Difference between revisions of "Herbert E. Hawkes"

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{{wp-also2|Herbert Hawkes}}
 
{{wp-also2|Herbert Hawkes}}
  
'''Herbert Edwin Hawkes''' had awesome hair. He was also Dean of [[Columbia College]] for a long, long time, helping pass through many of the reforms which helped build the [[Core Curriculum]]. A defender of the liberal arts, he opposed the "Columbia plan," which would have allowed College students to graduate in less than four years.
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'''Herbert Edwin Hawkes''' had truly awesome hair. He was also Dean of [[Columbia College]] for a long, long time, helping pass through many of the reforms which helped build the [[Core Curriculum]]. A defender of the liberal arts, he opposed [[University President]] [[Nicholas Murray Butler]]'s "Columbia plan" to create pre-professional tracks for undergraduates which would have allowed College students to graduate in less than four years.
  
 
A mathematician by training, he joined the faculty in [[1910]], becoming acting dean in [[1917]] and ascending to the full deanship a year later.
 
A mathematician by training, he joined the faculty in [[1910]], becoming acting dean in [[1917]] and ascending to the full deanship a year later.

Revision as of 19:04, 16 May 2013

Herbert Edwin Hawkes
See also Wikipedia's article about "Herbert Hawkes".

Herbert Edwin Hawkes had truly awesome hair. He was also Dean of Columbia College for a long, long time, helping pass through many of the reforms which helped build the Core Curriculum. A defender of the liberal arts, he opposed University President Nicholas Murray Butler's "Columbia plan" to create pre-professional tracks for undergraduates which would have allowed College students to graduate in less than four years.

A mathematician by training, he joined the faculty in 1910, becoming acting dean in 1917 and ascending to the full deanship a year later.

He possibly may or may not have made remarks that may or may not be later interpreted as anti-Semitic.

According to Wikipedia, his long tenure as Dean of Columbia College earned him the title "the dean of American college deans".

External links

Preceded by
Frederick P. Keppel
Dean of Columbia College 
1918-1943
Succeeded by
Harry J. Carman