Word: designate
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Almost every part of the University is looking for large sums of new money. Pusey's list included the School of Design ($11.6 million), the School of Public Health ($7.4 million), the Business School ($6 million), the Divinity School ($7 million), the Law School ($15 million), the School of Education ($5 million), the School of Dental Medicine ($4 million), and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences ($49 million for the Program for Harvard Science). Pusey's total of $160 million of new needs was, if anything, conservative. There are ventures to which the University has already made commitments that will...
Leonard Bernstein '39, conductor, composer, and instrumentalist, received a Doctor of Music degree. Honorary Doctor of Arts degrees went to Ben Shahn for his painting and graphic art, and to Jose Luis Sert, Dean of the Graduate School of Design...
...apartment living hinges on the completion of all Mrs. Bunting's other plans. Her "grand design"--as it has been called--cannot be effected until the College raises $7.5 million to supplement a $2.5 million challenge grant it received from the Ford Foundation this spring. A three-year campaign for the matching funds will get underway this summer; each October, beginning in 1968, Radcliffe can claim one-third of whatever has been raised. If plans move on schedule, the new House on Garden Street will be complete by September 1970. Once this is accomplished, girls can be moved from...
...acted in a high-handed manner or made promises she could not keep. In a "short history" they published after the strike, the strikers noted that Mrs. Bunting has sought out student advice only about the decor of the new dormitories, but never solicited student reaction to her grand design for the House system...
Portman's bold design has already paid off. Though the hotel has been accepting guests for only a month and will not open officially for another two weeks, it already has well over $30 million in advance bookings. Visitors' reactions to the courtyard range from "a fabulosity" (an Atlanta attorney) to "the eighth wonder of the world" (a Chicago businessman). Indeed, so many bowled-over guests blurt out "Jeez!"-or stronger-when they first gaze up into 21 stories of space that hotel employees have already dubbed the spot in the lobby where the full height is first...