Word: ens
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Professor Leopold Mabilleau, who is to deliver a series of lectures on "La Prevoyance Sociale en France," arrived in Cambridge last evening. His first lecture, "Tableau des institutions de prevoyance sociale en France on 1900," will be given this evening 8 o'clock in the Fogg Lecture Room, and will be open to the public...
...Lectures on La Prevoyance Sociale on France. L. Tableau des institutions de prevoyance Sociale en France en 1900. Professor Mabilleau. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum...
...Lectures on La Prevoyance Sociale en France. II. Le secours mutuel en France (15,500 societes et 2,600,00 adherents). Professor Mabilleau: Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum...
...stories in the second number of the Advocate are interesting and well written; there is very little verse, and it is not especially good. "The Major's Hallowe'en," by F. M. Class, is an effective story, giving, in spite of inaccuracies in dialect and description, a sympathetic character sketch of the "old school" southern gentleman. "One of the Crowd," by Richard Inglis, is another character sketch: it seems a little improbable and is not vivid. "Tramping with a Botanist;" describes and mildly caricatures, with a good deal of humor, the adventures and character of an exploring botanist. "The March...
...fund was established by J. H. Hyde '98, for the purpose of bringing to Harvard each year a distinguished man of letters to lecture on French art, literature or history. M. Rene Doumic, a critic, was the first to come to Cambridge, in 1898, lecturing on "Histoire du Romantisme en France." In 1899, followed M. Edouard Rod, a critic and novelist, who spoke on "La Poesie Dramatique en France." The third lecture was M. Henri de Regnier, a poet, whose subject was "Poesie Contemporaine Francaise." Last year M. Gaston Deschamps, the literary critic of the "Temps," delivered the course...