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From the Louvre, Harvard has drawn Monsieur Marcel Aubert as Lecturer on Fine Arts for the first half year. He will lecture on Gothic Architecture and Sculpture of the Culmination in France. Monsieur Aubert is Conservateur au Musee du Louvre, Directeur de la Societe d' Archeologie, and Professeur a l'Ecole des Chartes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Aubert Comes from Louvre | 9/24/1929 | See Source »

From the Sorbonne, Paris, France Monsieur Leon Robin, Professor of Ancien Philosophie, comes to Harvard to lecture during the first half year on Plato's Symposium and the philosophy of Plato. Wolfgang Liepe will come from the University of Kiel to lecture on the life and work of Hebbel and to give a graduate course in the poetry of the 18th century in Germany...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAMOUS FOREIGN PROFESSORS WILL TEACH THIS YEAR | 9/24/1929 | See Source »

...Mirabeau, a boy of 15 with a stocky figure and a face that bore marks of the pox in puffy profusion. His audience was his tutor, to whose reprovals he was retorting. Indignant, the tutor reported the cause of the reproval to Mirabeau Sr.: "Must I confess to you, Monsieur, that his ways have already forced me to dismiss two maids...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Stormy Mirabeau | 8/5/1929 | See Source »

During his last eight years the late, great Foch was attended by Aide-de-Camp Bugnet, an efficient, obedient soldier, now an author who tries to reveal not Marshal Foch but Monsieur Foch. From the nature of the man as well as the Boswell, one could scarcely expect a record of daily life and opinions comparable in readability with, for example, Jean Jacques Brousson's record of Foch's brother-Academician, Anatole France. It was inevitable that people must learn that Foch's "private life was irreproachable" and that he considered "born believers" the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Monsieur Foch | 7/15/1929 | See Source »

...right in the seat of honor was Charles Gates Dawes, the newly-arrived U. S. Ambassador. At his left was Foreign Secretary Arthur Henderson. Next to Mr. Dawes was plantagenet-beaked Sir Austen Chamberlain, the outgone Foreign Secretary, and beyond him Sir Austen's good friend, French Ambassador Monsieur de Fleurian. Also at the speakers' table were the Ambassadors of Germany, Japan, Belgium, Brazil, and the Italian Charge d'Affaires, Count Ruggeri...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Birdsong & Findhorn | 7/1/1929 | See Source »

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