Word: leipzigers
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...this scheme of things. Instead of the old, conventional picture, people saw only Mark Twain's students of Heidelberg, bloody and scarred with duelling. Reputations are more easily ruined than made, and German university life is recuperating slowly in foreign eyes. Yet the universities are determined to overcome prejudices. Leipzig, Heidelberg, Frankfort are again throwing open their doors with special summer lecture courses for Americans. This renewed opportunity for hearing great German lectuerers in literature, art music, and economics, together with all the advantages of a vacation in Germany, where the dollar still has magic power, is inducement enough...
...been announced that the University of Leipzig will give special courses of lectures during the summer for the benefit of American students and teachers. The success of these lectures in 1922 has made their repetition this year possible. In addition to those given at Leipzig, the Universities of Heidelberg. Frankfort on the Main, and Gothenburg, Sweden have planned similar courses...
...University of Leipzig, Germany, has announced that it will conduct a special course of lectures for American students this summer, the course including a tour of the principal German cities and points of interest. The University of Leipzig is one of the oldest in the world, and has been a famous seat of learning for five centuries...
...party will start from New York on July 8, by S. S. "Majestic", arriving at Southampton on July 14. From Southampton, the party will go immediately to Hamburg by boat, arriving the following day. Beginning on July 17, the party will remain in Leipzig until August 5, when the lecture-courses will come to an end, and diplomas will be given...
Professor Bouton was born in St. Louis on April 25, 1869, and he graduated from Washington University in 1891. He spent the years 1894-96 at Harvard as a graduate student of mathematics. In 1898 he went abroad on a Parker Fellowship and studied with Sophus Lie in Leipzig, taking the degree of Ph.D. in 1898. He returned to Cambridge the same year and took up his work on the staff of the Mathematics department continuing in this position until a few months before his death...