Picturing Our Past
When many students left to serve the government as soldiers, sailors and nurses during World War II, several campus activities were curtailed, particularly student participation in Greek life and athletics. In 1943, Eliot Review discontinued publication; Thurtene Carnival and Spring Formals were not held; and the Student Senate was disbanded. After the war, Chancellor Arthur […]
Anheuser-Busch, Emerson commit $10M to Siteman
The challenge gift will further St. Louis’ role as home to a nationally recognized, robust cancer research and treatment program.
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New York architect Mariano Sagasta wins 2004 Steedman Fellowship
A detail from Mariano Sagasta’s winning conceptual master plan for the west side of Brentwood Boulevard north of Highway 40.New York architect Mariano Sagasta has won Washington University’s 2004 Steedman Fellowship in Architecture International Design Competition. The biennial competition, which is open to young architects from around the world, carries a $30,000 first place award to support study and research abroad — the largest such award in the United States.
School of Architecture Distinguished Alumni Awards
Recipient biographies for School of Architecture 2004 Distinguished Alumni Awards
School of Architecture to honor distinguished alumni April 8
The School of Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis will honor five outstanding alumni at its 11th annual Distinguished Alumni Awards Dinner April 8.
Gallery of Art receives alumnus gift of monumental work
*Lo Sciocco Senza Paura* (The Fearless Fool) (1984), by Frank StellaNew York art collectors and patrons Ann Fertig Freedman and Robert L. Freedman have donated Lo Sciocco Senza Paura (The Fearless Fool) (1984), a major work by American artist Frank Stella, to Washington University’s Gallery of Art. The piece will be installed prior to Stella’s April 14 keynote address at the groundbreaking of the university’s new Sam Fox Arts Center.
The greening of American campuses
Photo by David Kilper / WUSTL PhotoWashington University’s new Earth & Planetary Sciences Building.Earth Day may arrive each April, but for architecture students and faculty, environmental design is increasingly part of the year-round curriculum. At the same time, a growing number of American universities are challenging themselves to implement green principles on their own campuses. From ivy-covered walls and tree-lined walkways, new ideals are taking shape: highly efficient buildings — constructed of local, sustainable materials — that reduce waste and minimize strain on local infrastructures; a holistic approach that considers operational as well as construction costs; and entire universities that might someday achieve net zero environmental impact.
Women’s day
Photo by Mary ButkusThe fifth annual International Women’s Day Celebration March 4 was a Sesquicentennial event focusing on “Historic Women in Legal Education.”
Public forum on ‘Intolerance and Prejudice’ brings leading scholars to Washington University, April 2
What are the origins of intolerance and prejudice? How are intolerance and prejudice similar, and how are they different? Are there certain people who are more intolerant or more prejudiced than others? How can the social problem of intolerance and prejudice be solved? These are just a few of the questions to be addressed as a panel of internationally recognized scholars assembles at Washington University in St. Louis on April 2 for a an interdisciplinary forum on issues of “Intolerance and Prejudice.”
Hand in Hand to Hell
ArmstrongShakespearean actor Gareth Armstrong, a former member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, will present Hand in Hand to Hell: Richard III and Macbeth—An Actor’s Perspective, the fifth annual Helen Clanton Morrin Lecture, for Washington University’s Performing Arts Department (PAD) in Arts & Sciences April 28.
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