Word: granting
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Derrick Horner, HARVARD, 22.09. 400-meter run: Mark Dunzo, M.I.T., 49-92. 500-meter run: Randy Lewis, Boston University, 1:04.22. 800-meter run: Terrence Dugan, Boston College, 1:52.25. Mile: Brad Schlapak, Northeastern, 4:11.7. 1000-meter run: Mark Gomes, Northeastern, 2:28.22. 3000-meter run: George Grant, Boston College, 8:19.25. 4-by-440 relay: Boston University 3:20.25. 4-by-880 relay: Northeastern, 7:52.27. Distance medley relay: Boston College, 10:11.36. High jump: Ken Moody, Boston College, 7-ft., 0-in. Pale vault: Bill Cranmer, Boston University, 14-ft., 0-in. Shot put: Bob Kuras, Northeastern...
This time, Edward Asner (Lou Grant) achieves the seemingly impossible by overplaying the loudmouth junkyard magnate Harry Brock, who is eight parts tyrant to one part teddy bear. Madeline Kahn (Oh Madeline) gets laughs as his fed-up mistress who sets out to acquire couth and literacy, but cute faces and cunning timing do not add up to a believable person. As the crusading journalist who sets out to trap Brock and woo away his woman, Daniel Hugh Kelly (Hardcastle and McCormick) seems lobotomized. Only Franklin Cover (The Jeffersons), as a sozzled, shopworn and sardonic Washington fixer, evokes a credible...
...January 18, 1989 article titled "ART To Receive $2.25 Million Grant," Crimson reporter Melanie R. Williams attempted to grapple with a series of complex grants and awards which the ART has received in the past few years. The matching requirements and inter-relationship of these grants are Byzantine at best, and the reporter did an admirable job. There are, however, a few factual matters that need to be corrected...
...awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Challenge program in the fall of 1985. The grant requires a three-to-one match, i.e. ART is responsible for raising $2.25 million in cash (not pledges) from non-federal sources in order to receive a grant of $750,000 from the NEA. While the maximum award under the challenge program is currently $1 million, which would require the recipient organization to raise $3 million in matching funds for a total principal of $4 million, the maximum award is set by the NEA, based on its evaluation...
This is the second time that ART has been awarded an NEA Challenge grant. The first was for $250,000, also on a three-to-one matching basis, and was used to expand and develop ART's marketing and fundraising efforts and to increase the artisitic scope of the company during the three year period from July 1, 1980, to June 30, 1983. The current grant period began September 1, 1985, and concludes July 31, 1989. NEA Challenge grants cover a period of no less than three years. No organization can receive a Challenge grant during the period covered...