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Examples
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"Campanella," said Hugh, without betraying the slightest interest in
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The pianolist may now place Liszt's "Campanella" (Bell rondo) on the instrument.
The Pianolist A Guide for Pianola Players Gustav Kobb�� 1887
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Moreover there are pieces of which the Liszt "Campanella," the Mendelssohn "Rondo Capriccioso" and the "Rosamunde" impromptu of Schubert, are examples, that, when played on the pianola by a musical person, sound just as well as if they came from under the fingers of the greatest living virtuoso -- possibly better.
The Pianolist A Guide for Pianola Players Gustav Kobb�� 1887
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Liszt's "At the Spring" is a charming composition somewhat in the same style as the "Campanella," but instead of describing silver-toned chimes of bells, reproducing the purl of a bosky spring.
The Pianolist A Guide for Pianola Players Gustav Kobb�� 1887
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"For who, if not the planner," Campanella asks, "will advocate on behalf of society at large?"
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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Campanella does not blame Jacobs for what happened to his profession.
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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In Campanella's view, although Jacobs was right to condemn the complicity of planning in postwar urban destruction, her legacy was that planning as a potential tool of progressive government was destroyed; as he puts it, "the planning baby was thrown out with the urban-renewal bathwater."
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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In the essay, entitled "Jane Jacobs and the Death and Life of American Planning," Thomas J. Campanella, a professor of urban planning and design at the University of North Carolina, describes and discusses the grim descent that planning as a profession has taken in the 50 years since publication of Jacobs' The Death and Life of Great American Cities.
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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In Campanella's view, although Jacobs was right to condemn the complicity of planning in postwar urban destruction, her legacy was that planning as a potential tool of progressive government was destroyed; as he puts it, "the planning baby was thrown out with the urban-renewal bathwater."
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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Campanella begins by looking back to when planning was a profession known for visionaries such as Frederick Law Olmsted, Daniel Burnham, and John Nolan, and then describes how in the postwar years planners "aided and abetted some of the most egregious acts of urban vandalism in American history," i.e., urban renewal.
Frank Gruber: Planning and Building for the Future, Dead: Round Up the Usual Suspects Frank Gruber 2011
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