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CAPTAIN MORIZE SPEAKS.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

To members of the University who attended one or more of the Harvard R. O. T. C. Camps during the period of war, the loan exhibition which opens tomorrow afternoon at the Fogg Art Museum will have a double appeal. In the first place the exhibition itself, comprised of valuable loans from many of the largest American art collections, has been carefully and tastefully selected to represent the whole history and scope of modern French art. Secondly the collection has been brought together in commemoration of the devoted services of those seven French officers who, assigned here as instructors, taught to so many members of the University the ways of modern war.

Captain Andre Morize, now Assistant Professor of French Literature at the University will open the exhibition this afternoon with a speech. To that charm of manner which used to make even a discussion of sand-bagged parapets attractive a year ago, Captain Morize now adds a very complete knowledge of the field of French art, and will know and feel whereof he speaks. As usual, we are confident that Captain Morize's talk will be well attended by undergraduates.

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