Ada Louise Huxtable — American Critic born on March 14, 1921,

Ada Louise Huxtable was an architecture critic and writer on architecture. In 1970 she was awarded the first ever Pulitzer Prize for Criticism. The esteemed architecture critic Paul Goldberger, also a Pulitzer Prize-winner for architectural criticism, said of Huxtable: "Before Ada Louise Huxtable, architecture was not a part of the public dialogue." "She was a great lover of cities, a great preservationist and the central planet around which every other critic revolved," said architect Robert A. M. Stern, dean of the Yale University School of Architecture... (wikipedia)

Summer is the time when one sheds one's tensions with one's clothes, and the right kind of day is jeweled balm for the battered spirit. A few of those days and you can become drunk with the belief that all's right with the world.
A disaster where marble has been substituted for imagination.
Nothing was more up-to-date when it was built, or is more obsolete today, than the railroad station.
An excellent job with a dubious undertaking, which is like saying it would be great if it wasn't awful.
The age of Lincoln and Jefferson memorials is over. It will be presidential libraries from now on.