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When Victor Nave, window washer, crawled out to do a tenth-story window of San Francisco's Rochester building one day last week, he found a falcon's nest on an upper ledge. A thorough cleaning nan, he swept it away. Down plunged sticks, straw and some squeaking nestlings. Down, too, with beak and talons at Victor Nave's face plunged the mother hawk, her mate hovering near with angry cries. Victor Nave, his face streaming blood, clung to the window ledge as the birds dashed at him again & again. At last he loosed his hold, steadied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Animals: Animals, Jun. 8, 1931 | 6/8/1931 | See Source »

...with 71,000 square feet of floor space exceed in area the famed cathedrals of Notre-Dame de Paris, Rheims, Cologne, Canterbury and Westminster Abbey. Units of its Gothic, cruciform plan already completed are the apse and choir (top of the cross), the entire foundations, the crypt of the nave, three crypt chapels, a Children's Chapel. Now being constructed are the two arms of the cross: the North and South transepts. To complete these in time for the bicentenary celebration next year of the birth of George Washington is the object of the Washington Cathedral's National...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: North Porch Begun | 5/25/1931 | See Source »

...library? You would never recognize it when you saw it. Enter it-pass through a bastard version of the west portal of an abbey. Continue down the main hall, which is a precise copy of a nave with five bays. Observe the massive and unnecessary piers, the inconvenient but orthodox side aisles, the lofty transepts bristling with sanctity above and serial catalogues below. Advance to the high altar-a $25,000 book delivery desk; overhead, admire the rood screen, of utmost complexity and facility at catching dust, which has been cleverly placed to hide the important library clock from view...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cathedral Culture | 4/28/1931 | See Source »

Despairing then, he hurries towards the exit portal of the sanctuary. And the last thing that greets his departing eye, at the end of the nave, is a telephone booth, designed as a fourteenth-century confessional. William Harlan Hale in The Nation

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cathedral Culture | 4/28/1931 | See Source »

...position of Dean of the Chapel or a similar office of religious leadership. Besides there will be appropriate arrangements for smaller services, so there could be evening ones as well as morning, for I understand that in the present plans the cathedral type will be used having a nave for larger services and a Choir for smaller groups to gather in on weekdays...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ex Cathedra | 3/13/1931 | See Source »

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