370 APPENDIX I 



ment of French and other Romance languages. He is also to be ad- 

 mitted to any courses of instruction in the university he is qualified 

 to pursue. These young men occasionally assist in the annual pro- 

 duction of the Cercle Francais play. The appointment of the 

 American exchange fellow to Paris, to benefit by the fellowship 

 offered in return by the French ministry of public instruction, is 

 made on the recommendation of the president of Harvard Univer- 

 sity. The incumbents have been George Wallace Umphrey, 

 1903-4; Robert Bell Michel, 1904-5; Charles Marshall Under- 

 wood, 1905-6; Arthur Fisher Whittem, 1906-7; Warren Barton 

 Blake, 1907-8; Samuel Montefiore Waxman, 1908-9. The same 

 conditions govern the incumbent of this fellowship as those of the 

 James Hazen Hyde fellowship offered by the Cercle Francais. 

 The "boursiers," or fellows from France at Harvard, have been Rob- 

 ert Dupouey, 1903-4; to whose article, Americans in French Uni- 

 versities, reference has here twice been made; Henri Baulig, 

 1904-5, now an instructor in French in Harvard College; Mederic 

 Tourneur, 1905-6; Edmond Jean Eggli, 1906-7; Jean Marie Gi- 

 raudoux, 1907-8; Maurice Chelli, 1908-9. 



About fourteen years ago, Baron Pierre de Coubertin made four 

 foundations for the study of French literature ; one each at Prince- 

 ton, Tulane, the University of California, and Leland Stanford. 

 By way of reciprocity, there are now the University of Paris: 

 i The due de Loubat's foundation at the College de France for the 

 study of American antiquities. The late Leon Lejeal used to 

 lecture in this course. 2 Mr. James Hazen Hyde's foundation at 

 the Sorbonne for the study of America, American Ideas and Insti- 

 tutions; lectures in English by the American exchange lecturer. 

 3 The proposed foundation by some American bankers and finan- 

 ciers at the law-school of the University for the study of the 

 History and Outline of American Law; lectures in French, in 

 1904-5, by Charles F. Beach, Jr., a noted American lawyer and 

 student of economic problems. 



Perhaps one of the best known of all the foreign traveling fel- 

 lowships is the Bourse du Tour du Monde, founded by Albert Kahn 

 in 1898. This bequest provides for sending around the world 

 "Cinq jeunes agreges de 1'universite," each on a fellowship of 

 $3,000. An account of experiences in foreign countries by thirteen 

 of these young men during the years 1898, 1899, and 1900, will be 

 found in"Autour dumonde, par les Boursiers de voyage del'Univer- 

 site de Paris" (Paris, Felix Alcan, 1904). The book is useful in giving 



