Remembering a Mistress
By (Author) Richard Thorsen
BookBaby
BookBaby
7th October 2022
United States
Hardback
336
Width 158mm, Height 234mm, Spine 25mm
689g
The school which began as the Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute is today known as the New York University Tandon School of Engineering. Remembering a Mistress is not intended to be a complete history of this storied institution. Rather it is an insider's account of the last 60 years of its challenges and triumphs as observed by one who had the privilege of serving in many capacities, affording a close-up opportunity to experience its history in the making and occasionally influencing some of the recorded events.
The emphasis of this book is on back-stories relating to challenging and triumphant events of the last 60 years as observed first-hand by the author. Every effort has been made to achieve accuracy and objectivity in summarizing these events, something difficult to achieve when one has lived through them. Where the author speculates or offers opinion he has tried to so indicate. During the six decades covered in this historical memoir, this formidable engineering school had six different names. No one name is suitable for this entire span of 60 years, but she was always his mistress.
Remembering a Mistress is intended to stand alone as a (hi)story with lessons extending beyond this particular institution and period in time. It also intended to inform future generations that the world didn't begin the day they were born. It is a reminder that we are the sum of our past and our aspirations for the future.
Born in Brooklyn, Dr. Thorsen is a product of New York City where he has lived or worked for his entire life. He is an engineering practitioner and educator, having contributed to such historic projects as the Lunar Module and devoted sixty years to teaching, scholarship and senior administrative roles at the institution he calls his Mistress. During six decades he has observed and influenced the evolution of the storied institution once known as Brooklyn Poly, home of the American Dream.