Word: renowned
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...independent success as an artist and his commitment to the local music community brought him renown outside the University as well...
Winthrop specifically asked that his collection be primarily at the disposal of the Harvard community, even at the expense of its worldwide renown...
...fall. After languishing under .500 the previous two seasons, this year’s Crimson team made its first trip to NCAAs since 1996. Much of the success was overshadowed by the football team’s dream season, but it put Harvard back on the road to national renown. That, Kerr says, was his reason for taking the job in the first place...
DIED. BYRON WHITE, 84, last surviving member of the Warren Supreme Court, who won renown first as a college and pro football player and then as an even-keeled, defiantly independent jurist; of complications from pneumonia; in Denver. Known for his speed--and record rushing yardage and pay--as a defensive back for the Pittsburgh Pirates (now Steelers) and Detroit Lions in the late '30s and early '40s, the Rhodes scholar never shook his nickname, Whizzer, much to his ire. Appointed to the court in 1962 by President John F. Kennedy after serving as Robert Kennedy's deputy Attorney General...
...narrator to narrator in a patchwork style that mirrors his cluttered subject matter, Downing chronicles the predictable drift from the heady promise of Zen Center's early days to the sourness and disillusionment that followed its growth into a spiritual brand name. As Zen Center's membership and renown increased, so too did Baker's sense of self-importance and entitlement. In 1971, Suzuki died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 69. Before he did so, he established Baker as his sole American dharma heir, making him the uncontestable arbiter of Zen Center's fate. The honor did nothing...