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CONTACT:
Alan K. Cubbage at 847-491-4886 or a-cubbage@northwestern.edu;
or Mary Jane Twohey at 847-491-4889 or mjtwohey@northwestern.edu
FOR RELEASE: May 13, 2008
Other media:
• PDF version of this
release
• Northwestern
University School of Music to get new name and new funding
source (Chicago Tribune)
• NU
names new music school for Henry Bienen (Chicago
Sun-Times)
• Northwestern
School of Music Renamed (Musical
America)
• Watch
a video of the ceremony (YouTube)
• Listen to
a WFMT-FM newscast about the annnouncement (WFMT)
Northwestern School of Music
to Be Named for Bienens
EVANSTON, Ill. --- Northwestern University’s School of
Music will be named the Henry and Leigh Bienen School of Music
in honor of the retiring University president and his wife, announced
Patrick G. Ryan, chair of Northwestern’s Board of Trustees
today (May 13, 2008). President Bienen, who announced in March
that he plans to retire next year, and his wife, Leigh, are avid
music-lovers and strong supporters of the arts, including the
School of Music.
“The naming of the school is being made possible through
the generosity of trustees, alumni and friends of the University
who wish to honor the legacy of the Bienens,” Ryan said. “There
could be no more fitting way to recognize all the things that
Henry has done for the School of Music and the entire University
than to build a lasting endowment that will support one of the
areas of the University closest to his heart.
“Henry has been an unparalleled academic leader, a remarkably
successful steward of the University finances and a consistent
advocate for the arts at Northwestern,” Ryan added. “I
know my fellow trustees, alumni and other friends of the University
will join me in endowing the music school in his and Leigh’s
honor.”
President Bienen said, “Leigh and I are truly honored
by this magnificent gesture by Chairman Ryan, members of the
Board of Trustees and alumni. As two people who love music, we’re
obviously very gratified and proud that our name will be forever
associated with Northwestern’s outstanding School of Music.”
Northwestern’s Board of Trustees recently approved the
naming, which will be implemented next fall at the start of the
academic year. The new endowment will support the general operations
of the music school, including scholarships, professorships and
new creative and scholarly initiatives.
President Bienen and music school dean Toni-Marie Montgomery
announced last month that Northwestern
will construct a new building for the school. To be situated on the prime location of the south
end of Northwestern’s lakefront campus in Evanston and
designed by an architect who will be selected through a design
competition, the new home of the music school will be visible
for miles and is expected to become an iconic building on Northwestern’s
campus. Fundraising has already begun for the new facility, in
addition to the campaign to endow the school.
“The new building, coupled with the new endowment fund
for the school, will ensure that we will continue to have a premier
music school and help make it even greater,” President
Bienen said.
“The School of Music is honored to bear the Bienen name,
recognizing Henry and Leigh Bienen’s love of music and
support for the arts,” Montgomery said. “When the
next history of Northwestern is written, Henry Bienen’s
presidency will clearly be seen as transformational. Our faculty,
students and staff will strive to embrace the bold ambitions
and uncompromising standards that have been hallmarks of the
Bienen presidency.”
Henry Bienen became the 15th president of Northwestern on Jan.
1, 1995. During his tenure, the University has gained increasing
academic prominence, attracted ever-better faculty and students,
been strengthened financially and enjoyed unprecedented athletic
success.
The Northwestern University School of Music is one of the oldest
degree-granting music schools in the United States, combining
the resources of a world-class private research university with
conservatory-level music training. The school is home to 640
undergraduate and graduate students and a world-renowned faculty
of more than 125, many of whom are members of the Chicago Symphony
and Chicago Lyric Opera orchestras. School of Music alumni are
found in major arts institutions and universities, worldwide,
in performance, teaching and arts administration.
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