Word: gardened
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Hundreds, dressed in the requisite fancy “garden-party attire,” attended the fourth annual Harvard vs. Yale Charity Polo Match on May 21 to watch Ivy League graduates square off in a friendly contest organized by the Charity Network of New York City (CNNYC...
...currently fragmented University body—with its various protuberances stretching in all directions, nonlinear and hiccoughing in fragments across the Cantabridgian landscape—will finally have the opportunity to centralize, or at least become contiguous. Gone will be the days, one can write hopefully, of the Garden Street style Sporades of Harvard undergraduate buildings, the reality of the city intermittently interrupting the University’s plans for expansion and design. University President Lawrence H. Summers’ emphasis on centralization of the sprawling University and on facilitating interdisciplinary studies will find its physical embodiment in the Allston...
...sure I’d made a mistake. Earlier that morning, on my way to school, I had dropped my college acceptance card in the mailbox after an agonizing month of weighing decisions. Did I prefer the Bay State to the Garden state? Was I better suited to the Kremlin on the Charles to the Ivy Country Club? Did I look better in crimson, or orange? Trusting the advice of various friends, teachers, and parents of friends—my own sat on opposite sides of the fence—I signed up to join the 369th graduating class...
Harvard prides itself on the range of opportunities it presents its undergraduates, with its 41 concentrations, 41 intercollegiate varsity sports, and over 300 extracurriculars ranging from the Lovers of the Garden State to the Hong Kong Society, the Krokodiloes to the Kuumba Singers. It’s an all-you-can-eat buffet of self-discovery and enrichment, and no two among us have had exactly the same meal. What we have shared instead is the discovery that you can be anything that you can imagine. That is--you can be anything, but you cannot be everything. Perhaps...
...same approach led to continued success after Limpert left the MoMA in the mid-1980s. As vice president for development at Lincoln Center, he helped to generate a major sponsorship deal with General Motors, and his work at the New York Botanical Garden resulted in the first substantial gift dedicated to renovation and expansion of the garden’s buildings...