Difference between revisions of "Herman Wouk"
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In [[1989]], he served as the Columbia College [[Class Day]] speaker. | In [[1989]], he served as the Columbia College [[Class Day]] speaker. | ||
− | The manuscript of ''The Caine Mutiny'' is preserved in the [[Rare Book and Manuscript Library]] inside [[Butler]]. | + | The manuscript of ''The Caine Mutiny'' is preserved in the [[Rare Book and Manuscript Library]] inside [[Butler Library]]. |
{{succession|succeeded=Ralph Ellison|preceded=Anthony Lewis|office=[[Columbia College]] [[Class Day]] Speaker|years=[[1989]]}} | {{succession|succeeded=Ralph Ellison|preceded=Anthony Lewis|office=[[Columbia College]] [[Class Day]] Speaker|years=[[1989]]}} |
Latest revision as of 07:58, 25 May 2013
- See also Wikipedia's article about "Herman Wouk".
Herman Wouk CC '34 is a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer famous for the novel The Caine Mutiny.
Wouk entered Columbia College at age 16, writing for Spec and Jester. He was also a member of then then-primarily Jewish (and now defunct) Columbia chapter of the Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. Wouk graduated at age 20 with the Richard H. Fox Prize. Wouk considered Professor Irwin Edman a mentor and later dedicated a novel to him.
In the 70s, he endowed Beit Ephraim, a Jewish retreat for Columbia students.
In 1980, Wouk won the Alexander Hamilton Medal. Someone recently claimed to be selling it on eBay as a paperweight.[1]
In 1989, he served as the Columbia College Class Day speaker.
The manuscript of The Caine Mutiny is preserved in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library inside Butler Library.
Preceded by Anthony Lewis |
Columbia College Class Day Speaker 1989 |
Succeeded by Ralph Ellison |
External links
References
- ↑ Unfortunately, the link's now dead, so this can no longer be verified.