Difference between revisions of "Committee on Global Thought"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
(External Links)
Line 1: Line 1:
Nobody's really sure what the '''Committee on Global Thought''' does. It seems to be a PR move, designed to keep Columbia's "superstar faculty", such as [[Jeffrey Sachs]], [[Joseph Stiglitz]], and [[Orhan Pamuk]], in the limelight. It is, however, well-funded and its events have good, free food, even if the content ranges variously from the incomprehensible to the incoherent.
+
Nobody's really sure what the '''Committee on Global Thought''' does. It was created on [[December 14]], [[2005]] and seems to be a PR move, designed to keep Columbia's "superstar faculty", such as [[Jeffrey Sachs]], [[Joseph Stiglitz]], and [[Orhan Pamuk]], in the limelight. It is, however, well-funded and its events have good, free food, even if the content ranges variously from the incomprehensible to the incoherent.
  
 
Fun Fact: the group came up with the slogan "Think globally, act locally."
 
Fun Fact: the group came up with the slogan "Think globally, act locally."

Revision as of 20:27, 5 August 2007

Nobody's really sure what the Committee on Global Thought does. It was created on December 14, 2005 and seems to be a PR move, designed to keep Columbia's "superstar faculty", such as Jeffrey Sachs, Joseph Stiglitz, and Orhan Pamuk, in the limelight. It is, however, well-funded and its events have good, free food, even if the content ranges variously from the incomprehensible to the incoherent.

Fun Fact: the group came up with the slogan "Think globally, act locally."

The name is a ripoff of the University of Chicago's much older and more intellectually rigorous Committee on Social Thought, which actually awards its own PhDs.

External Links