KSS Architects.KSS KSS Kearns-Sayre Syndrome KSS Komunistická Strana Slovenska (Slovak Communist Party, Slovakia) KSS Kelowna Secondary School (Kelowna, BC, Canada) KSS Kirby Super Star (SNES game) Architects, of Princeton, NJ, announced four new additions to its staff. Mary Friend has joined the firm as senior interior designer. Friend specializes in corporate and higher education higher education Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art. interiors projects. She holds a degree in design from the Moore College of Art and Design Moore College of Art and Design is an art and design women's college located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It is the first and only women's art and design college in the nation, and one of only two in the world. On average, approximately 500 women are enrolled at the College. . Friend resides in Allentown, N.J. Stephen Doyle Stephen Doyle (born 13 July 1981) is a South Australian Australian rules football player with the Sydney Swans of the AFL. Doyle was selected by the Swans under the father-son rule in the 1999 National Draft. , returns to KSS as an intern architect. He earned a five-year professional degree in architecture from Texas Tech University. He managed several successful projects during his previous service at KSS, and brings over seven years of experience in corporate, educational, and municipal projects. Fei Wang is an intern architect at KSS. He studied architecture at Tongji University in Shanghai, China, and received his Masters of architecture at Virginia Tech where he won the 2005 Thesis Award. Danielle Matuch comes to KSS as an intern architect. She earned a Masters of Architecture from Syracuse University as well as Bachelor of Arts degrees in Italian and art history from Mary Washington College Mary Washington College, mainly at Fredericksburg, Va.; state supported; chartered 1908 as the State Normal and Industrial School for Women; first given its present name in 1938; coeducational since 1970. . |
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