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  1. ROYHALE was founded by designer, educator, activist and artist Mary Hale, winner of the 2015 AIA Associates Award. Mary received a Masters of Architecture from MIT in 2009, and a...

    • 500+
    • 983
    • Northeastern University
    • Boston, Massachusetts, United States
  2. Hail, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou amongst women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death. Amen.

  3. Mary Hale is a designer with a particular focus on ephemeral spatial experiences, animated and brought to life through projection and movement. Mary founded ROYHALE, an interdisciplinary art, design and design-research practice, in 2014 as a vehicle for this work.

  4. Swami Vivekananda’s Philosophico-Poetic Debate with Mary Hale (CW8: 162–167) Swami Vivekananda’s first poem to Mary (15 Feb 1895): From dreams awake, from bonds be free, Be not afraid. This mystery, My shadow, cannot frighten me, Know once for all that I am He. Mary’s reply to Swami Vivekananda: My scolding letter I deplore

    • The Lyons
    • The Hales
    • Charles C. Bonney
    • John H. Barrows
    • Elisha Gray
    • Mrs. Potter Palmer
    • Jane Addams
    • Florence Adams
    • Emma Calvé
    • Robert Ingersoll

    The Lyons belonged to the First Presbyterian Church. Mrs. Lyons had volunteered to host any broad minded delegate since Mr. Lyon was much interested in philosophy but heartily disliked bigots. Their home was at 262 Michigan Ave (now the Hilton Hotel) where they lived with their two sons John B. Jr. and William, a widowed daughter Mrs. Conger and 6 ...

    On September 10, 1893 the day before the Parliament was to begin Swamiji sat down, weary and exhausted, on the street-side when Mrs. Hale who lived in the house across the street noticed him and welcomed him into their home. The Hale family was to become more dear to Swamiji than any other he would know in the West. 'I scarcely find a family so hig...

    Charles C. Bonney was a well-known judge in Chicago and the author of many important constitutional and economic reforms. He was the President of the World's Congress Auxiliary of the Columbian Exposition and it was Bonney's inspiration and idea to hold the Parliament of Religions as part of the Congress in order to, as he said in his welcome addre...

    Rev. John Barrows was pastor of the 1st Presbyterian Church in Chicago and one of the city's most well known clergymen. As the chairman of the Parliament of Religions he was the principal organizer of the event. Swamiji met him at his house (2957 Indiana Ave) on September 10, 1893.

    Elisha Gray was a famous electrical engineer and inventor who held over seventy patents to his credit. He was chairman of the Internal Electrical Congress, which had been held in conjunction with the Columbian Exposition, and his teleautograph machine to transmit facsimile was one of the exhibits in the Electrical Building at the Exposition.

    Mrs. (Bertha Honore) Potter Palmer headed the Board of Lady Managers of the Columbian Exposition. A very well known socialite and outspoken feminist, she was the official hostess of the Exposition. On September 22, 1893, in Hall VII of the Art Institute, Swamiji spoke on 'Women in Oriental Religion' at a special session organized by Mrs. Potter Pal...

    Jane Addams reverently known in her circle as "Saint Jane" was a social reformer, peace activist, and with Ellen Gates Starr, the founder of Hull House - a social settlement whose main purpose was to provide social and educational opportunities for working class immigrants in the surrounding neighborhood. She shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931. S...

    Mrs. (Florence) Milward Adams, a highly intellectual and versatile woman, was a popular lecturer on the Art of Expression and one of Swamiji's staunchest admirers in Chicago. He first met her in Sara Bull's house in Cambridge, MA in December, 1894. She was the principal force behind arranging lecture classes for Swamiji in Chicago since then. She l...

    Emma Calvé was a celebrated French operatic soprano and was probably the most famous French female opera singer of the time. She first met Swamiji in November, 1899 when she was visiting Chicago with the Metropolitan Opera Company. Feeling 'greatly depressed in mind and body' at the death of her daughter she went to see Swamiji. "She is a great wom...

    Sometime during the post-Parliament period Swamiji first met the celebrated agnostic orator Mr. Robert Green Ingersoll and discussed religious and philosophical matters with him. The evidence of Swamiji's admiration for this honest, forthright man can be found in his lecture in London in 1896 where he said, referring to a conversation he had with M...

  5. His work is cited and has been published in prestigious journals and magazines around the world, including Encyclopedia.com, Vedanta Kesari and Hinduism Today. His research has lead to many new discoveries of Vivekananda considered by hundreds of millions as the spiritual father of modern India.

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  7. "Mary Had a Little Lamb" is an English language nursery rhyme of nineteenth-century American origin, first published by American writer Sarah Josepha Hale in 1830. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 7622.