Difference between revisions of "Grayson Kirk"

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[[Image:GraysonKirk.gif|thumb|Grayson Kirk]]
 
[[Image:GraysonKirk.gif|thumb|Grayson Kirk]]
'''Grayson Kirk''' had the misfortune of becoming the 14th [[University President]] after [[Dwight Eisenhower]] set off for greener pastures, later enduring the [[1968 protests]]. The community hated him because... well they really just hated Columbia, and he was just a stand in for the institution. The students hated him because... well they hated establishment authority figures- it was the 60's after all. The faculty hated him because the university grossly underpaid its employees in relation to peer institutions during his tenure.
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'''Grayson Kirk''' had the misfortune of becoming the 14th [[University President]] after [[Dwight Eisenhower]] set off for greener pastures, later enduring the [[1968 protests]]. Previously, Kirk had served as [[Provost]].
  
The stress of the University's harebrained involvement in the [[The Strickman Filter|Strickman Filter]] and the [[1968 protests]] led to his resignation. Kirk is perhaps indirectly responsible for decades of alumni apathy (including, at one point, the serious thought of closing the school due to a lack of funding) and the affirmation of the university as a left-wing jihadist institution, much like the University of Havana.  
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The neighorhood hated him because... well they really just hated Columbia, and he was just a stand in for the institution. It didn't help that Kirk had proposed a never-completed expansion that would have wiped out half of [[Morningside Heights]].
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The students hated him because... well they hated establishment authority figures- it was the 60's after all. The faculty hated him because the university grossly underpaid its employees in relation to peer institutions during his tenure.
 +
 
 +
The stress of the University's harebrained involvement in the [[The Strickman Filter|Strickman Filter]] and the [[1968 protests]] led to his resignation. Kirk is perhaps indirectly responsible for the decades of alumni apathy that followed (including, at one point, the serious thought of closing the school due to a lack of funding) and the affirmation of the university as a left-wing jihadist institution, much like the University of Havana.  
  
 
{{succession|office=[[Provost]]|years=[[1949]]-[[1953]]|preceded=[[Albert C. Jacobs]]|succeeded=[[Jacques Barzun]]}}
 
{{succession|office=[[Provost]]|years=[[1949]]-[[1953]]|preceded=[[Albert C. Jacobs]]|succeeded=[[Jacques Barzun]]}}

Revision as of 00:06, 10 April 2008

See also Wikipedia's article about "Grayson Kirk".
Grayson Kirk

Grayson Kirk had the misfortune of becoming the 14th University President after Dwight Eisenhower set off for greener pastures, later enduring the 1968 protests. Previously, Kirk had served as Provost.

The neighorhood hated him because... well they really just hated Columbia, and he was just a stand in for the institution. It didn't help that Kirk had proposed a never-completed expansion that would have wiped out half of Morningside Heights.

The students hated him because... well they hated establishment authority figures- it was the 60's after all. The faculty hated him because the university grossly underpaid its employees in relation to peer institutions during his tenure.

The stress of the University's harebrained involvement in the Strickman Filter and the 1968 protests led to his resignation. Kirk is perhaps indirectly responsible for the decades of alumni apathy that followed (including, at one point, the serious thought of closing the school due to a lack of funding) and the affirmation of the university as a left-wing jihadist institution, much like the University of Havana.

Preceded by
Albert C. Jacobs
Provost 
1949-1953
Succeeded by
Jacques Barzun


Preceded by
Dwight D. Eisenhower
President of Columbia University 
1953-1968
Succeeded by
Andrew W. Cordier