Source: Boston Herald
By Mike Underwood
It might have taken America a little while to figure it out, but his teachers and classmates at Harvard Law School knew almost immediately that Barack Obama was destined for stardom.
“He came by my office to introduce himself and expressed an interest in my work and wanted to work with me,” said constitutional law professor Lawrence Tribe, recalling the moment when he met the skinny 27-year-old with the broad smile in 1988.
“He was just extraordinary in every respect,” said Tribe, who made the rare decision to hire the untested student on the spot as his research assistant. “I knew from the very first moment that he had an unlimited future.”
Obama’s years at Harvard propelled the young community activist onto a national stage when he was elected the first African-American editor of the Harvard Law Review. The achievement made headlines across the country and eventually netted the future president a book deal for his memoir, “Dreams From My Father.”
His classmates remember his intellect and idealism, but they also remember a nice guy with a quiet sense of humor who liked to play basketball and eat Mexican food.
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