Word: friendly
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Whitney Warren, a distinguished New York architect, will give a lecture on "Our Friend--France" in Emerson D this afternoon at 4.30 o'clock under the auspices of the Cercle Francais. This talk will be open only to members of the University and will be illustrated by lantern slides depicting conditions such as the lecturer actually observed during his residence in the belligerent countries...
...Friend--France" is the subject of a lecture to be given by Mr. Whitney Warren, a prominent New York architect, in Emerson D tomorrow afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. It will be illustrated by Mr. Warren's Own pictures of the conditions of such places as the Cathedral of Rheims, which, after its bombardment, he officially visited as a member of the Institute of France. A devoted admirer of France, Mr. Warren went there at the beginning of the war to do whatever service he could to help the country. During the year or more of his stay there...
...Whitney Warren will give a lecture on "Our Friend--France," under the auspices of the Cercle Francais in Emerson D next Wednesday afternoon at 4.30 o'clock. Mr. Warren is a distinguished New York architect and was the designer of the Grand Central Station. He is also a Member of the French Institute and was selected to make the official report to the Institute on the injuries inflicted during the war on the Cathedral of Rheims. The lecture will be open to all members of the University and will be illustrated by lantern slides...
...prominence, in foreign lands. This is a selfish reason. A consideration of the situation the American would be in if he were studying in Berlin may suggest unselfish ones. The foreigner himself would, of course, gain a better knowledge of Americans, and he would return to Europe a true friend of the University...
...Fields secured from his friend, Dr. John Brown of Edinburgh, a copy of Byron's 'Don Juan, Cantos III, IV, and V,' which supplements most satisfactorily the Byron first editions which Harvard received with the library of Harry Widener. The first page of this copy is covered by a note in Byron's handwriting, as attested by the publisher, John Murray. In this the author implores 'those superior persons--the publisher and printer--that they will in future, less misspell, misplace, mistake, and mis-everything, the humbled M.S.S. of their humble Servant. Oct. 26th, 1821.' There are three volumes...