Arts and letters | |
Lionel Trilling at Columbia | p. 3 |
Gilbert Highet and classics at Columbia | p. 13 |
Da Ponte, MacDowell, Moore, and Lang : four biographical essays | p. 27 |
The many lives of Moses Hadas | p. 45 |
Brander Matthews and theater studies at Columbia | p. 57 |
Joseph Wood Krutch as cultural critic, drama critic, and nature writer | p. 69 |
Joseph Wood Krutch as cultural critic | p. 70 |
Joseph Wood Krutch : a rare critic | p. 76 |
In the desert with Joseph Wood Krutch | p. 83 |
John Dewey on morningside heights | p. 91 |
My memories of John Dewey | p. 92 |
John Dewey and intelligent problem solving | p. 100 |
The many lives of Paul Oskar Kristeller | p. 107 |
Making art history at Columbia : Meyer Schapiro and Rudolf Wittkower | p. 117 |
The "conscience of Columbia" : remembering Marjorie Hope Nicolson, scholar and teacher | p. 131 |
Learning a pedagogy of love : Thomas Merton | p. 143 |
The sciences | |
Edmund Beecher Wilson : America's first cell biologist | p. 151 |
Biology at Columbia | p. 165 |
Thomas Hunt Morgan at Columbia University | p. 166 |
An American century of biology | p. 178 |
Genetics, biology, and the mysteries of the mind at the cusp of the twenty-first century | p. 184 |
Chemistry at Columbia | p. 199 |
I. I. Rabi : physics and science at Columbia, in America, and worldwide | p. 211 |
Cournand and Richards and the Bellevue Hospital cardiopulmonary laboratory | p. 237 |
Virginia Apgar : savior of new lives | p. 253 |
Beyond Typhoid Mary : the origins of public health at Columbia and in the city | p. 267 |
Maurice Ewing and the Lamont-Doherty Earth observatory | p. 277 |
Edwin Howard Armstrong : pioneer of the airwaves | p. 297 |
Law and society | |
Paul F. Lazarsfeld's scholarly journey | p. 309 |
Two centuries of "Columbian" constitutionalism | p. 323 |
From Muskogee to morningside heights : political scientist Charles V. Hamilton | p. 333 |
The developing science and art of anthropology | p. 343 |
Benedict and Mead at Columbia : a student looks back | p. 344 |
Benedict herself | p. 347 |
The "daughters" of Papa Franz : Benedict, Mead, and Hurston | p. 350 |
History and economics | |
Reminiscences of the Columbia history department : 1923-75 | p. 365 |
Jacques Barzun : cultural historian, cheerful pessimist, Columbia Avatar | p. 383 |
Salo Wittmayer Baron : demystifying Jewish history | p. 397 |
Richard Hofstadter : Columbia's evolutionary historian | p. 405 |
Columbia and the great empirical tradition of American economics | p. 415 |
Benjamin Graham : father of value investing | p. 427 |
Eli Ginzberg : skeptical economist, conservator of manpower | p. 437 |
Columbia as a university | |
John W. Burgess and the birth of the university | p. 455 |
Virginia Gildersleeve : opening the gates | p. 465 |
Carl W. Ackerman : the journalism school's other founder | p. 481 |
Frank Tannenbaum and collegial learning in the university seminars | p. 489 |
Tannenbaum as Latin Americanist | p. 495 |
The core curriculum | |
Van Doren, Erskine, and the great books legacy | p. 503 |
The beginnings of the great books movement at Columbia | p. 504 |
In class with Mark Van Doren | p. 509 |
Mark Van Doren as poet and teacher | p. 513 |
What Columbia College is known for | p. 515 |
Wisdom, training, and contemporary civilization | p. 529 |
Asia in the core curriculum | p. 543 |
Lou Gehrig, Columbia legend and American hero | p. 559 |
Columbia and the world | |
James T. Shotwell : a life devoted to organizing peace | p. 571 |
Louis Henkin and the age of rights | p. 581 |
East Asian studies at Columbia | p. 593 |
East Asian studies at Columbia : the early years | p. 594 |
Ryusaku Tsunoda : pioneer of Japanese studies at Columbia | p. 605 |
A cycle of Cathay and Columbia | p. 613 |
Columbia's Russian institute : the formative years | p. 621 |
A communitarian at large | p. 633 |
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