- Roger Howell, Jr.
Infobox University President
width = 150px
name =James S. Coles
caption =
order =10th
university =President ofBowdoin College
term_start =1969
term_end =1978
birth_date =1936
birth_place =
death_date =1989
death_place =
predecessor =James S. Coles
successor =Willard F. Enteman
alumnus =Bowdoin College
residence =
profession =
website =
footnotes =|Roger Howell, Jr. (1936-1989) was the tenth president of
Bowdoin College and the fourth to be an alumnus.Life and Career
Born in
Baltimore, Maryland , Howell continued his education atSt John's College, Oxford after graduating from Bowdoin in 1958. When he became president of Bowdoin in 1968 at the age of 32, he was one of the youngest university presidents in the nation.Under Howell's nine year presidency which lasted until 1978, Bowdoin became a co-ed institution (1971), expanded its enrollment from 950 students to 1,350, eliminated College Board examination requirements for entering students (1970), and established the first African American center in Maine. Bowdoin became the first academic institution in America to eliminate SAT I requirements, thus setting a trend to follow for other institutions, including
Bates College ,Franklin & Marshall College ,Hamilton College ,Middlebury College ,Mount Holyoke College ,Pitzer College , theUniversity of Texas at Austin , andWheaton College , among others.A
Rhodes Scholar at Bowdoin, where he graduated summa cum laude and was elected toPhi Beta Kappa in his junior year, Howell first began teaching at Bowdoin in 1964 and continued to teach and write after the end of his presidency. During his life, he wrote several books on British history, where he specialized on the history of Tudor and Stuart England. In 2001, the Roger J. Howell Professorship was established in his honor.External Links
*http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE3D7173AF93AA1575AC0A96F948260
*http://www.bowdoin.edu/news/archives/1bowdoincampus/000937.shtml
*http://www.fairtest.org/university/optional
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