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Word: olmstead (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Accordingly, the Committee has voted the varsity rowing "H" to Alastair D. Robertson '33, Armistead B. Rood '31, Rodgers Donaldson '30, David S. M. Lanier '28, Robert W. Herr '28, George Bancroft '27, John B. Olmstead, II, '27, John H. Harwood, Jr. '27 and Robert S. Riley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: H.A.A. To Discontinue All But Two Jayvee Teams Next Year | 5/11/1934 | See Source »

...present American Academy was incorporated in June 1897 by a group of distinguished men including Charles Francis Adams '88, Charles W. Eliot, Frederick Law Olmstead '94, and Henry Lee Rigginson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HUBBARD IS APPOINTED TO AMERICAN ACADEMY | 12/19/1933 | See Source »

...Senator, a Congressman, and several officers representing other departments of the United States government, are, ex-officio, members of the Commission. The three or four other members are appointed by the President from the ranks of leaders in the professions of architecture, landscape architecture, and city planning. F. L. Olmstead '94, of Brookline, landscape architect, is at present a member of the Commission...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HUBBARD SELECTED BY HOOVER FOR COMMISSION | 5/16/1932 | See Source »

...judges were L. V. Caldwell, prominent Boston landscape architect; Robert Coe '25, of the Olmstead firm in Brookline; H. V. Hubbard '97, Chairman and Professor of the School of City Planning; and B. W. Pond, Professor and Chairman of the School of Landscape Architecture. Following a brief statement by Professor Bond, the judges made a cursory inspection of the plans...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In the Graduate Schools | 1/21/1932 | See Source »

...call the era America's "Buried Renaissance" is extreme; those thirty years contributed much to the future development of our civilization, but they gave us few monuments. Richardson and Roebling, Marsh, Olmstead and Eliot--these men laid the foundations on which we have built, they did not contribute, in most cases, the masterpieces associated with a genuine renaissance. What Mr. Mumford said in "The Golden Day" is more nearly true than any expression he uses in "The Brown Decades," that "a genuine culture was beginning to struggle upward again in the seventies." That culture had not then and indeed...

Author: By R. N. C. jr., | Title: BOOKENDS | 11/14/1931 | See Source »

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