Palin Prayed for Classmate, Was `Average' Student at 5 Schools
Sept. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Sarah Palin's academic adviser at
the University of Idaho said he doesn't remember her.
Roy Atwood, a journalism professor who signed her
application for graduation in 1987, said the Republican vice
presidential candidate was just one of dozens of students he
helped process through the program that year.
Interviews with classmates paint a similar picture of Palin
as an anonymous, though motivated and hard-working, student who
spent time at four other colleges before earning her degree from
the school in Moscow, Idaho. She later told a campus publication
that one of her best semesters was spent learning about
broadcasting at a student-run Idaho television studio.
``My sense from people is that she was an average
student,'' said Kaylene Johnson, author of a biography,
``Sarah'' (Epicenter Press, 2008). ``I don't know that she
distinguished herself in college in any particular way.''
Palin, 44, made an impression on one college friend, Stacia
Hagerty, who credits her conversion to Catholicism in part to
discussions the two had as dorm mates at the University of
Idaho's Neely Hall. As a teenager, Palin had attended the
Assembly of God Church in Wasilla, Alaska, and she encouraged
her friend to commit time to church.
``She just had a strong relationship with the Lord,'' said
Hagerty, now an Idaho lawyer.
Hagerty shared a dating dilemma with Palin one day. ``I'm
going to go back to my room and say a prayer for you,'' Hagerty
recalled Palin saying. When Hagerty felt better the next day,
Palin credited the prayer.
Crisscrossing the Country
Then known as Sarah Heath, Palin was the third of four
children of Chuck Heath, a school teacher, and Sally, a school
secretary. Palin spent almost five years crisscrossing from
Hawaii to northern Idaho and back to Alaska before graduating
from the University of Idaho.
Palin's rival on the Democratic ticket, Senator Joe Biden,
graduated from the University of Delaware in 1965 and from
Syracuse University College of Law in 1968. Senator Barack Obama
attended Occidental College, in Los Angeles, and received a B.A.
in 1983 from Columbia University and a J.D. from Harvard Law
School in 1991. Senator John McCain graduated from the Naval
Academy in 1958.
Palin's first stop, at the University of Hawaii in Hilo in
1982, didn't last long, according to Johnson. Palin and three
Wasilla friends who expected sunny skies were dismayed at Hilo's
rainy climate, Johnson said.
Hawaii Pacific
Palin then shifted to Hawaii Pacific College in sunnier
Honolulu. She was enrolled full-time for a semester, school
spokeswoman Crystale Lopez said.
Missing home, Palin transferred again to North Idaho
College, a community college in Coeur d'Alene, near Sandpoint,
where Palin was born.
She studied two semesters there in 1983 as a general
studies major, according to school spokeswoman Stacy Hudson. She
said she couldn't find any professors who remembered Palin.
Federal privacy laws prevent universities from disclosing
grades, and Palin hasn't released them.
Palin moved in 1984 to the University of Idaho, where her
brother Chuck Jr. played for the football team, Johnson said.
She went to dormitory dance parties, rarely drank and never had
boys in her room, according to Hagerty. She spoke often about
her high-school sweetheart, now her husband, Todd Palin, and
fishing in Alaska during the summer.
`So Not Sarah'
``I was sort of shocked to find that her daughter was
pregnant out of wedlock, because that was so not Sarah,''
Hagerty said, referring to the news that Palin's unwed 17-year-
old daughter, Bristol, is five months pregnant and plans to
marry the father.
Palin took courses in news writing, the history of mass
communication, interviewing, psychology, political science and
communications ethics, according to Atwood.
For one semester, in fall 1985, she attended Matanuska-
Susitna Community College in Palmer, Alaska, according to school
spokeswoman Sandy Gravley. ``It looks like she may have taken a
few classes there,'' Palin spokeswoman Maria Comella said in an
e-mail.
Journalism was a natural major for her because she grew up
discussing current events with her family, Palin told an alumni
publication last year. ``I was always asking everyone the
questions, and I still am today,'' she said.
As a student, Palin sat near the front of class and rarely
spoke up, recalled Brian Long, a fellow journalism major who is
now a lawyer in Coeur d'Alene. ``She was pretty quiet in
school,'' he said.
`Blended In'
``I remember her face,'' said former classmate Larry
Richardson, who was struck by the beauty of the one-time Miss
Wasilla. As a student, ``she kind of blended in,'' said
Richardson, now a real estate agent in Eagle, Idaho.
The University of Idaho's communications department had no
record of Palin writing for the school's newspaper.
Palin knew she wanted ``to be a newscaster on TV,'' Hagerty
said. ``And to have a family.''
She earned a Bachelor of Science degree in journalism in
1987 and got a job as a sportscaster at KTUU-TV in Anchorage.
Politics came as a surprise, even to her family, said biographer
Johnson.
``What was talked about around the kitchen table was
sports, it wasn't politics,'' Johnson said. ``When she went into
politics, everyone went, `Oh, really?'''
To contact the reporter on this story:
Peter Robison in Seattle at
robison@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: September 6, 2008 00:01 EDT