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  2. Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts was founded as the Freshman Year Program at The New School in 1972 as a pre-college program for high school graduates. Three years later, in 1975, the program was expanded to a full undergraduate program and renamed The Seminar College.

  3. www.newschool.edu › lang › about-historyHistory - The New School

    In 1985, a $5 million gift from philanthropist and New School trustee Eugene M. Lang established the Seminar College as a full school of the university, and it was named Eugene Lang College.

  4. Nov 8, 2018 · The Senior College returns to the Adult Division, while the Seminar College and Freshman Year Program remain the Undergraduate Division. 1985: Otis Art Institute is listed as a division of the New School for Social Research. 1985: The Seminar College is expanded and renamed Eugene Lang College, now its own division. The Freshman Year Program is ...

  5. The Seminar College was renamed Eugene Lang College ten years later, when educational philanthropist Eugene Lang and his wife, Theresa, made a generous $5 million donation to the school. For more information, visit www.lang.newschool.edu.

  6. From 2005 until 2015, the college was renamed as, "Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts." In 2015, the college name changed to "Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts" following a university-wide rebranding.

  7. The school was called the New School for Social Research and was later renamed The New School. From the beginning, The New School maintained close ties to Europe. Its founders had modeled the school in part after the Volkshochschulen for adults established in Germany.

  8. Nov 8, 2018 · The program expanded as the Seminar College in 1977 and further grew in 1985 with a large donation and new name, Eugene Lang College. In 1933, the New School for Social Research established the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science.

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