Word: editor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Among the more important papers in Paris is the Matin whose policy through four years of war has been admirable. Its editor, M. Stephane Joseph Vincent Lauzanne, will speak in the New Lecture Hall tonight at 8 o'clock. M. Lauzanne is likewise an officer in the Legion of Honor. He is a man of reputation in his country, and that country now sends him to us to tell us something of France's story, her present situation, and her hopes. We have all read to a certain extent, but reading is tame sport compared to hearing. Tonight we have...
Members of the University will have the opportunity tonight to hear of the part which France is playing in the present war from M. Stephane Joseph Vincent Lauzanne, editor of the Paris Matin. The address, which will be delivered in the New Lecture Hall at 8 o'clock, is the ninth of the series of war lectures, the last of which was given on February 27 by Professor Wallace Clement Sabine, Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy at the University...
...Stephane Joseph Vincent Lauzanne, editor of the Paris Matin, will renew the series of war lectures given during the winter months under the auspices of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, when he speaks on "France in Arms" in the New Lecture Hall on Friday evening. The address will be delivered at 8 o'clock and will be open to the public...
...Lauzanne, beside being an editor of note, is an officer of the Legion of Honor. He is now in this country for the purpose of showing the people of the United States the view that her ally has taken in this conflict...
Cheerfulness is a virtue ordinarily so difficult of achievement in these days that the editor of the Graduates' Magazine must be congratulated on the optimistic tone of the March number. The note is struck in Mr. Wister's sketch of the late Evert Jansen Wendell, in which the great-hearted "perpetual undergraduate" is depicted wart and all. The secret of Wendell's personality was an abiding youthfulness or, to use Mr. Wister's phrase, an innocence that "never shrank from its full original stature." Like all youths he was swept ahead by enthusiasms, sometimes to the detriment of social conventions...