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Fogg Art Museum Scrapbook, January 1931-August 1933

ARCH.2003.26, Rendition: 791694

Mistral, mistral.magistral-small-2509

The document is a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. It details events scheduled for Wednesday, January 13, including a Romance Seminary meeting at 3 p.m. in Sever 19 and the Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education at 8 p.m. in the large lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum. The lecture, titled 'Realism in American Education,' is to be delivered by Dr. William Setchell Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The Inglis Lectureship, established in honor of Professor Alexander Inglis, aims to stimulate thinking and experiment in secondary education. The lectures are open to the public and published annually. The document also mentions a hockey game between St. Mark's School and Harvard at Southboro, and a swimming meet between M.I.T. and Harvard.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-3b-instruct

The image is a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. It contains details about various events scheduled at Harvard University for January 13, 1932.

Key events listed on the page include:

  1. Romance Seminar Meeting: Scheduled for 3 p.m. in Sever 19.
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education: This lecture will be delivered by Dr. William Setchel Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The topic of the lecture is "Realism in American Education." It will be held in the Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum at 8 p.m.

The Inglis Lecture was established in honor of Professor Alexander Inglis, who was a prominent figure in secondary education. The lecture aims to stimulate thinking and experimentation in the field of education that Professor Inglis devoted his life to. The lectures are open to the public and are published annually by the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Additionally, there is a brief mention of a hockey match between St. Mark's School and Harvard at Southboro, and a swimming match between M.I.T. and Harvard University and Freshmen.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-8b-instruct

The image is a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. It provides information about events scheduled for Wednesday, January 13, 1932.

  1. Romance Seminar: Scheduled to meet in Sever 19 at 3 p.m.
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education: The lecture titled "Realism in American Education" will be delivered by Dr. William Setchel Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. This lecture is the eighth annual lecture under the foundation established by the Graduate School of Education to honor Professor Alexander Inglis. The lecture is set to take place at the Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum at 8 p.m.

The text also includes a detailed description of the Inglis Lectureship in Secondary Education, established in honor of Professor Alexander Inglis. The lectureship aims to stimulate thinking and experimentation in the field of secondary education, which Inglis was known for. The lectures are open to the public and published annually by the School.

Additionally, there is a mention of a sports event: Hockey, St. Mark's School vs. Harvard '35, scheduled at Southboro, with swimming and fencing events also noted. The sports event is at 4 p.m.

Mistral, mistral.ministral-3-14b-instruct

The image is a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. The page details events and announcements for the week of January 13, 1932.

  1. Romance Seminary Meeting:

    • Scheduled for January 19 at 3 p.m. in Sever Hall.
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education:

    • Title: "Realism in American Education"
    • Speaker: Dr. William Setchel Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
    • Location: Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum
    • Time: 8 p.m. on Wednesday, January 13
    • Description: This lecture is the eighth annual under the Foundation established to perpetuate the memory and interests of Professor Alexander Inglis.
  3. Inglis Lectureship in Secondary Education:

    • The annual lecture series was established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education in honor of the late Professor Alexander Inglis, a prominent scholar in secondary education.
    • The lectures aim to stimulate thinking and experimentation in the field of secondary education.
    • The lectures are open to the public and are published annually by the School.
  4. Additional Event:

    • Hockey match between St. Mark's School and Harvard '35 at Southboro.
    • Swimming match between M.I.T. and Harvard, University and Freshmen.
    • Lecture on "Realism in American Education" by Dr. William Setchel Learned at the Fogg Art Museum, 8 p.m.

The page also includes some handwritten notes, including a date "Jan 13, 1932" and a notation "H.A.13."

Mistral, mistral.mistral-large-3-675b-instruct

The image is a clipping from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. It details several events and lectures scheduled for Wednesday, January 13.

  1. Romance Seminar:

    • Meeting in Sever 19 at 3 P.M.
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education:

    • Speaker: Dr. William S. Learned from the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
    • Location and Time: Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum at 8 P.M.
    • Topic: "Realism in American Education."
    • Background:
      • The Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education was established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education to honor the late Professor Alexander Inglis, a member of the Faculty of the School who passed away in 1924. Inglis was a notable scholar and writer in secondary education.
      • The lectureship aims to promote thinking and experimentation in the field of secondary education, a focus of Professor Inglis's work.
      • The lectures are open to the public and published annually by the School.

Additionally, the Gazette mentions scheduled sports events:

  • Hockey: St. Mark’s School vs. Harvard '34 at Southboro.
  • Swimming: M.I.T. vs. Harvard, with details about the event and the freeman category.

Mistral, us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0

The image is a page from the Harvard University Gazette, dated January 9, 1932. It details events and announcements for Wednesday, January 13, 1932.

  1. Romance Seminary Meeting:

    • Time: 3 P.M.
    • Location: Sever 19
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education:

    • Title: "Realism in American Education"
    • Speaker: Dr. William Setchell Learned, of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
    • Time: 8 P.M.
    • Location: Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum
    • Note: This is the eighth annual lecture under the Foundation, established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education to perpetuate the memory and interests of Professor Alexander Inglis.
  3. Inglis Lectureship in Secondary Education:

    • The lecture for 1932 will be delivered by Dr. William Setchell Learned.
    • The lectureship was established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education in honor of Professor Alexander Inglis, a member of the Faculty of the School who passed away in 1924.
    • The lectureship aims to stimulate thinking and experiment in the field to which Professor Inglis devoted his life work.
    • The lectures are open to the public and are published annually by the School.
  4. Additional Events on January 13:

    • Hockey: St. Mark's School vs. Harvard '35, Sophmore.
    • Squash: M. I. T. vs. Harvard university and freshmen.
    • Lecture: "Realism in American Education" by Dr. William Setchell Learned.

The page also includes some handwritten annotations, likely for editorial purposes.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4

This image appears to be a photograph or scan of an old document from the Harvard University Gazette, dated January 9, 1932. The document details an upcoming event, specifically an "Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education" on the topic "Realism in American Education" to be delivered by Dr. William Senftle Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The lecture is noted to be held on Wednesday, January 13, at 8 P.M. in the large lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum, Quincy Street, under the auspices of the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

The document explains that this Inglis Lectureship in Secondary Education was established to honor the memory and interests of Professor Alexander Inglis, a member of the Harvard Graduate School of Education faculty until 1924. It aims to stimulate thinking and extend the influence of Professor Inglis's devoted work. The lectures are reported to be open to the public and published annually by the School.

The bottom of the document also mentions a sporting event, a hockey game, scheduled for the same day at 3:30 P.M. between St. Mark's School JV and Harvard '35, at Storrowing. There are handwritten notes on the page that include "HCL8" and a repetition of the year "1932" which suggest this document may have been archived or cataloged at some point.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4o-2024-05-13

This image contains a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932. It details events and lectures for Wednesday, January 13, including:

  1. Romance Seminary:

    • Meeting in Sever 19 at 3 P.M.
  2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education:

    • "Realism in American Education"
    • Delivered by Dr. William S. Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
    • The lecture will be held at 8 P.M. in the large lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum, Quincy Street.
    • This lecture is the eighth annual lecture under the Foundation established by the Graduate School of Education to honor Professor Alexander Inglis.
    • The purpose of the Inglis Lectureship is to perpetuate the memory and interests of Professor Inglis, stimulating thinking and experimentation in secondary education.
  3. Additional events on January 13:

    • Hockey game: St. Mark's School vs. Harvard '35 at Southboro.
    • Swimming meet: M.I.T. vs. Harvard university and freshmen.
    • Inglis Lecture: "Realism in American Education" by Dr. William Setchell Learned at 8 P.M. in the Fogg Art Museum.

Handwritten at the top of the page is "Harvard University Gazette January 9, 1932" and a note "HAB Jan 8 1932" is written in pencil on the right side.

Azure OpenAI Service, gpt-4.1-mini-2025-04-14

The image shows a page from the Harvard University Gazette dated January 9, 1932, featuring several newspaper clippings and printed notices about upcoming events on Wednesday, January 13. The main focus is on the Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education titled "Realism in American Education," to be delivered by Dr. William Setchel Learned of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The lecture is scheduled to be held at 8 p.m. in the large lecture room of the Fogg Art Museum, Quincy Street. The page contains repeated announcements about the Inglis Lectureship, explaining that it was established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education in honor of Professor Alexander Inglis, a leading scholar in secondary education who died in 1924. The purpose of the lectureship is to stimulate thinking and experimentation in secondary education. There are also brief notices about a hockey match between St. Mark's School and Harvard ’35 and a swimming event between M. I. T. and Harvard.

Handwritten at the top of the page is "Harvard University Gazette January 9, 1932." One of the clippings has handwritten notes reading "H A B Jan 8 1932." The page is otherwise mostly empty, with all the printed text located on the left side.

Amazon, us.amazon.nova-2-lite-v1:0

The image shows a page from the Harvard University Gazette, dated Wednesday, January 13, 1932. The page is a printed announcement detailing academic events and lectures scheduled for that week. Here is a detailed description:

Header Information:

  • Title: "Harvard University Gazette"
  • Date: January 9, 1932 (handwritten at the top)
  • Issue Date: Wednesday, January 13, 1932 (printed at the top of the page)

Main Content:

The page primarily announces two academic events:

1. Romance Seminar

  • Meeting Time: Sever 19, 3 P.M.
  • No further details provided in the visible portion.

2. Inglis Lecture in Secondary Education

  • Title of Lecture: "Realism in American Education"
  • Speaker: Dr. William Setchel Learned, of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
  • Date and Time: Wednesday, January 13, at 8 P.M.
  • Location: Large Lecture Room of the Fogg Art Museum, Quincy Street.
  • Background Information:
    • This is the eighth annual lecture under the Inglis Lectureship in Secondary Education, established by the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
    • The lectureship was created in honor of the late Professor Alexander Inglis, a member of the Harvard faculty who was a leading scholar in secondary education. He passed away in 1924.
    • The purpose of the lectureship is to stimulate thinking and experimentation in the field of secondary education, which Inglis devoted his life to.
    • The lectures are open to the public and are published annually by the School.

Additional Events Listed:

  • Hockey: St. Mark's School vs. Harvard '35, at Southboro.
  • Swimming: M. I. T. vs. Harvard University and freshmen.
  • Inglis Lecture: A repeat announcement for the same lecture by Dr. William Setchel Learned, emphasizing the topic "Realism in American Education" at the Fogg Art Museum, 8 P.M.

Handwritten Notes:

  • In the margin, there are handwritten notes, including:
    • "H.C.TB" and "JULY 8, 1982" — likely annotations or markings by someone reviewing the document.
    • The handwritten date "January 9, 1932" at the top suggests the page was part of a bound or archived collection.

Visual Characteristics:

  • The page has a light beige or off-white background with clear black text.
  • The layout is typical of early 20th-century newspapers or university gazettes, with typed text and minimal formatting.
  • The page appears to be part of an archived or historical document, as indicated by the wear and the handwritten annotations.

Overall Context:

The image captures a historical snapshot of academic life at Harvard University in 1932, highlighting the importance placed on secondary education and the legacy of Professor Alexander Inglis through the Inglis Lectureship. The page serves as both an announcement and a historical record of university events.