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...Property. Under English law, which has filtered through the colonies to the states, a man's body is not his own property to "devise and bequeath." Nor is it technically the property of surviving kin, but since they are responsible for giving it decent burial, they have won the right to decide what shall not be done with a relative's body...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Anatomy: ANATOMY Bodies by Bequest | 8/27/1965 | See Source »

Closed Seasons. In California, body bequest is not only legal but so generally accepted that the medical schools have been forced to set specific "open seasons" during which prospective donors can bequeath their bodies. U.C.L.A. now has 3,500 donation forms, filed by the living in anticipation of death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Anatomy: ANATOMY Bodies by Bequest | 8/27/1965 | See Source »

Courted ardently for his collection, Justin Thannhauser recently decided to bequeath the majority of his works to Manhattan's Guggenheim Museum. His reasoning: "My collection complements the museum's." Placed on exhibition last week in newly opened galleries off the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed spiral rotunda, Thannhauser's paintings fit so well into the museum's formerly limited collection that in one stroke they make the Guggenheim a historical showcase of modern...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bequests: Redressing a Spiral Showcase | 5/7/1965 | See Source »

...graduate of Columbia University. Her son, L. Stockwell Jadwin, was an honor student and track-team captain at Princeton who died in an auto accident shortly after his graduation in 1928. Before her own death last fall in her lifetime Brooklyn house, Mrs. Jadwin had decided to bequeath her fortune to a university as a memorial to both. Last week Princeton President Robert F. Goheen was able to announce that Mrs. Jadwin chose Princeton rather than Columbia for that memorial: a no-strings gift of $27 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Giving Is Growing | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

Despite the demands of his work, Reisner was able somehow to build, and bequeath to the University, his extensive mystery collection. Because his secretary asked that British and American troops in Egypt be allowed to read the books, Harvard did not receive Reisner's bequest until 1945. Although the story that it was expecting a shipment of soberminded treatises seems dubious, Widener's cataloguers were surprised to discover that about a fifth of the novels had been graded, much as term papers are graded by professors in Cambridge...

Author: By Marlin S. Levine, | Title: The Reisner Collections: Frivolity in the Stacks | 12/17/1964 | See Source »

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