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Vast and elegant, Arizona State University’s Grady Gammage Auditorium represents the final masterpiece of architect Frank Lloyd Wright. The circular structure stands 80 feet high. Two pedestrian bridges that extend 200 feet from the building are, in Wright’s words, “outstretched arms, saying 'Welcome to ASU!'"
Inside the ASU Gammage, three tiers holding 3,000 seats allow no one to sit farther than 115 feet from the stage, and well balanced acoustics afford an even flow of sound to every seat. The facility hosts 12 week-long Broadway shows each year. A student ID from any school will get you a 50 percent ticket discount.
Friday, July 2, 2004, enjoying some down time at the Cornell Dairy bar:
Visiting Associate Professor in Molecular Medicine at the Veterinary College, from the University of Wisconsin, Lacrosse, Adrienne Loh, and her friend Tom McCarrick, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology here at Cornell, take a mint-chocolate chip ice cream break with Professor Loh's dog, Oliver. He is a rescue Greyhound.
Friday, July 2, 2004, enjoying some down time at the Cornell Dairy bar:
Visiting Associate Professor in Molecular Medicine at the Veterinary College, from the University of Wisconsin, Lacrosse, Adrienne Loh, and her friend Tom McCarrick, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology here at Cornell, take a mint-chocolate chip ice cream break with Professor Loh's dog, Oliver. He is a rescue Greyhound.
The Annie Pfeiffer Chapel, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, was the first of the Wright buildings constructed on campus. It remains the hallmark image of Florida Southern College.
Wright designed 18 structures for the campus, and 12 were constructed, representing the world’s largest one-site grouping of Wright’s work known collectively as "Child of the Sun."
http://www.flsouthern.edu/fllwctr/FPfeiffer.htm
Located inside the Polk County Science Building, the Miller Planetarium is the only planetarium designed by Frank Lloyd Wright that was ever built.
Wright designed 18 structures for the campus, and 12 were constructed, representing the world’s largest one-site grouping of Wright’s work known collectively as "Child of the Sun."
http://www.flsouthern.edu/academics/chem/planetarium/index.htm
The Water Dome, first completed in 1948, was remodeled to its original design and was dedicated on October 25, 2007.
Wright designed 18 structures for the campus, and 12 were constructed, representing the world’s largest one-site grouping of Wright’s work known collectively as "Child of the Sun."
http://www.flsouthern.edu/fllwctr/FWaterDome.htm
The William H. Danforth Chapel was completed in 1955 and represents Wright’s only work in leaded glass on campus. Framed in native Florida tidewater red cypress woodwork, Danforth still contains the original pews and cushions, designed by Wright and constructed by industrial arts students and home economics classes. This intimate chapel is often referred to as a miniature cathedral.
Wright designed 18 structures for the campus, and 12 were constructed, representing the world’s largest one-site grouping of Wright’s work known collectively as "Child of the Sun."
http://www.flsouthern.edu/fllwctr/FDanforth.htm
Have your photo taken with the James Madison ("Little Jimmy") statue located near the Quad.
Rev. James Wenzel, O.S.A. stands in the middle of the new labyrinth on the Merrimack College campus in North Andover, MA. Construction of the labyrinth was made possible through donations collected at Fr. Wenzel’s 50th anniversary of his ordination.
Students on the campus green; Presidents Hall is pictured in the background.
St. Catherine University sits on 110 wooded acres in the Highland Village neighborhood of St. Paul, Minnesota — less than a mile from the Mississippi River and in one of the most vibrant metropolitan areas of the country. To learn more, visit St. Kate’s website: www.stkate.edu.