Scribble scribble, tap tap. As Summer School students improved their
minds, construction workers refreshed the campus. Building projects ranged
from great (renovation of the the Law School Library in Langdell Hall) to
small (touched-up trim for Harvard Hall). The height of the season was the
restoration of the Lowell House bell tower. Flint Born photographed the
scaffolding for this magazine from below. The Boston Globe's intrepid
David L. Ryan scaled the heights to a 206-foot vantage point for a panoramic
shot that dominated the paper's front page. Built in 1929, the tower carried
many layers of lead paint, some of it over rotten wood. The paint came off
and the rot came out at a cost of about $750,000. A quarter of that went
for the junglegym of staging. Philip Bisaga, examining the copper weathervane,
is manager of mechanical and structural maintenance. Says he, "I really
like the high jobs."