Difference between revisions of "Fritz Stern"

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While a student at the College, Stern was friends with [[Allen Ginsberg]]. The two served as debate partners on the [[College Debate Council]], of which Stern was president. They also founded the Roosevelt for President club together in [[1944]]. Ginsberg also persuaded Stern to take classes with [[Lionel Trilling]] and [[Jacques Barzun]], which Stern found "humbling and life-transforming". He quit his pre-med track and became a history major, reporting on current affairs for the then-college radio station [[CURC]]. After staying on to complete his graduate studies in history, Stern was named a full professor in [[1963]]. He was named to the [[Seth Low Professor of History]] chair in [[1967]], served as [[provost]] of the [[Arts and Sciences]] from [[1980]] to [[1983]] (and again as acting provost in [[1989]]), and was appointed a University Professor in [[1992]].  
 
While a student at the College, Stern was friends with [[Allen Ginsberg]]. The two served as debate partners on the [[College Debate Council]], of which Stern was president. They also founded the Roosevelt for President club together in [[1944]]. Ginsberg also persuaded Stern to take classes with [[Lionel Trilling]] and [[Jacques Barzun]], which Stern found "humbling and life-transforming". He quit his pre-med track and became a history major, reporting on current affairs for the then-college radio station [[CURC]]. After staying on to complete his graduate studies in history, Stern was named a full professor in [[1963]]. He was named to the [[Seth Low Professor of History]] chair in [[1967]], served as [[provost]] of the [[Arts and Sciences]] from [[1980]] to [[1983]] (and again as acting provost in [[1989]]), and was appointed a University Professor in [[1992]].  
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In [[1994]], he was [[Columbia College]]'s [[Class Day]] speaker.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
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{{succession|office=[[Provost]] (Arts and Sciences)|years=[[1980]]-[[1983]]|preceded=[[Michael I. Sovern]]|succeeded=[[Robert F. Goldberger]]}}
 
{{succession|office=[[Provost]] (Arts and Sciences)|years=[[1980]]-[[1983]]|preceded=[[Michael I. Sovern]]|succeeded=[[Robert F. Goldberger]]}}
 
{{succession|office=[[Provost]] (acting)|years=[[1989]]|preceded=[[Robert F. Goldberger]]|succeeded=[[Jonathan R. Cole]]}}
 
{{succession|office=[[Provost]] (acting)|years=[[1989]]|preceded=[[Robert F. Goldberger]]|succeeded=[[Jonathan R. Cole]]}}
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{{succession|preceded=?|succeeded=[[Tom Brokow]]|office=[[Columbia College]] [[Class Day]] Speaker|years=[[1994]]}}
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[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Stern, Fritz]]
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Stern, Fritz]]

Revision as of 21:06, 15 September 2007

Fritz Stern
See also Wikipedia's article about "Fritz Stern".

Fritz Stern CC '46 PhD '53, now retired, was a University Professor. His teaching and research interests included 19th and 20th century Germany and Europe.

While a student at the College, Stern was friends with Allen Ginsberg. The two served as debate partners on the College Debate Council, of which Stern was president. They also founded the Roosevelt for President club together in 1944. Ginsberg also persuaded Stern to take classes with Lionel Trilling and Jacques Barzun, which Stern found "humbling and life-transforming". He quit his pre-med track and became a history major, reporting on current affairs for the then-college radio station CURC. After staying on to complete his graduate studies in history, Stern was named a full professor in 1963. He was named to the Seth Low Professor of History chair in 1967, served as provost of the Arts and Sciences from 1980 to 1983 (and again as acting provost in 1989), and was appointed a University Professor in 1992.

In 1994, he was Columbia College's Class Day speaker.

External links

Preceded by
Michael I. Sovern
Provost (Arts and Sciences) 
1980-1983
Succeeded by
Robert F. Goldberger
Preceded by
Robert F. Goldberger
Provost (acting) 
1989
Succeeded by
Jonathan R. Cole
Preceded by
?
Columbia College Class Day Speaker 
1994
Succeeded by
Tom Brokow