Word: concerned
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...study of the conception of a gentleman among French classicists of the 17th century; it will be conducted in French on Wednesdays, and Fridays at 4.30 o'clock and will be open to the public. Course 51 will deal with problems of comparative literature, especially such as concern the relations of French and English literature. It will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 3.30 o'clock. Course 52 will offer an explanation of certain of Alfred deVigny's poems in their relation to English poetry, Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1.30 o'clock
...study of the conception of a gentleman among the French classicists of the 17th century. This course is conducted in French and is open to the public as well as to members of the University. Course 51 deals with problems of modern comparative literature, especially such as concern the relations of English and French literature. His other course, Comparative Literature 51, is an explanation of certain poems of Alfred de Vigny which are related in form or thought with works of the well-known English and German poets. Professor Baldensperger is regarded as the greatest authority in France...
...whom it may concern...
When a business concern finds itself in financial difficulties which would disappear if its actual condition were consistent wish its books, its directors generally put their shoulders to the wheel and bring about a consistency. But when the Harvard University Register shows an actual deficit of a thousand dollars, none but its immediate managers seem to be concerned. The Student Council, which directs its publication, and the Harvard undergraduates, whom we might consider stockholders since they are the beneficients, take no apparent interest in the matter. If the Student Council members would realize their responsibility and if the undergraduates would...
...college men at the Northfield Conferences, at Yale, at Princeton, and at other colleges. His wide knowledge of social conditions, his sincerity, and enthusiasm have brought him fame and popularity as a lecturer. In modern life no social conditions are so menacing and perplexing, so much a matter of concern to college men, as those due to the complexity of crime and graft in the life of large cities. Therefore, we welcome Mr. Bates who comes to tell us what he has learned in a lifetime devoted to the unselfish and sympathetic study of these conditions in the "underworld...