Word: courtyard
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...17th year. Her little facility, now known as the Mae Tao clinic, has grown into a complex of buildings that includes operating rooms, a pediatric and maternity ward, a laboratory, a blood bank, an eye-care facility, a 100-bed hospital and a school. Built around a central courtyard, it feels less like a clinic and more like a de facto town-- one that treats up to 400 patients a day, educates 4,000 migrant children and even issues birth certificates and marriage licenses...
...According to the e-mail, the party would include a three-story beer funnel in the Delphic’s courtyard...
Going to a museum, one comes across greatness where it is least expected; this time its true in terms of both location and content. Through the courtyard and tucked in the back of the Fogg museum is the Strauss Gallery, which is currently featuring “A New Kind of Historical Evidence: Photographs from the Carpenter Center Collection,” showcasing a collection in three parts of photographs amassed and until now collecting dust like most of the university’s gathering in a Harvard depository. Hidden from tourists and casual museum-goers only interested...
...supplemental report in Katona’s case and that an arraignment day of Oct. 24 has been set for Singh. LaGrassa said that it was possible charges would be filed against Katona after that report is filed. The students spilling out of the party and into the courtyard of Peabody Terrace did not cooperate with police and caused a disturbance, according to HUPD spokesman Steven G. Catalano. Katona, who was allegedly screaming at police officers, was placed under arrest. According to Catalano, Singh interfered with the arrest by yelling and was arrested after repeated attempts by a police officer...
...petitioned to have truck traffic limited to Cowperthwaite Street. According to Greenfield, Healy originally proposed a Jersey Barrier extending along all of Cowperthwaite Street. But under that plan, Greenfield said, “there would no pedestrian traffic, and you couldn’t walk through the Leverett Towers courtyard. The shuttles would go up Grant Street, near DeWolfe, instead of Dunster and Mather.” After students expressed concerns about this plan, Thomas J. Lucey, Harvard’s director of community relations for Cambridge, brought the current design to the table. Now the Jersey Barrier will only...