Word: chapel
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Joseph Lautner, '21. As an undergraduate he was first Secretary and then President of the choristers. Since then he has studied abroad, where he attained world-wide fame as a tenor and has recently returned from a European concert tour. The concert will be at Wellesley in Houghton Memorial Chapel at 7:30 o'clock Sunday evening, and is open to the public free of charge...
...program consisting of works of John Sebastian Bach will be presented by the Wellesley College Choir and the Harvard College Glee club on Sunday at 7:30 o'clock in the Houghton Memorial chapel at Wellesley. 70 men and 90 girls will participate. The program will consist of The Magnifieat and the Kantata No. 190, "Singet dem Herrn". Soloists for this performance will be: Jean MacDonald Haddow, contralto; Joseph F. Lautner, tenor; and Daniel Harris, baritone. Mr. Carl Weinrich will accompany on the organ...
George Lyman Kittredge '82, Gurney Professor of English Literature, emeritus, was guest speaker at Wellesley's Honors Day yesterday. He addressed the assembly in Memorial Chapel on "Shakspere and His Critics" as part of the celebration in honor of the scholars at Wellesley. In the past Professors Harlow Shapley and John H. Williams have been guest speakers...
...gates, looming almost as large as the late Otto Kahn's huge chateau down near Huntington, stands a rambling, many-chimneyed Tudor house whose four stories and So rooms contain $2,000,000 worth of the world's greatest paintings, tapestries, porcelains and a large, handsome private chapel. Last week the public learned that next May it may pay admission-for charity-to inspect the house, the wooded walks, the unsurpassed rose gardens of "Inisfada." home of the late great Roman Catholic Utilities Tycoon, Nicholas Frederic Brady. After the contents of the mansion are sold at auction, "Inisfada...
With his pension doubled and a grant of an annual ton of wine, Chaucer ended his life in comfort. Ten months before his death he leased, in a sanguine mood, for fifty-three years a house in the garden of St. Mary's Chapel at Westminster. Surrounded by those distinguished men who loved both the poet and man, Chaucer slipped peacefully into eternity at the turn of the century, a round-numbered date that no English student has difficulty in remembering...