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10 things you didn't know about the Concordia's latest Governor General's Award winners

From kudos in Time Magazine to the best place to read, here are a few facts about Eleanor Wachtel and Dick Pound
January 20, 2015
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Anti-doping crusader Richard W. Pound (BA 63, LLD 10) was first named an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1992. Now the two-time vice-president of the International Olympic Committee has received a promotion to the rank of Companion of the Order of Canada for his commitment to fairness in sport, to the Olympic Games, and to civic, legal and educational causes.

Eleanor Wachtel (LLD, 10), host of the CBC’s Writers and Company and another well-known Concordia honorary doctorate holder, was promoted to the rank of Officer of the Order of Canada for her work connecting Canadians to the worldwide literary community and promoting contemporary writing. She was named a Member of the Order of Canada in 2005.

To recognize their accomplishments, we gathered together some fun facts about each of these two outstanding Concordians. 

Eleanor Wachtel Eleanor Wachtel

Eleanor Wachtel

1.  According to an interview published in 2012, the first writer Wachtel ever interviewed was Margaret Atwood, who was teaching at Sir George Williams University, one of Concordia’s founding institutions, at the time. They met at a Greek restaurant to discuss Atwood’s then-new book of poetry, The Circle Game.

2. After moving to Vancouver in 1975, the Montreal native joined the Growing Room Collective, also known as the West Coast Feminist Literary Magazine Society, which publishes a quarterly literary journal. Wachtel contributed as a volunteer for 13 years.

3. Wachtel’s favourite question to ask writers is: What is your earliest memory?

4. Author Kazuo Ishiguro once called Wachtel “one of the very finest interviewers of authors I’ve come across, anywhere in the world.” She credits much of her success to her exhaustive reading of her interviewees’s works beforehand.

4. Wachtel dedicated her first published book of interviews to the Snowdon branch of the N.D.G Boys and Girls Library, where she went as a child.  

5. The radio host’s favourite place to read is her backyard.

Richard W. Pound Richard W. Pound | Photo courtesy of Owen Egan

Richard W. Pound

1. Time Magazine selected Pound as one of its 100 Most Influential People in 2005 for being a “prime mover in freeing the Olympic world from the taint of illicit, performance-enhancing drugs.”

2. A competitive swimmer, Pound narrowly missed the Olympic podium, finishing fourth in the 4x100 meter relay, and sixth in the 100 meter freestyle at the 1960 Summer Games in Rome. He won four medals, including a gold at the 1962 Commonwealth Games.

3. A tax lawyer by trade, Pound helped save the Olympics from financial catastrophe during the 1980s by restructuring the TV and marketing rights deals. The long-time member of the International Olympic Committee’s Executive Board and two-time vice-president worked out the first major contracts in time for the Calgary Winter Games in 1988, where they generated $325 million.

4. In October 2014, McGill University and the University of Texas at Austin reached an agreement to process and digitize Pound’s 350-box, 400,000-page Olympic archive. The collection includes 12 Olympic torches, 850 pin sets, medals and other regalia.

5. Pound, the founding president of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), has been outstpoken in his condemnation of athletes who use performance enhancing drugs. In 2005, eight years before cyclist Lance Armstrong finally confessed to doping, Dick Pound publically challenged him and other cyclists to “explain how it is that EPO got into their systems.”

Read about other Concordians appointed to the Order of Canada

 



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