Difference between revisions of "Steven Marcus"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
(Marcus Commission Report)
Line 6: Line 6:
  
 
==Marcus Commission Report==
 
==Marcus Commission Report==
The ''Marcus Commission Report'' of 1979, formally titled "''Report on the Presidential Commission on Academic Priorities in the Arts and Sciences''", was a harsh assessment of the standing of the university among its peers. It brutally summarized Columbia's fall thanks to nearly two decades of budget crises: "We have fallen. The evidence is unambiguous, and candor compels us to acknowledge that we no longer occupy a position of distinct pre-eminence. In several disciplines we have fallen below the first rank."
+
The ''Marcus Commission Report'' of [[1979]], formally titled "''Report on the Presidential Commission on Academic Priorities in the Arts and Sciences''", was a harsh assessment of the standing of the university among its peers. It brutally summarized Columbia's fall thanks to nearly two decades of budget crises: "We have fallen. The evidence is unambiguous, and candor compels us to acknowledge that we no longer occupy a position of distinct pre-eminence. In several disciplines we have fallen below the first rank."
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Revision as of 13:27, 7 May 2013

Steven Marcus
See also Wikipedia's article about "Steven Marcus".

Steven Marcus CC '48 PhD '61 was Dean of Columbia College for a short while. He continues to be George Delacorte Professor Emeritus in the Humanities. While he was an undergraduate, Marcus studied with Lionel Trilling. He is famous in the scholarly world for coining the concept "pornotopia" to describe a state in which "all men...are always and infinitely potent; all women fecundate with lust and flow inexhaustibly with sap or juice or both. Everyone is always ready for everything".

Marcus Commission Report

The Marcus Commission Report of 1979, formally titled "Report on the Presidential Commission on Academic Priorities in the Arts and Sciences", was a harsh assessment of the standing of the university among its peers. It brutally summarized Columbia's fall thanks to nearly two decades of budget crises: "We have fallen. The evidence is unambiguous, and candor compels us to acknowledge that we no longer occupy a position of distinct pre-eminence. In several disciplines we have fallen below the first rank."

External Links

Preceded by
Jack Greenberg
Dean of Columbia College 
1993-1995
Succeeded by
Austin Quigley