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Word: problems (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1960
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Usage:

...only encouragement that day came from John Mason Brown, who thought the idea possible and worth pursuing. It must be kept in mind that our problem was a University theater, not Broadway, or "off Broadway...

Author: By Hugh Stubbins, ARCHITECT FOR THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER | Title: Evolution of an Unusual Playhouse | 10/14/1960 | See Source »

...site was at the limit of the commercial development on residential Brattle Street. The building was very large in area and intrinsically of great bulk--bigger than anything else around it. The problem was how to make it a good neighbor, how to make it in scale and, at the same time, fulfil its purposes...

Author: By Hugh Stubbins, ARCHITECT FOR THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER | Title: Evolution of an Unusual Playhouse | 10/14/1960 | See Source »

...more than the mere translation of ideas into technical reality. Perhaps the most important consideration of all and the most difficult is the aesthetic environment produced by a structure. In the case of a theater, and in particular this theater on Brattle Street, this was a unique and difficult problem...

Author: By Hugh Stubbins, ARCHITECT FOR THE LOEB DRAMA CENTER | Title: Evolution of an Unusual Playhouse | 10/14/1960 | See Source »

Tocsin was also addressed by Richard J. Barnet '52, research fellow in the Russian Research Center, author of Who Wants Disarmament? Barnet discussed the history of disarmament efforts and the moral, technical, and political aspects of the present problem...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Tocsin Session Attracts 150; Action for Disarmament Advocated | 10/14/1960 | See Source »

...fashion Broadway understands. The playwright's task and the actor's and the director's and the designer's is to hold that necessary attention, not to gratify it in other ways. And to learn to hold it is, in a very precise sense, the heart of the dramatic problem. For unless the audience is held it will not participate in the play and unless it participates in the play, lives the play, nothing dramatic will have happened...

Author: By Archibald Macleish, BOYLSTON PROFESSOR OF RHETORIC AND AND MEMBER OF THE FACULTY COMMITTE | Title: Loeb's Function, 'Plays for Audiences,' Not Inconsistent with Artistic Integrity | 10/14/1960 | See Source »

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