I've gotten a couple of emails asking what I think of the fact that the new president of Williams College is a theoretical physicist. So, here are my (very brief) thoughts on the matter:
1) As a general matter, I'm happy to see scientists in administrative positions. They tend to have a better appreciation of the demands of scientific research than humanists, and they tend to approach the running of things in a manner that's a little closer to my own preferences.
Having a physicist as president is highly unlikely to result in the diversion of vast sums of money to fund physics research, though.
2) That said, the actual day-to-day influence of a college president on the running of the institution is pretty minimal. The president of a college, particularly one like Williams, is more a fundraiser-in-chief than a hands-on administrator. The really important factor in the choice of a president is how effective he or she can be at schmoozing with alumni and wealthy donors.
Knowing that Falk is a physicist really doesn't provide any special insight into this.
3) As for what sort of physicist Falk is, I'm not really qualified to evaluate that. He does theoretical QCD sorts of things, which is so far from my home field of AMO physics that I can barely parse the titles of his papers, let alone say whether they're any good.
And that's about all I can say about that. I've never met the man, but I wish him well in his new job. He's got a fairly tough act to follow, in that the previous president, Morton Schapiro, was really popular, at least among people I know who had an opinion.
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He is barely out of diapers as college Presidents go! Just over 40? Wow. I wonder how long he will be at Williams before moving to a major university.
It is safe to say that his career as a practicing physicist is effectively over. Once you start down the path that leads to administration, forever will it dominate your destiny.
With his coming from JHU it would be fantastic if he had some leverage with Bloomberg's generosity.
I mean this in all kindness, but it's not like Williams needs any more money...breaking through the billion-dollar barrier for a SLAC is pretty wild.
(Actually, somebody smack me. Endowments pay for faculty startup, and the bigger they are, the better...)
I mean this in all kindness, but it's not like Williams needs any more money...breaking through the billion-dollar barrier for a SLAC is pretty wild.
Back in 2001 when the markets took a dive, they lost an amount of money that was equal to Union's entire endowment. And they still had a billion dollars.
You would not believe how extensive their money-collecting apparatus is...