Word: herzog
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...committee of three has been named by the anonymous donor to administer the fellowship. These men who will receive applications for the award, are Carl J. Friedrich and Rupert Emerson '21, assistant professors of Government, and Paul M. Herzog. They have assumed the position of trustees and for the next few years will investigate the chances of enlarging the project. If the donor feels that the experiment has been successful, he is willing to enlarge his donation, one of the committee stated last night...
...next meeting of the Harvard Politics Club, Thomas H. Eliot '28, of the Solicitors Office of the Department of Labor, and probably Paul M. Herzog '27 of the National Labor Board will speak on "Labor and the N.R.A." Mr. Eliot graduated magna cum laude in Government four years ago and Mr. Herzog was formerly an instructor in Government. Professor Arthur N. Holcombel '06 will preside. The meeting will be in Lowell House Junior Common Room at 8 o'clock next Tuesday...
Though eclipsed by many another French writer, in the opinion of many a big and little wig, Andre Maurois (real name: Emile Herzog) stands first in the eyes of a majority of his countrymen, is now generally regarded as France's foremost living writer. Readers who eschew the unsteady brilliance of Jean Cocteau, the cold amorality of Andre Gide, turn with relief to the sympathetic charm, the Judaic kindliness, of Author Maurois. His ironic fire, at its fiercest only kindled laughter, never burnt anyone. An unembarrassing writer, his manners are beautiful-although, like most good manners, a little banal...
...Maurois biographical writing is a method of escape. Emile Herzog (he adopted the pseudonym since his first book, a war novel, was published while he was still an officer in the French army) was destined for the role of a "chef d'industrie" in his father's cloth factory in Elbeuf. But an active business career did not interest him. He turned novelist and for a while he was known as the "humorous author of a pair of war books." That was hardly satisfactory, but "from the entanglement of passion we escape by action." Action: where was it? Mr. Maurois...
...explaining the movement, Mrs. P. M. Herzog writes in the catalogue of the exhibition...