Professional Papers: Writings of Max Abramovitz 1935-1969
Box:6
Folder:1
High school for the community,
Architectural Forum, 1935 Jan.
Box:6
Folder:2
School can be an aesthetic contribution to the community,
1940
Typescript of an article written for the American School Publishing Corp.
Box:6
Folder:3
China airfield construction,
CBI Dromes 1944 Dec.
Box:6
Folder:4-5
Trends in synagogue design,
Bulletin of the American Institute of Architects, 1948 May
File includes article typescript and correspondence.
Box:6
Folder:6-7
Disciplines of fenestration : a study prepared with the assistance of Max Abramovitz,
Architectural Record 1955 Apr.
Box:6
Folder:8
Architect's message,
Opera news, 1962 Sept. 29
Box:6
Folder:9-10
City of tomorrow,
Pitt, 1963 Oct
File includes article typescript and correspondence.
Box:6
Folder:11
Treatise on seismic forces and their effects on structures, submitted as part of the requirement by the California State Board
of Architectural Examiners towards registration to practice architecture in the State of California.
1965 Jan. 21
Box:6
Folder:12
Changing practice : theaters,
Progressive Architecture, 1965 Oct.
Section entitled Programming and the client-user includes a discussion with Max Abramovitz and others.
Box:6
Folder:13
Troubled search : new dimensions in a changing environment,
1966 Sept. 18
Transcript of the address presented by MA at the New Year Convocation for Students, University of Illinois.
Box:6
Folder:14
Essay on architectural and planning problems in New
York City,
1967 Nov. 29
Written in the form of a letter to John B. Oakes, New York Times.
Box:6
Folder:15
What the architect can do,
Build international, 1969 Jan./Feb.
Box:6
Folder:16-17
Designing for the performing arts,
Journal of Aesthetic Education
1969 Jan
File includes article typescript and correspondence.
Box:6
Folder:18
New York: the shape of the future,
New York Sunday New Magazine, 1969 Sept. 7
Box:6
Folder:19-20
Susan Morse and Frederick Whiley Hilles Library at Radcliffe College,
Harvard Library Bulletin, 1969 Oct.
Bulletin contains pencil sketch on fron cover.
|