Difference between revisions of "Arnold Beichman"

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(New page: '''Arnold Beichman''' CC '34 MA '67 PhD '73 is a conservative commentator. He currently works as a fellow at Stanford and as a c...)
 
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'''Arnold Beichman''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1934|34]] [[MA]] '[[1967|67]] [[PhD]] '[[1973|73]] is a conservative commentator. He currently works as a fellow at [[Stanford]] and as a columnist for the ''Washington Times''.
 
'''Arnold Beichman''' [[Columbia College|CC]] '[[1934|34]] [[MA]] '[[1967|67]] [[PhD]] '[[1973|73]] is a conservative commentator. He currently works as a fellow at [[Stanford]] and as a columnist for the ''Washington Times''.
  
He was editor-in-chief of ''[[Spectator]]'' and had a flourishing career in journalism before returning to academia in his fifties to study for a graduate degree in [[PoliSci]]. He recalls that, during his oral examinations, he was not asked anything about the books he was assigned to read, only about events taking place in Czechoslovakia at the time, the spring of [[1968]].
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He was editor-in-chief of ''[[Spectator]]'' and had a flourishing career in journalism before returning to academia in his fifties to study for a graduate degree in [[PoliSci]]. Two events stand out during his period at the ''Spec''. In [[1934]], he reported on the [[1934 Purim dance|anti-Semitic incident]] that took place at that year's Purim dance, over the objections of Jewish students worried it would only damage their reputation. He also led a group of northern students in a protest against the mistreatment of black students during a student journalism conference at the then-segregated Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. This impressed an editor for the ''[[New York Times]]'' so much that young Beichman was given a gig as freelancer for the paper right out of college.
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Around [[1939]] and [[1940]], while Beichman was still working in journalism, he maintained a bet with economist [[Milton Friedman]], studying at Columbia, that the Second World War would be a "phony war" that would last just six months. They bet a quarter; Friedman won.
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As the years progressed Beichman became closer to several New York intellectuals affiliated with Columbia, including [[Lionel Trilling]], and operated a sort of salon out of his apartment. This influenced his decision to return to school.
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He recalls that, during his oral examinations, he was not asked anything about the books he was assigned to read, only about events taking place in Czechoslovakia at the time, the spring of [[1968]].
  
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Beichman]]
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Beichman]]
 
[[Category:GSAS alumni]]
 
[[Category:GSAS alumni]]

Revision as of 14:26, 31 July 2007

Arnold Beichman CC '34 MA '67 PhD '73 is a conservative commentator. He currently works as a fellow at Stanford and as a columnist for the Washington Times.

He was editor-in-chief of Spectator and had a flourishing career in journalism before returning to academia in his fifties to study for a graduate degree in PoliSci. Two events stand out during his period at the Spec. In 1934, he reported on the anti-Semitic incident that took place at that year's Purim dance, over the objections of Jewish students worried it would only damage their reputation. He also led a group of northern students in a protest against the mistreatment of black students during a student journalism conference at the then-segregated Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. This impressed an editor for the New York Times so much that young Beichman was given a gig as freelancer for the paper right out of college.

Around 1939 and 1940, while Beichman was still working in journalism, he maintained a bet with economist Milton Friedman, studying at Columbia, that the Second World War would be a "phony war" that would last just six months. They bet a quarter; Friedman won.

As the years progressed Beichman became closer to several New York intellectuals affiliated with Columbia, including Lionel Trilling, and operated a sort of salon out of his apartment. This influenced his decision to return to school.

He recalls that, during his oral examinations, he was not asked anything about the books he was assigned to read, only about events taking place in Czechoslovakia at the time, the spring of 1968.