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Word: 1c (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Emerson A Government 43 Emerson 211 History 20a Emerson 211 Hist. of Religions 8a Emerson 211 Latin A Emerson A Philosophy 2b Emerson D Philosophy 10 Emerson D Physics 4a Memorial Hall Slavic 8 Emerson D MONDAY, JANUARY 25 (II) 9.15 A.M. Anthropology 1b Mallinckrodt MB 9 Architectural Sci. 1c Robinson Hall Biology 1b Mallinckrodt MB 9 Biology 21a Mallinckrodt MB 23 Chemistry 14a Mallinckrodt MB 8 Comp. Philology 190 Emerson 211 Engineering Sci. 12 Pierce 307 English 130a Emerson D Fine Arts E Fogg Small Rm. Geography 4a Harvard 2 Geography 10a Mallinckrodt MB 23 Geography 12a Mallinckrodt...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MIDYEAR EXAM SCHEDULE | 1/6/1943 | See Source »

...Fine Arts gave the Department a bill of health of which it may well be proud, as appears in this morning's article for the Confidential Guide, one criticism that was voiced had to do with the introductory survey courses to the field. For this year Fine Arts 1c, dealing with ancient, Greek, and Roman art has been expanded into a full course, Fine Arts A, while the far more important Fine Arts 1d, the course in medieval, Renaissance, and modern art, has been left at its half year status...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE FINE ARTS | 4/27/1937 | See Source »

Students examining the course book find Fine Arts 1d, which is a half-year course covering the art of western Europe from Early Christian to modern. Also, there is Fine Arts 1c, which is a similar history of ancient art; and Fine Arts 1a, which cuts out our future bank president because it requires an ability to draw. To the student who wants a survey of European art, there is no selection...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MAIL | 2/19/1936 | See Source »

...making no mention of the needs of the undergraduates. If you will turn to the List of Courses of Instruction you will find the answer to that question. In that you will see that there are a large number of courses beginning with the well-known 1a, 1c, 1d and continuing through many other courses which are designed primarily to do the thing which you intimate is not done; namely, to give the average undergraduates an opportunity to "round out their cultural education"; and later in the article you admit that the "Fine Arts authorities realize this final purpose. There...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fogg Director Answers Editorials on Suggested Revision in Fine Arts Work | 10/25/1935 | See Source »

...even this course is not enough for the general course in Art. The History and Philosophy of Art, given also excellently in themselves, fail to appeal because they need some of the concretizing of 1a, and yet 1a in itself needs some of the vaporizing of 1c and 1d and 1c. The course which combines all of these three would have to narrow its scope somewhat, but it would teach the method and general principles better to the amateur...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FINE ARTS II | 10/11/1935 | See Source »

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