Difference between revisions of "Peter Pouncey"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 12: Line 12:
  
 
He is known for his incredible hair, witty British quips, and half-serious grandiose plans to resurrect the [[w:British Empire|British Empire]].
 
He is known for his incredible hair, witty British quips, and half-serious grandiose plans to resurrect the [[w:British Empire|British Empire]].
 +
 +
== External links ==
 +
* [http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19760512-01.1.13 Graduation Retrosepctive - The Pouncey Era, including parting words from Pouncey], Columbia Spectator, 12 May 1976
  
 
{{succession|office=Dean of Columbia College|years=[[1972]]-[[1975]]|preceded=[[Carl Hovde]]|succeeded=[[Robert Belknap]] (acting)}}
 
{{succession|office=Dean of Columbia College|years=[[1972]]-[[1975]]|preceded=[[Carl Hovde]]|succeeded=[[Robert Belknap]] (acting)}}

Revision as of 02:17, 15 May 2013

See also Wikipedia's article about "Peter Pouncey".
Peter Pouncey

Peter Pouncey PhD '69 is a British classicist who served as the ninth Dean of Columbia College. Pouncey was born, a son of missionaries, in the British concession of the Chinese city of Tsingtao.

In 1975, Pouncey issued a report recommending the merger of the College, General Studies, Barnard College, and the undergraduate division of SEAS into one dedicated undergraduate school for all students, downsizing GSAS enrollment, and forcing more GSAS faculty to dirty their hands by teaching undergradautes. [1] This went well beyond Carl Hovde's calls for merging SEAS and GS with the College in 1970.

Pouncey went on to serve as president of Amherst College between 1984-1994 before returning to Columbia's faculty. He currently holds an adjunct position at the Heyman Center for the Humanities, and is a member of the Society of Senior Scholars.

In 2005, he published his first novel, Rules for Old Men Waiting, a very sad story about an old man waiting to die after his son and wife died.

He is known for his incredible hair, witty British quips, and half-serious grandiose plans to resurrect the British Empire.

External links

Preceded by
Carl Hovde
Dean of Columbia College 
1972-1975
Succeeded by
Robert Belknap (acting)


References