Proceedings of the ... Annual Convention of the American Institute of Architects, 第 44 巻Committee on Library and Publications, 1911 Vol. for 1893 includes proceedings of the World Congress of Architects held in conjunction with the 27th annual convention of the American Institute of Architecture at Chicago, 1893. |
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adopted amendment American Institute Angeles Annual Convention appointed Architecture Article average attendance ballot bath rooms Board of Directors Boston building Business transacted By-Laws Cass Gilbert Chairman Chapter has held Chapter members church Club commission Committee on Competitions construction delegates entitled delegates present draughtsmen elected Ethics follows further Gabriel Archangel GLENN BROWN Government Honorary ideals Institute and Chapter Institute members Institute of Architects Institute Seal Institute's interest January 17 Kohn last Convention last year's report Los Angeles Magonigle matter Missions mittee Motion seconded municipal Number of delegates Number of proxies Octagon pipe plumbing Pond practice President profession proposed Rankin recommend regular meetings resolution Roeschlaub roofs Rosenheim San Francisco Chapter Santa Barbara schedule of charges Schnaittacher seconded and unanimously Secretary SECTION Southern California Chapter special committee Standing Committee suggest tion unanimously carried vote Waid walls Walter Cook Wheelock York Chapter
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78 ページ - Assembly then proceeded to hear the Report of the Committee on the Report of the Board of Education.
123 ページ - Commissioners, they shall have full power and authority, and it shall be their duty...
139 ページ - Of the manner in which the project was executed, Dwinelle goes on to say : — " These laws, whose ostensible purpose was to convert the missionary establishments into Indian pueblos, their churches into parish churches, and to elevate the Christianized Indians to the rank of citizens, were after all executed in such a manner that the so-called secularization of the missions resulted in their plunder and complete ruin, and in the demoralization and dispersion of the Christianized Indians.
39 ページ - Secretary. This Chapter has held five regular meetings during the year, with an average attendance of seven. Business transacted at these meetings consisted of the election of officers, new members, and delegates to the Convention and the action taken upon death of a member. A paper on "Lighting fixtures, ancient and modern," by David Crownfield was read.
65 ページ - ... neighbors and whose flimsy structures make necessary the present large public expenditure for fire-department service in our cities. This Committee, in common with those who have from the beginning promoted the cause of Conservation, believes in the use of our natural resources, not in their abuse—in their equitable distribution and development in the hands of the people or in the hands of the Government, not in locking them up in the hands of a few; and that if corporate capital can develop...
54 ページ - To accept any commission or substantial service from a contractor or from any interested party other than the owner. 4. To advertise. ' 5. To take part in any competition the terms of which are not in harmony with the principles approved by the Institute. 6. To attempt in any way, except as a duly authorized competitor, to secure work for which a competition is In progress. 7. To attempt to influence, either directly or indirectly, the award of a competition in which he is a competitor. 8. To accept...
13 ページ - ... executive skill; third, that his admission shall necessitate an expressed pledge upon his part to sustain by individual effort a sound standard of professional bearing." President Irving K. Pond was not so sure of the wisdom of opening wide the doors. In 1911 he expressed his doubts to the Convention. "The officers of The Institute are urged constantly to widen the bounds and to take in every practitioner in the country, upon the idea that there is strength in numbers. This is a most mistaken...
28 ページ - The report of the recording secretary showed that the club had held twelve regular meetings during the year with an average attendance of 19, and had listened to 23 stated papers.
116 ページ - ... liberalization came in 1909 when the Convention voted that any fifteen members or Fellows, belonging to not less than two chapters, could nominate candidates for office by notification of the Secretary sixty days prior to the convention. It was not until 1911 that the Convention got around to ruling that "no person shall be eligible to membership in The Institute unless he be at the time a member of a chapter, provided that a chapter exists in the territory in which he resides.
27 ページ - PRESIDENT YOUNG: The next item in the order of business is the report of the Board of Trustees. James M. Greenwood, of Kansas City, Mo., vice-chairman of the Board of Trustees, presented the report of the Board of Trustees and explained in detail certain features of the report, showing the care taken in the annual report to give in detail all securities belonging to the...
