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Six designs showing the most significant work done in the Architectural School during the past few years are being shipped to Kansas City some time this week for the Travelling Exhibition of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.
Starting form Kansas, the organization will conduct an eastern and a western tour of the most important Architectural schools in the country.
Paul M. Hefferman, who graduated from the School in 1935, has the most distinguished sheet of the six. His exhibited thesis, "An Estate and Art Gallery for an Art Collector," won the Paris Prize in 1935, the highest student award in Architecture.
Two works of Hugh A. Stubbins, Jr., also graduated in 1935, were chosen. One of these, "A Wine Collar and Tap Room," won the Boston Society of Architecture prize, the other is a thesis, a design for "A Municipal Sports Building."
"A Foyer Dedicated to Stradivarius," by George W. Browster, Jr., a second year man at the School, and a pair of identical sheets, which are reproductions of an extremely involved sketch showing the "Correlation of Function, Design, and Construction," by Richard H. Cutting, graduated in 1934, make up the remainder of the list.
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