Word: aims
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Pope will conduct the course by means of lectures, conferences, visits to galleries and reports. The chief aim will be a study of the works of Turner in the galleries in and near London, together with a study of his environment and development, in order to learn as much as possible of the mental processes involved in the production of great imaginative works of art. The many thousands of drawings, sketches, and paintings now in the new Turner wing of the Tate Gallery, make the study of Turner far more comprehensive than is possible in the case of any other...
Professor Arthur Pope '01 will conduct the course by means of lectures, conferences, visits to galleries and reports. The chief aim will be a study of the works of Turner in the galleries in and near London, together with a study of his environment and development, in order to learn as much as possible of are mental processes involved in the production of great imaginative works of art. The many thousands of drawings, sketches, and paintings now in the now Turner wing of the Tate Gallery, make the study of Turner far more comprehensive than is possible in the case...
...Harvard's glory shall be our aim...
...team able to win from Yale this year must be one trained in all the fine points of the game of football. The ability to play within the rules is far from the least important of these. It should be the aim of the players and coaches in their work of final preparation to profit by the experience of the past so that in the final games the unnecessary loss of ground by reason of penalties may be avoided...
...questions, not in a spirit of chronic protest, but with the idea of arousing undergraduate interest in College affairs other than football, and of expressing this opinion for the service of the authorities. One of the undergraduate papers is already committed to this policy, another has the equally important aim of preserving the best literary work of the College, the third attempts both. Some consolidation might be desirable and possible; but complete consolidation would probably mean the abandoning of the more journalistic functions, and, as has happened in the past, new papers would arise to meet this ever-present need...