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Word: architecte (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...models of the three proposed buildings for the Graduate School of Business Administration have been placed on exhibition on the fifth floor of Widener Library where the department has its offices. Mr. Harold Field Kellogg '06 is the architect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: EXHIBIT MODELS OF PROPOSED BUSINESS SCHOOL BUILDINGS | 1/8/1923 | See Source »

Tentative plans for this course are already under way. Six sites, all of them within easy reach of Cambridge, have been offered to the Association. The architect who is to build the course has promised to have it ready for use by July, 1923. This course will be for the use of the alumni, faculty, and students of the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LEADING COLLEGE GOLFERS TO PLAY IN EXHIBITION MATCH | 10/14/1922 | See Source »

Several sites in Cambridge and the immediate vicinity have been considered for the projected group of buildings, suggested plans for which have been tentatively drawn up by Harrold F. Kellogg '06, a Boston architect. These plans call for several Colonial buildings, with simple red brick walls and stone or wood trim, the style depending for effect more on its proportion than on its ornamentation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLAN ERECTION OF DORMITORIES FOR BUSINESS SCHOOL | 5/29/1922 | See Source »

...Here is a real opportunity for the scholastic world of this country to combine and offer this monument to their elder sister in distress. Yale, Princeton, Columbia, and Amherst have come through splendidly. Let not Harvard fall down with her share". Thus Mr. Whitney Warren, architect of the new Memorial and speaker at the Union last night, characterized the importance of the University's Louvain Library fund drive which starts today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOUVAIN LIBRARY DRIVE OPENS AT UNION MEETING | 5/11/1922 | See Source »

Suppose today an architect planned and constructed a 30-story skyscraper and supplied it with most of the modern conveniences, such as running water, electric lights, sanitary arrangements and ventilation, but did not equip it with elevators before opening it up for public use but instead, only provided stairways from the first to the 30th floors, because a generation ago such stairways were all that were necessary in the then existing buildings. How much space do you think would be rented in that building? What would you think of that architect? I will not give your answer out loud...

Author: By Daniel L. Turner, CONSULTING ENGINEER TO NEW YORK TRANSIT COMMISSION | Title: CITY TRANSIT FACILITIES SHOULD NOT BE BASED ON TRAFFIC IMMEDIATELY IN SIGHT | 5/6/1922 | See Source »

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