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Paris (France)
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Annual Mixed Gourmet Dinner: October 26, 1984

In this Mixed Gourmet Dinner, the University Club, its kitchen and staff, celebrate "les Grands Grands Hôtels de France": Hôtel George V, Plaza Athénée, and Hôtel Ritz Paris.

Nicole Allardet Collection

  • CA RBD MSG 1267
  • Collection
  • between approximately 1940 and 1959

Collection consists of an illustrated manuscript containing a map and brief guidebook to Paris landmarks, created by Nicole Allardet probably during the 1940s or 1950s. The item is inscribed to Vivienne Horne. A folded booklet on heavy grey paper, the guidebook contains twelve panels, ten of which feature a gouache illustrated vignette of a Paris landmark and a short handwritten description in white. The landmarks include the Jardin du Luxembourg, Opera House, Eiffel Tower, the river Seine, the Bois de Vincennes, Notre-Dame de Paris, the Jardin des Tuileries, the Champs-Élysées, Montmartre, and the Luxor Obelisk in the Place de la Concorde. In the centermost two panels is a simple map of Paris showing the landmarks depicted.

Allardet, Nicole

Colonel House

Correspondence between E.M. House and Mr. Buxton, including several typed copies of House's letters.

Letter to Harvey Cushing, May 20, 1925

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Robert S. Brewster, Paris, France. Brewster's wife, Mabel, has been in hospital under the care of Cushing's friend Dr. de Martel. He reports that his mother died suddenly and that his wife plans to read "Life of William Osler" while in hospital.

Brewster, Robert S.

Letter to Harvey Cushing, May 3, 1925(?)

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Mabel Brewster, Hôtel Vendôme, Paris, France. Brewster has not yet received a copy of Cushing's "Life of Sir William Osler," which she is anxious to read. She writes of the sudden death of her mother-in-law, Mrs. Brewster.

Brewster, Mabel

Letter to Harvey Cushing, October 1, 1923

Letter to Harvey Cushing from A.A. Warden, 11, Avenue du Bois-de-Boulogne, Paris, France. Warden responds to Cushing's appeal for material relating to Osler. He also sends an abstract of an address by Charles Mayo. He mentions his sister-in-law, Mrs. R. Bruce Taylor, wife of the president of Queen's University.

Warden, A.A.

Letter to William Osler, June 6, 1919

Zaharoff has just received Osler's letter and will bring its contents to the notice of the important members of the Peace Conference. Although Zaharoff agrees with Professor Tendeloo's opinion that demanding cattle from the Germans would increase their mortality, he does not agree that revolution in the Allied countries is an inevitability.

Zaharoff, Basil

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