.college.columbia.edu/alumni/events/hamiltondinner/previoushonorees List of honorees]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Alexander Hamilton Medal recipients|*]]<br />
[[Category:Alumni awards]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Alexander_Hamilton_Medal&diff=56491Alexander Hamilton Medal2021-04-16T16:37:41Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Alexander Hamilton Medal''' is presented each year by the [[Columbia College Alumni Association]] to an alumnus/a or faculty member for distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of endeavor. The Alexander Hamilton Medal, first presented in [[1947]] to [[Nicholas Murray Butler]], is the highest tribute awarded to a member of the [[Columbia College]] community.<br />
<br />
Recently, [[Herman Wouk]]'s was [http://cgi.ebay.com/Fantastic-Rare-Columbia-University-Medal-Paperweight_W0QQitemZ7754432742QQcategoryZ39726QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem sold on eBay as a paperweight].<br />
<br />
==Past Winners==<br />
* [[1947]] - University President [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] CC 1882<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Frank Diehl Fackenthal]] CC 1906<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo]] CC 1909<br />
* [[1950]] - [[William Joseph Donovan]] CC 1905<br />
* [[1951]] - [[Harry James Carman]] (namesake of Carman Hall)<br />
* [[1952]] - [[Carlton Hayes]] CC 1904<br />
* [[1953]] - [[Arthur Hays Sulzberger]] CC 1913<br />
* [[1954]] - [[Frank Smithwick Hogan]] CC 1924<br />
* [[1955]] - Frederick Coykendall CC 1895<br />
* [[1955]] - [[Marcellus Hartley Dodge]] CC 1903<br />
* [[1956]] - [[Richard Rodgers]] CC 1923 and [[Oscar Hammerstein II]] CC 1916<br />
* [[1957]] - University President [[Grayson Kirk]]<br />
* [[1958]] - Edmund Prentis Mines 1906<br />
* [[1959]] - [[Mark Van Doren]] PhD 1920<br />
* [[1960]] - Ward Melville CC 1909<br />
* [[1961]] - The College honored its Nobel Laureates: Edward Calvin Kendall (CC 1908), [[Polykarp Kusch]], Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr., Joshua Lederberg (CC 1944), Herman Joseph Miller (CC 1910), John Howard Northrop (CC 1912), [[Isidor Isaac Rabi]], Harold Clayton Urey <br />
* [[1975]] - [[Meyer Schapiro]] CC '24<br />
* [[1979]] - University President [[William McGill]]<br />
* [[1980]] - [[Herman Wouk]] CC '34<br />
* [[1983]] - [[Franklin Thomas]]<br />
* [[1986]] - [[Joseph Mankiewicz]]<br />
* [[1989]] - [[Robert Pollack]] CC '61<br />
* [[1991]] - [[John Kluge]] CC '37<br />
* [[1994]] - Core Curriculum Faculty: Honoring the 75th Anniversary of the [[Core Curriculum]] by awarding the 75 tenured faculty teaching Core Classes. Accepted on their behalf by [[Jacques Barzun]] CC '27<br />
* [[1995]] - Columbia Science [[Nobel Prize]] Winners since [[1961]]: Leon N. Cooper `51 (Physics 1972), Roald Hoffmann `58 (Chemistry 1981), Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. `35 (Physics 1989), Melvin Schwartz `53 (Physics 1988) Julian S. Schwinger `36 (posthumously) (Physics 1965)<br />
* [[1997]] - [[Alfred Lerner]] CC '55<br />
* [[1998]] - [[Roone Arledge]] CC '52<br />
* [[1999]] - Columbia Professors: [[William Theodore de Bary]], CC'41, [[James Shenton]], CC'49, [[Richard Axel]], CC'67<br />
* [[2000]] - [[William Campbell]], CC '62<br />
* [[2003]] - [[Emanuel Ax]] CC '70<br />
* [[2004]] - [[Robert Kraft]] CC '63<br />
* [[2005]] - [[Richard Witten]] CC '75<br />
* [[2006]] - [[Bob Berne]] CC '60 BUS '60<br />
* [[2007]] - [[Mark E. Kingdon]] CC '71<br />
* [[2008]] - Columbia College Dean [[Austin Quigley]]<br />
* [[2009]] - [[Conrad H. Lung]] CC '72<br />
* [[2010]] - [[Michael Rothfeld]] CC '69 J'71 SIPA '71 Business '71<br />
* [[2011]] - [[Gerry Lenfest]] Law '58<br />
* [[2012]] - [[Jonathan Schiller]] '69, '73LAW<br />
* [[2013]] - [[Joel I. Klein]] CC '67<br />
* [[2014]] - [[Phillip M. Satow]] CC '63<br />
* [[2015]] - [[Eric H. Holder]] CC '73, LAW '76<br />
* [[2016]] - Columbia Professors [[Eric Foner]] CC '63, GSAS '69, [[Ronald Breslow]], [[Kenneth T. Jackson]]<br />
* [[2017]] - [[Jonathan S. Lavine]] CC '88<br />
* [[2018]] - [[Lisa L. Carnoy]] CC'89<br />
* [[2019]] - [[Dr. George D. Yancopoulos]] CC '80, GSAS '86, PS '87<br />
Previous winners also include Columbia President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.college.columbia.edu/alumni/events/hamiltondinner/previoushonorees List of honorees]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Alexander Hamilton Medal recipients|*]]<br />
[[Category:Alumni awards]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Alexander_Hamilton_Medal&diff=56490Alexander Hamilton Medal2021-04-16T16:37:25Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Alexander Hamilton Medal''' is presented each year by the [[Columbia College Alumni Association]] to an alumnus/a or faculty member for distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of endeavor. The Alexander Hamilton Medal, first presented in [[1947]] to [[Nicholas Murray Butler]], is the highest tribute awarded to a member of the [[Columbia College]] community.<br />
<br />
Recently, [[Herman Wouk]]'s was [http://cgi.ebay.com/Fantastic-Rare-Columbia-University-Medal-Paperweight_W0QQitemZ7754432742QQcategoryZ39726QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem sold on eBay as a paperweight].<br />
<br />
==Past Winners==<br />
* [[1947]] - University President [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] CC 1882<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Frank Diehl Fackenthal]] CC 1906<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo]] CC 1909<br />
* [[1950]] - [[William Joseph Donovan]] CC 1905<br />
* [[1951]] - [[Harry James Carman]] (namesake of Carman Hall)<br />
* [[1952]] - [[Carlton Hayes]] CC 1904<br />
* [[1953]] - [[Arthur Hays Sulzberger]] CC 1913<br />
* [[1954]] - [[Frank Smithwick Hogan]] CC 1924<br />
* [[1955]] - Frederick Coykendall CC 1895<br />
* [[1955]] - [[Marcellus Hartley Dodge]] CC 1903<br />
* [[1956]] - [[Richard Rodgers]] CC 1923 and [[Oscar Hammerstein II]] CC 1916<br />
* [[1957]] - University President [[Grayson Kirk]]<br />
* [[1958]] - Edmund Prentis Mines 1906<br />
* [[1959]] - [[Mark Van Doren]] PhD 1920<br />
* [[1960]] - Ward Melville CC 1909<br />
* [[1961]] - The College honored its Nobel Laureates: Edward Calvin Kendall (CC 1908), [[Polykarp Kusch]], Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr., Joshua Lederberg (CC 1944), Herman Joseph Miller (CC 1910), John Howard Northrop (CC 1912), [[Isidor Isaac Rabi]], Harold Clayton Urey <br />
* [[1975]] - [[Meyer Schapiro]] CC '24<br />
* [[1979]] - University President [[William McGill]]<br />
* [[1980]] - [[Herman Wouk]] CC '34<br />
* [[1983]] - [[Franklin Thomas]]<br />
* [[1986]] - [[Joseph Mankiewicz]]<br />
* [[1989]] - [[Robert Pollack]] CC '61<br />
* [[1991]] - [[John Kluge]] CC '37<br />
* [[1994]] - Core Curriculum Faculty: Honoring the 75th Anniversary of the [[Core Curriculum]] by awarding the 75 tenured faculty teaching Core Classes. Accepted on their behalf by [[Jacques Barzun]] CC '27<br />
* [[1995]] - Columbia Science [[Nobel Prize]] Winners since [[1961]]: Leon N. Cooper `51 (Physics 1972), Roald Hoffmann `58 (Chemistry 1981), Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. `35 (Physics 1989), Melvin Schwartz `53 (Physics 1988) Julian S. Schwinger `36 (posthumously) (Physics 1965)<br />
* [[1997]] - [[Alfred Lerner]] CC '55<br />
* [[1998]] - [[Roone Arledge]] CC '52<br />
* [[1999]] - Columbia Professors: [[William Theodore de Bary]], CC'41, [[James Shenton]], CC'49, [[Richard Axel]], CC'67<br />
* [[2000]] - [[William Campbell]], CC '62<br />
* [[2003]] - [[Emanuel Ax]] CC '70<br />
* [[2004]] - [[Robert Kraft]] CC '63<br />
* [[2005]] - [[Richard Witten]] CC '75<br />
* [[2006]] - [[Bob Berne]] CC '60 BUS '60<br />
* [[2007]] - [[Mark E. Kingdon]] CC '71<br />
* [[2008]] - Columbia College Dean [[Austin Quigley]]<br />
* [[2009]] - [[Conrad H. Lung]] CC '72<br />
* [[2010]] - [[Michael Rothfeld]] CC '69 J'71 SIPA '71 Business '71<br />
* [[2011]] - [[Gerry Lenfest]] Law '58<br />
* [[2012]] - [[Jonathan Schiller]] '69, '73LAW<br />
* [[2013]] - [[Joel I. Klein]] CC '67<br />
* [[2014]] - [[Phillip M. Satow]] CC '63<br />
* [[2015]] - [[Eric H. Holder]] CC '73, LAW '76<br />
* [[2016]] - Columbia Professors [[Eric Foner]] CC '63, GSAS '69 [[Ronald Breslow]] [[Kenneth T. Jackson]]<br />
* [[2017]] - [[Jonathan S. Lavine]] CC '88<br />
* [[2018]] - [[Lisa L. Carnoy]] CC'89<br />
* [[2019]] - [[Dr. George D. Yancopoulos]] CC '80, GSAS '86, PS '87<br />
Previous winners also include Columbia President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.college.columbia.edu/alumni/events/hamiltondinner/previoushonorees List of honorees]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Alexander Hamilton Medal recipients|*]]<br />
[[Category:Alumni awards]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Alexander_Hamilton_Medal&diff=56489Alexander Hamilton Medal2021-04-16T16:37:09Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>The '''Alexander Hamilton Medal''' is presented each year by the [[Columbia College Alumni Association]] to an alumnus/a or faculty member for distinguished service and accomplishment in any field of endeavor. The Alexander Hamilton Medal, first presented in [[1947]] to [[Nicholas Murray Butler]], is the highest tribute awarded to a member of the [[Columbia College]] community.<br />
<br />
Recently, [[Herman Wouk]]'s was [http://cgi.ebay.com/Fantastic-Rare-Columbia-University-Medal-Paperweight_W0QQitemZ7754432742QQcategoryZ39726QQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem sold on eBay as a paperweight].<br />
<br />
==Past Winners==<br />
* [[1947]] - University President [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] CC 1882<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Frank Diehl Fackenthal]] CC 1906<br />
* [[1948]] - [[Vi Kyuin Wellington Koo]] CC 1909<br />
* [[1950]] - [[William Joseph Donovan]] CC 1905<br />
* [[1951]] - [[Harry James Carman]] (namesake of Carman Hall)<br />
* [[1952]] - [[Carlton Hayes]] CC 1904<br />
* [[1953]] - [[Arthur Hays Sulzberger]] CC 1913<br />
* [[1954]] - [[Frank Smithwick Hogan]] CC 1924<br />
* [[1955]] - Frederick Coykendall CC 1895<br />
* [[1955]] - [[Marcellus Hartley Dodge]] CC 1903<br />
* [[1956]] - [[Richard Rodgers]] CC 1923 and [[Oscar Hammerstein II]] CC 1916<br />
* [[1957]] - University President [[Grayson Kirk]]<br />
* [[1958]] - Edmund Prentis Mines 1906<br />
* [[1959]] - [[Mark Van Doren]] PhD 1920<br />
* [[1960]] - Ward Melville CC 1909<br />
* [[1961]] - The College honored its Nobel Laureates: Edward Calvin Kendall (CC 1908), [[Polykarp Kusch]], Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr., Joshua Lederberg (CC 1944), Herman Joseph Miller (CC 1910), John Howard Northrop (CC 1912), [[Isidor Isaac Rabi]], Harold Clayton Urey <br />
* [[1975]] - [[Meyer Schapiro]] CC '24<br />
* [[1979]] - University President [[William McGill]]<br />
* [[1980]] - [[Herman Wouk]] CC '34<br />
* [[1983]] - [[Franklin Thomas]]<br />
* [[1986]] - [[Joseph Mankiewicz]]<br />
* [[1989]] - [[Robert Pollack]] CC '61<br />
* [[1991]] - [[John Kluge]] CC '37<br />
* [[1994]] - Core Curriculum Faculty: Honoring the 75th Anniversary of the [[Core Curriculum]] by awarding the 75 tenured faculty teaching Core Classes. Accepted on their behalf by [[Jacques Barzun]] CC '27<br />
* [[1995]] - Columbia Science [[Nobel Prize]] Winners since [[1961]]: Leon N. Cooper `51 (Physics 1972), Roald Hoffmann `58 (Chemistry 1981), Norman F. Ramsey, Jr. `35 (Physics 1989), Melvin Schwartz `53 (Physics 1988) Julian S. Schwinger `36 (posthumously) (Physics 1965)<br />
* [[1997]] - [[Alfred Lerner]] CC '55<br />
* [[1998]] - [[Roone Arledge]] CC '52<br />
* [[1999]] - Columbia Professors: [[William Theodore de Bary]], CC'41, [[James Shenton]], CC'49, [[Richard Axel]], CC'67<br />
* [[2000]] - [[William Campbell]], CC '62<br />
* [[2003]] - [[Emanuel Ax]] CC '70<br />
* [[2004]] - [[Robert Kraft]] CC '63<br />
* [[2005]] - [[Richard Witten]] CC '75<br />
* [[2006]] - [[Bob Berne]] CC '60 BUS '60<br />
* [[2007]] - [[Mark E. Kingdon]] CC '71<br />
* [[2008]] - Columbia College Dean [[Austin Quigley]]<br />
* [[2009]] - [[Conrad H. Lung]] CC '72<br />
* [[2010]] - [[Michael Rothfeld]] CC '69 J'71 SIPA '71 Business '71<br />
* [[2011]] - [[Gerry Lenfest]] Law '58<br />
* [[2012]] - [[Jonathan Schiller]] '69, '73LAW<br />
* [[2013]] - [[Joel I. Klein]] CC '67<br />
* [[2014]] - [[Phillip M. Satow]] CC '63<br />
* [[2015]] - [[Eric H. Holder]] CC '73, LAW '76<br />
* [[2016]] - Columbia Professors [[Eric Foner]] CC '63, GSAS '69 [[Ronald Breslow] [[Kenneth T. Jackson]]<br />
* [[2017]] - [[Jonathan S. Lavine]] CC '88<br />
* [[2018]] - [[Lisa L. Carnoy]] CC'89<br />
* [[2019]] - [[Dr. George D. Yancopoulos]] CC '80, GSAS '86, PS '87<br />
Previous winners also include Columbia President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]].<br />
<br />
==External Links==<br />
*[http://www.college.columbia.edu/alumni/events/hamiltondinner/previoushonorees List of honorees]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Alexander Hamilton Medal recipients|*]]<br />
[[Category:Alumni awards]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Salutatorian&diff=56488Salutatorian2021-04-16T16:27:41Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>A '''Salutatorian''' is typically judged to be the second most worthy degree candidate in his or her school's respective graduating class by [[GPA]] and other measures.<br />
<br />
==List of [[Columbia College]] salutatorians==<br />
*[[2021]]: [[Sofia Montrone]]<br />
*[[2020]]: [[Ariana Mao]] <br />
*[[2019]]: [[Jessica Bai]]<br />
*[[2018]]: [[Hannah Bender]]<br />
*[[2017]]: [[Hui Yu Wong]]<br />
*[[2016]]: [[Zoe Poll]]<br />
*[[2015]]: [[Stephanie Gergoudis]]<br />
*[[2014]]: [[Samuel Walker]]<br />
*[[2013]]: [[Yoshiaki Ko]]<br />
*[[2012]]: [[Zachary Levine]]<br />
*[[2011]]: [[Elizabeth Lyon]]<br />
*[[2010]]: [[Jeff Spear]]<br />
*[[2009]]: [[Mollie Schwartz]]<br />
*[[2008]]: [[Julia Kalow]]<br />
*[[2007]]: [[Nick Klagge]]<br />
*[[2006]]: [[Julia DiBenigno]]<br />
*[[2005]]: [[Alexander Prescott-Couch]]<br />
*[[2004]]: [[Tienmu Ma]]<br />
*[[2003]]: [[Denise De Las Nueces]]<br />
*[[2002]]: [[Daniel Immerwahr]]<br />
*[[2001]]: [[Lauren Monacell]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1999]]: [[Dave Koenig]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1997]]: [[Aravind Adiga]]<br />
*[[1996]]: [[Yair Galil]]<br />
*[[1994]]: [[Emilie T. Hsu]]<br />
*[[1992]]: [[Robert Miller]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1990]]: [[Ali Yegulalp]]<br />
*[[1989]]: [[Leora Mogilner]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1987]]: [[Ilaria Rebay]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1982]]: [[George Stephanopoulos]]<br />
*[[1981]]: [[Christopher Jackson]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1976]]: [[Tom Schwartz]]<br />
*[[1975]]: [[John Matelski]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1974]]: [[James Russell]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1972]]: [[Joseph D. “Jody” Pope]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1970]]: [[Lawrence Rosenwald]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1967]]: [[Allen Michael Spiegel]]<br />
*[[1966]]: [[Paul Bogrow]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1963]]: [[Carl C. Chi]]<br />
*[[1962]]: [[Peter E. Winn]]<br />
*[[1961]]: [[Nathaniel Reichek]]<br />
*[[1960]]: [[Neil Decter]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1958]]: [[Henry Solomon]]<br />
*[[1957]]: [[Alvin Kass]]<br />
*[[1956]]: [[David Emery Wolf]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1955]]: [[Leroy L. Constantin]]<br />
*[[1954]]: [[Avrom H. Fleishman]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1950]]: [[Carl Hovde]]<br />
*[[1949]]: [[Gene Hawes]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1947]]: [[Robert L. Bonaparte]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1943]]: [[Eugene Remmer]]<br />
*[[1942]]: [[Seymour Ethan]]<br />
*[[1941]]: [[Donald Dike]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1939]]: [[Jerome Kurshan]]<br />
*[[1938]]: [[Alfred M. Duschatko]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1914]]: [[Benjamin Graham]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1882]]: [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] (also listed in some sources as valedictorian)<br />
<br />
==List of [[SEAS]] Salutatorians ==<br />
[[2011]]: [[Michael Wang]]<br />
<br />
==List of [[School of General Studies]] Salutatorians==<br />
*[[2013]]: <br />
*[[2012]]: [[Aliza Kathryn Minogue-Nachison]]<br />
*[[2011]]: [[Elliot Shackelford]]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Salutatorians|*]]<br />
[[Category:Commencement]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Salutatorian&diff=56487Salutatorian2021-04-16T16:27:32Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>A '''Salutatorian''' is typically judged to be the second most worthy degree candidate in his or her school's respective graduating class by [[GPA]] and other measures.<br />
<br />
==List of [[Columbia College]] salutatorians==<br />
*[[2021]]: [[Sofia Montrone]]<br />
*[[2020]]: [[Ariana Mao]] <br />
*[[2019]]: [[Jessica Bai]]<br />
*[[2018]]: [Hannah Bender]]<br />
*[[2017]]: [[Hui Yu Wong]]<br />
*[[2016]]: [[Zoe Poll]]<br />
*[[2015]]: [[Stephanie Gergoudis]]<br />
*[[2014]]: [[Samuel Walker]]<br />
*[[2013]]: [[Yoshiaki Ko]]<br />
*[[2012]]: [[Zachary Levine]]<br />
*[[2011]]: [[Elizabeth Lyon]]<br />
*[[2010]]: [[Jeff Spear]]<br />
*[[2009]]: [[Mollie Schwartz]]<br />
*[[2008]]: [[Julia Kalow]]<br />
*[[2007]]: [[Nick Klagge]]<br />
*[[2006]]: [[Julia DiBenigno]]<br />
*[[2005]]: [[Alexander Prescott-Couch]]<br />
*[[2004]]: [[Tienmu Ma]]<br />
*[[2003]]: [[Denise De Las Nueces]]<br />
*[[2002]]: [[Daniel Immerwahr]]<br />
*[[2001]]: [[Lauren Monacell]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1999]]: [[Dave Koenig]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1997]]: [[Aravind Adiga]]<br />
*[[1996]]: [[Yair Galil]]<br />
*[[1994]]: [[Emilie T. Hsu]]<br />
*[[1992]]: [[Robert Miller]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1990]]: [[Ali Yegulalp]]<br />
*[[1989]]: [[Leora Mogilner]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1987]]: [[Ilaria Rebay]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1982]]: [[George Stephanopoulos]]<br />
*[[1981]]: [[Christopher Jackson]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1976]]: [[Tom Schwartz]]<br />
*[[1975]]: [[John Matelski]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1974]]: [[James Russell]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1972]]: [[Joseph D. “Jody” Pope]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1970]]: [[Lawrence Rosenwald]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1967]]: [[Allen Michael Spiegel]]<br />
*[[1966]]: [[Paul Bogrow]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1963]]: [[Carl C. Chi]]<br />
*[[1962]]: [[Peter E. Winn]]<br />
*[[1961]]: [[Nathaniel Reichek]]<br />
*[[1960]]: [[Neil Decter]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1958]]: [[Henry Solomon]]<br />
*[[1957]]: [[Alvin Kass]]<br />
*[[1956]]: [[David Emery Wolf]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1955]]: [[Leroy L. Constantin]]<br />
*[[1954]]: [[Avrom H. Fleishman]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1950]]: [[Carl Hovde]]<br />
*[[1949]]: [[Gene Hawes]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1947]]: [[Robert L. Bonaparte]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1943]]: [[Eugene Remmer]]<br />
*[[1942]]: [[Seymour Ethan]]<br />
*[[1941]]: [[Donald Dike]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1939]]: [[Jerome Kurshan]]<br />
*[[1938]]: [[Alfred M. Duschatko]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1914]]: [[Benjamin Graham]]<br />
...<br />
*[[1882]]: [[Nicholas Murray Butler]] (also listed in some sources as valedictorian)<br />
<br />
==List of [[SEAS]] Salutatorians ==<br />
[[2011]]: [[Michael Wang]]<br />
<br />
==List of [[School of General Studies]] Salutatorians==<br />
*[[2013]]: <br />
*[[2012]]: [[Aliza Kathryn Minogue-Nachison]]<br />
*[[2011]]: [[Elliot Shackelford]]<br />
<br />
[[Category:Salutatorians|*]]<br />
[[Category:Commencement]]</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56486Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T13:51:32Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Father: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: [[Benjamin Apfel]] CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit [[Bloomingdale]]s (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56485Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T13:51:15Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: [[Benjamin Apfel]] CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit [[Bloomingdale]]s (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56484Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T13:28:30Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit [[Bloomingdale]]s (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56483Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:57:45Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit [[Bloomingdale]]s (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56482Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:57:13Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit Bloomingdales (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to [[Girls Who Code]].</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56481Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:55:55Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit Bloomingdales (her family moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to Girls Who Code.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56480Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:55:25Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost disciples of this decade. A little bit country (she was born in Houston) and a lot a bit Bloomingdales (her family subsequently moved to New Rochelle), Sara's unique perspective on the American experience greatly enriched Columbia's diverse community. An enthusiastic supporter of women in STEM, when Sara wasn't busy completing a problem set or surfing bloomies, she volunteered her time to Girls Who Code.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56479Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:47:52Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon]]'s foremost students.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56478Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:47:28Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Heath Cannon's]] foremost students.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56477Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:46:54Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Sara Bernstein, CC '21, was a trailblazing CS whiz and one of [[Adam Cannon's]] foremost students.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56476Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:39:05Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Class of Covid '19<br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Sara_Bernstein&diff=56475Sara Bernstein2021-04-16T12:37:44Z<p>BenjaminButton: Created page with "{{Infobox student |Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg |Name=Sara G. Bernstein |Birth Date=May 21, 1998 |School=Columbia College |Graduation Year=2021 |Awards and Recognition= |Occ..."</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Sara.Bernstein.jpg<br />
|Name=Sara G. Bernstein<br />
|Birth Date=May 21, 1998<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2021<br />
|Awards and Recognition= <br />
|Occupation= Computer Science, Personal Shopper<br />
|Family= Parents: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Brother in Law: Benjamin Apfel CC '18 <br />
|}}</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=File:Sara.Bernstein.jpg&diff=56474File:Sara.Bernstein.jpg2021-04-16T12:34:31Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div></div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=56473Benjamin Apfel2021-04-16T12:30:22Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]], [[Columbia Law School]] <br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '85, Naomi CC '86. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21. Uncles: Mark Apfel CC '83, Stuart Apfel CC '81.<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55510Benjamin Apfel2020-05-26T12:14:30Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '85, Naomi CC '86. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21. Uncles: Mark Apfel CC '83, Stuart Apfel CC '81.<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Dylan_Cooper&diff=55503Dylan Cooper2020-04-26T12:34:02Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Dylan Cooper.jpg<br />
|Name=Dylan J. Cooper<br />
|Birth Date=August 14, 1995<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition=Milch Prize Recipient, King's Crown Community Building Award, Psi Chi Honor Society<br />
|Occupation= Pre-med, heir to Cooper Hotels fortune<br />
|Family= Parents: Pace CC '85, Aileen BC '85. Siblings: Jeremy CC '17, Ethan CC '18, Elan CC '22, Ellin BC '19. Cousins: Daniella BC '17, Sade, BC '17, Jonathan CC '15, Jon SEAS '18, Yonatan CC '20. <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Dylan Cooper served as a member of [[URC]], and was elected to the [[Hillel]] executive board for the 2016-2017 term. <br />
<br />
He was the distinguished recipient of the 2017 [[Milch Prize]], which is awarded to the member of the junior class best able to suck up to the administration. He also was granted the [[King's Crown]] Community Building Award, presented to students who have "offered outstanding leadership to their communities with exemplary commitment and energy." <br />
<br />
Cooper founded the Steady Mobbers co-rec intramural basketball team and captained the team to 3 consecutive championships,[http://www.columbiaspectator.com/opinion/2016/04/12/steady-mobbing-championship/] though allegations of PED use and infidelity have dogged team members throughout their improbable run.<br />
<br />
As of September 2019, Cooper is purported to be romantically involved with Anna Cappell, Penn '19, paternal descendant of a prestigious Polish Rabbinic dynasty.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Dylan_Cooper&diff=55363Dylan Cooper2019-09-17T19:08:09Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Dylan Cooper.jpg<br />
|Name=Dylan J. Cooper<br />
|Birth Date=August 14, 1995<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition=Milch Prize Recipient, King's Crown Community Building Award, Psi Chi Honor Society<br />
|Occupation= Pre-med, heir to Cooper Hotels fortune<br />
|Family= Parents: Pace CC '85, Aileen BC '85. Siblings: Jeremy CC '17, Ethan CC '18, Elan CC '22, Ellin BC '19. Cousins: Daniella BC '17, Sade, BC '17, Jonathan CC '15, Jon SEAS '18, Yonatan CC '20. <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Dylan Cooper served as a member of [[URC]], and was elected to the [[Hillel]] executive board for the 2016-2017 term. <br />
<br />
He was the distinguished recipient of the 2017 [[Milch Prize]], which is awarded to the member of the junior class best able to suck up to the administration. He also was granted the [[King's Crown]] Community Building Award, presented to students who have "offered outstanding leadership to their communities with exemplary commitment and energy." <br />
<br />
Cooper founded the Steady Mobbers co-rec intramural basketball team and captained the team to 3 consecutive championships,[http://www.columbiaspectator.com/opinion/2016/04/12/steady-mobbing-championship/] though allegations of PED use and infidelity have dogged team members throughout their improbable run.<br />
<br />
As of September 2019, Cooper is purported to be romantically involved with Anna Cappell, Penn '19, paternal descendant to a prestigious Polish Rabbinic dynasty.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Dylan_Cooper&diff=55362Dylan Cooper2019-09-17T19:07:45Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Dylan Cooper.jpg<br />
|Name=Dylan J. Cooper<br />
|Birth Date=August 14, 1995<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition=Milch Prize Recipient, King's Crown Community Building Award, Psi Chi Honor Society<br />
|Occupation= Pre-med, heir to Cooper Hotels fortune<br />
|Family= Parents: Pace CC '85, Aileen BC '85. Siblings: Jeremy CC '17, Ethan CC '18, Elan CC '22, Ellin BC '19. Cousins: Daniella BC '17, Sade, BC '17, Jonathan CC '15, Jon SEAS '18, Yonatan CC '20. <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Dylan Cooper served as a member of [[URC]], and was elected to the [[Hillel]] executive board for the 2016-2017 term. <br />
<br />
He was the distinguished recipient of the 2017 [[Milch Prize]], which is awarded to the member of the junior class best able to suck up to the administration. He also was granted the [[King's Crown]] Community Building Award, presented to students who have "offered outstanding leadership to their communities with exemplary commitment and energy." <br />
<br />
Cooper founded the Steady Mobbers co-rec intramural basketball team and captained the team to 3 consecutive championships,[http://www.columbiaspectator.com/opinion/2016/04/12/steady-mobbing-championship/] though allegations of PED use and infidelity have dogged team members throughout their improbable run.<br />
<br />
As of September 2019, Cooper is purported to be romantically involved with Anna Cappell, Penn '19, a paternal descendant to a prestigious Polish Rabbinic dynasty.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Dylan_Cooper&diff=55361Dylan Cooper2019-09-17T19:04:21Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Dylan Cooper.jpg<br />
|Name=Dylan J. Cooper<br />
|Birth Date=August 14, 1995<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition=Milch Prize Recipient, King's Crown Community Building Award, Psi Chi Honor Society<br />
|Occupation= Pre-med, heir to Cooper Hotels fortune<br />
|Family= Parents: Pace CC '85, Aileen BC '85. Siblings: Jeremy CC '17, Ethan CC '18, Elan CC '22, Ellin BC '19. Cousins: Daniella BC '17, Sade, BC '17, Jonathan CC '15, Jon SEAS '18, Yonatan CC '20. <br />
|}}<br />
<br />
Dylan Cooper served as a member of [[URC]], and was elected to the [[Hillel]] executive board for the 2016-2017 term. <br />
<br />
He was the distinguished recipient of the 2017 [[Milch Prize]], which is awarded to the member of the junior class best able to suck up to the administration. He also was granted the [[King's Crown]] Community Building Award, presented to students who have "offered outstanding leadership to their communities with exemplary commitment and energy." <br />
<br />
Cooper founded the Steady Mobbers co-rec intramural basketball team and captained the team to 3 consecutive championships,[http://www.columbiaspectator.com/opinion/2016/04/12/steady-mobbing-championship/] though allegations of PED use and infidelity have dogged team members throughout their improbable run.<br />
<br />
As of September 2019, Cooper is purported to be romantically involved with Anna Cappell.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55335Benjamin Apfel2018-12-11T01:52:14Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55334Benjamin Apfel2018-12-11T01:47:37Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has regularly spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH". Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55276Benjamin Apfel2018-07-01T05:23:38Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, LAW '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55275Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:52:19Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55274Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:49:58Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy solely for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55273Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:47:17Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years at an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noted only for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55272Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:46:47Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noted only for its sustained mediocrity.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55271Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:43:08Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise noteworthy only for it being unremarkabale.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55270Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:42:29Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's term at Columbia was otherwise unremarkable.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55269Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:41:51Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content. Benjamin's tenure at Columbia was otherwise unremarkable.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55268Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:39:45Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award, [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55267Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:39:29Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award. [[WikiCU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55266Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:39:00Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award. [[WIKICU]] editor.<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55265Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:38:14Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law: Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law: Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55264Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T12:37:57Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. Father in Law= Joseph Bernstein CC '87. Sister in Law= Sara Bernstein CC '21<br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55263Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:12:12Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at the Columbia hip hop society "CUSH", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55262Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:11:29Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, "[[CUSH]]", but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55261Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:07:03Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists of the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55260Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:05:30Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18, CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists for the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in politicized speech in the classroom, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55259Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:04:14Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18 CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists for the [[Columbia Daily Spectator]]'s column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in political action, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55258Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:03:32Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= Nominee for [[King's Crown]] Award<br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18 CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists for the [[Columbia Daily Spectator's]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in political action, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55257Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:02:02Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Awards and Recognition= <br />
|Occupation= Philosophy/Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18 CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists for the [[Columbia Daily Spectator's]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in political action, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButtonhttps://www.wikicu.com/index.php?title=Benjamin_Apfel&diff=55256Benjamin Apfel2018-06-29T01:01:06Z<p>BenjaminButton: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Infobox student<br />
|Image=Benjamin Apfel.jpg<br />
|Name=Benjamin E. Apfel<br />
|Birth Date=March 10, 1994<br />
|School=[[Columbia College]]<br />
|Graduation Year=2018<br />
|Major=Philosophy <br />
|Occupation= Law<br />
|Family= Parents: Howard CC '86, Naomi CC '87. Spouse: Mikaella Bernstein CC '17. <br />
|}}<br />
Benjamin Apfel, CC '18 CLS '21, was one of the founding panelists for the [[Columbia Daily Spectator's]] column "Discourse and Debate"--a pioneering attempt by Spec to represent the intellectual diversity of Columbia's student body. Therein, Benjamin argued for the right of professors to engage in political action, and penned a memorable defense of the virtues of the Columbia Football program. Before arriving at Columbia, Benjamin spent several years in an Ultra-Orthodox seminary in Jerusalem where he studied talmudic texts in Yiddish. Benjamin has spit bars at a Columbia hip hop society cypher, but was banned indefinitely due to his controversial content.</div>BenjaminButton