Everyone
has probably been told by their parents that if they want a successful
and lucrative career then they must go to and graduate from college or
university. For most, this does seem to be a truthful statement but
there are many people out there who prove this very theory wrong in the
most spectacular ways. Here we take a look at the most successful and
the most wealthy college dropouts ever. Who says you need a college
education to succeed? these guys and gals prove no one does.
Tiger Woods. In a world where
prodigious sports talents tend to forgo higher education altogether for
the pros, Tiger Woods chose to continue playing amateur golf at Stanford
University as an economics major. Perhaps it was in Econ 101 that he
learned the term "opportunity cost," because his time at Stanford was
not long. After two years there, Woods turned pro with his "Hello world"
announcement, officially ending his collegiate career. He would go on
to become one of the highest paid athletes in the world, earning more
than $100 million annually at the height of his career. How's that for
economics? 09 more after the break...
Before she was a Gaga, she was a
Germanotta. Born Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, the artist better
known as Lady Gaga attended New York University's Tisch School of the
Arts, but dropped out after just a year to pursue her music career full
time. She broke onto the New York club scene with her burlesque
performances and was signed to Interscope Records by the age of 20. Her
2008 debut album, The Fame, has had the world going gaga for Gaga ever
since.
Apparently a college degree isn't
a prerequisite for flying the Millennium Falcon. Harrison Ford, of Star
Wars and Indiana Jones fame, majored in philosophy at Ripon College,
but dropped out shortly before graduation. He subsequently landed
several small parts in Hollywood productions, but unhappy with such
minor roles, turned to a career in professional carpentry instead.
Almost ten years later, he would co-star in George Lucas' 1973
graduation night comedy American Graffiti and subsequently joined Lucas
in a galaxy far, far away in the 1977 blockbuster Star Wars.
TIME has called Tom Hanks
America's chronicler in chief; Sacramento State can call him their most
famous dropout. The storied actor left college to intern full time at
the Great Lakes Theater Festival in Cleveland, Ohio. There, he learned
various aspects of theater from lighting to set design, laying the
foundation for his Hollywood career as movie star, producer, director
and writer. Not one to forget his own past, in 2009 Hanks helped
fund-raise money to help renovate the Cleveland theater where he got his
start.
Most college students use their
dorm rooms to sleep, study, or do things their parents probably don't
want to know about. Mark Zuckerberg founded Facebook in his. Originally
meant only for Harvard students, the popular social networking site
quickly spread to the rest of the Ivies and other colleges across the
nation. As Facebook's popularity exploded, Zuckerberg packed up his bags
and relocated the fledgling company to Palo Alto, California, forever
leaving behind Harvard's hallowed halls. So far, the decision has worked
out pretty well for the twenty-something. According to Forbes,
Zuckerberg is the youngest billionaire in the world, with a 2010 net
worth of $4 billion.
The Academy Award-winning
director followed a circuitous route to Hollywood. Born and raised in
Canada, he and his family moved to Brea, California in 1971. It was
there that the young Cameron enrolled in Fullerton College to study
physics. His academic life did not last long. He would drop out, marry a
waitress and eventually become a truck driver for the local school
district. It was not until he saw Star Wars in 1977 that Cameron would
trade his blue collar career for one creating some of the late
20th-century's most stunning (and expensive) science-fiction movies.
Buckminster
Fuller — architect, thinker, inventor, futurist, college dropout.
Expelled from Harvard not once, but twice, Fuller's post-dropout period
was anything but successful. He suffered a string of bad business
ventures and years of anguish following his daughter's death. While
Fuller could have settled for a less than extraordinary life — he even
contemplated suicide — he refused to buck to the bevy of bad breaks. At
the age of 32, Fuller set out on a one man quest to change the world for
the better. His unorthodox ideas such as the dymaxion (a portmanteau of
dynamic maximum tension) house and dymaxion car captivated the nation,
while his iconic geodesic domes would bring him international fame and
recognition.
America's most celebrated
architect spent more time designing colleges than attending them. Frank
Lloyd Wright was admitted to the University of Wisconsin-Madison in
1886, but left after only one year. He would move to Chicago and
eventually apprentice under Louis Sullivan, the "father of modernism."
By the time of his passing, Wright's resume included more than 500
works, most famous of which are Fallingwater and New York City's Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum.
The Mac, the iPod, heck, even
Buzz Lightyear probably wouldn't have existed had Steve Jobs stayed in
school. The future wizard of One Infinite Loop dropped out of Reed
College after just six months because of the undue financial strain it
placed on his working-class parents' savings. He would go on to
eventually found Apple, NeXT Computer and Pixar, becoming an
instrumental force in shaping the landscape of modern culture. However,
his brief tenure in academia was not for naught. In a 2005 commencement
speech he gave at Stanford University, Jobs credited a calligraphy class
he took at Reed College with forming the basis for the typography used
in the first Macintosh computer.
The Harvard Crimson called him
"Harvard's most successful dropout" — the rest of the world just calls
him ridiculously rich. For more than a decade, Bill Gates has been one
of the wealthiest, if not the wealthiest, men in the world. The son of
an attorney and a schoolteacher, Gates entered Harvard in the fall of
1973, only to drop out two years later to found Microsoft with childhood
friend Paul Allen. In 2007, more than thirty years after he left
Harvard, the co-founder of Microsoft would finally receive his degree
(an honorary doctorate) from his alma mater. At the commencement, Gates
said, "I'm a bad influence. That's why I was invited to speak at your
graduation. If I had spoken at your orientation, fewer of you might be
here today."
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