Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
40 Wall Street was the world's tallest completed building for one month. [94] Prior to 40 Wall Street's completion, architect William Van Alen obtained permission to install a 125-foot (38 m) long spire on the Chrysler Building [127] [128] and had it constructed secretly. [94]
Morgan helped the firm to combine most of the radiator manufactories in the US. [2] In 1899, the company was re-incorporated under the same name, absorbing the St. Louis Radiator Manufacturing Company, and the Standard Radiator Manufacturing Company of Buffalo, and the radiator business of the Titusville Iron Company (Pennsylvania). [1]
The American Radiator Building (also known as the American Standard Building) is an early skyscraper at 40 West 40th Street, just south of Bryant Park, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. It was designed by Raymond Hood and André Fouilhoux in the Gothic and Art Deco styles for the American Radiator Company. The original ...
The diamond-shaped tower was patented by Nicholas Gerten and Ralph Jenner for Blaw-Knox July 29, 1930. [5] and was one of the first mast radiators.[1] [6] Previous antennas for medium and longwave broadcasting usually consisted of wires strung between masts, but in the Blaw-Knox antenna, as in modern AM broadcasting mast radiators, the metal mast structure functioned as the antenna. [1]
San Galli received a radiator patent in 1857, [2] while American Joseph Nason developed a primitive radiator in 1841 [3] and received a number of U.S. patents for hot water and steam heating. Nason's patent for tapered pipe threads in particular is cited by 1930s writer Ara Marcus Daniels as the key development in the birth of the radiator.
When excluding volatile food and energy costs, the so-called core PCE was down to 2.8% in November — compared with a peak of 5.6% in September 2022.
"Nail Your Heart to Mine" ()"Like Dreamers Do" (Volker) "Confidential" (Volker) "Little Paradise" (Volker) "Zigzagging Through Ghostland" (Volker) "Doctor Doctor ...
An investigation was reopened in 1999. A San Francisco grand jury looked into the incident, but the results were not immediately made public. [1] [4] A Secret Federal grand jury was convened in 2001 to re-investigate the “open” Park Station cold case.