Word: puseys
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...fundraiser. And so, the capital campaign became the chief duty of President Neil L. Rudenstine. Derek C. Bok, Rudenstine’s predecessor, was charged at the outset with healing a wounded campus fragmented by the turbulent protest years of 1968-69. And with the selection of Nathan M. Pusey ’28 in 1953, Harvard consciously sought a president who would spend less time in the national spotlight, while defending the University from McCarthy-era attacks...
...outset of his term as Harvard’s president, Nathan M. Pusey ’28 was charged with bringing the University together after the turmoil of World War II. His successor, Derek C. Bok, had to restore continuity and rebuild infrastructure after the turmoil of the 1960s...
Perhaps Rudenstine’s most significant change to Harvard’s administration was the recreation of the provost position, which Pusey had eliminated. Rudenstine envisioned the Provost as a “cloned president,” as not only a tool for delegation, but also a means of unifying the University. For example, the provost’s office now oversees interfaculty initiatives, one of Rudenstine’s favorite projects, which unify academic interests—like Mind, Brain and Behavior—across the schools...
Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church Peter J. Gomes welcomed the soon-to-be-graduates to the annual event, which he described as “a way of incorporating [the seniors] into the eternal life of the institution...
September 1, 1973: Students return to find Pusey, Currier and Canaday under construction. Overcrowding also reaches crisis levels with six River Houses converting office space to bedrooms...