Headlines from Harvard history, November-December 1924-1989

From the pages of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin and Harvard Magazine

1924

Professor of dramatic literature George P. Baker, founder of the “47 Workshop” and instructor in playwriting and production at Harvard, resigns to direct Yale’s new Department of Dramatic Art, following a $1-million gift to Yale from E.S. Harkness to be used in part to build a theater for the production of plays written by members of Baker’s department. An unhappy alumnus writes the Bulletin, “Losing Professor Baker and the Yale game in the same week is a little too much to stand.”

1939

In an apparent first for the Stadium, a drum majorette—Beatrice Fishman of New Hampshire University—appears in the halftime parade during a Harvard football game. In addition, after New Hampshire’s 11 female cheerleaders call on Crimson fans for “a regular Harvard cheer,” old-timers report “they had never heard such enthusiastic cheering from a Harvard crowd.”

1954

A Committee on Visual Arts, to examine the place of art in the teaching of Harvard College and the Harvard graduate schools, has been designated by the president to find ways of putting Harvard resources in the fine arts to most fruitful use.

1959

Harvard’s new chemistry laboratory, boasting 21,000 square feet of workspace, is dedicated and named after president emeritus James Bryant Conant. President Pusey thanks the federal government for paying half the building’s cost and suggests this betokens an era when “we will work together more closely.”

1984

Bishop Desmond M. Tutu, LL.D. ’79, visits briefly, sponsored by the Harvard Foundation. “I can’t say, ‘Hey, I support divestment,’ because that would be an indictable offense back in South Africa,” he says during a press conference. “But I will certainly say that I expect those who want to support us…to exert all the pressure they can on the South African government—political, diplomatic, and above all economic pressure.”

1989

At halftime during The Game, former clarinet student Derek Bok tootles the opening bars of Rhapsody in Blue. “The instrument was thrust upon me,” Harvard’s president reports. “The reed was in desperate condition, but the selection seemed appropriate. They had the blue and we had the rhapsody.”

Related topics

You might also like

One of Harvard’s Oldest Structures Is Hiding Behind a Beer Garden

A crumbling wall in Harvard Square holds centuries of the city’s story, if you know how to read it.

Yesterday’s News

How a book on fighting the “Devill World” survived Harvard’s historic fire.

At Harvard’s Beck-Warren House, Ghosts Speak Many Languages

The quirky 1833 home now hosts Celtic scholars.

Most popular

Harvard Board of Overseers Candidates Describe Priorities

Alumni will vote for the University governing board in April and May.

Is Copyright Law the Wrong Weapon Against AI?

Harvard law professor Rebecca Tushnet explains how “fair use” applies to LLMs.

Harvard’s Class of 2029 Reflects Shifts in Racial Makeup After Affirmative Action Ends

International students continue to enroll amid political uncertainty; mandatory SATs lead to a drop in applications.

Explore More From Current Issue

Modern campus collage: Rubenstein Treehouse Conference Center, One Milestone labs, Verra apartment, and co-working space.

The Enterprise Research Campus in Allston Nears Completion

A hotel, restaurants, and other retail establishments are open or on the way.

A black primate hanging lazily on a branch in a lush green forest.

What Bonobos Teach Us About Female Power and Cooperation

A Harvard scientist expands our understanding of our closest living relatives.

Purple violet flower with vibrant petals surrounded by green foliage.

Bees and Flowers Are Falling Out of Sync

Scientists are revisiting an old way of thinking about extinction.