Word: aloud
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...COPELAND'S voluntary course in literature. Contrary to report, the time of meeting for the new Voluntary Course in Literature and Reading Aloud has not been changed. Meetings will be held, as before, Fridays at half-past three, in Sever 11; and the announcement appears each week in the University calendar...
...COURSE IN LITERATURE AND READING ALOUD.A new voluntary course in English Literature and the Art of Reading Aloud will be given by Mr. Copeland during the second half-year. The second meeting will be held in Sever 11, on Friday, March 10, at 3.30 p. m. A great variety of authors, ranging chronologically from Shakespeare to Mr. Rudyard Kipling, will be discussed and read from; and novels and plays - with some account of famous modern performances - will make a large proportion of the course. Meetings are to be held once a week; and the hour will be divided between reading...
...Copeland will repeat his talk on "The Art of Reading Aloud," at the Y. M. C. U. 48 Boylston Street Boston, Tuesday evening...
...Copeland will today meet students at Sever 11, at 3.3. p. m. to explain more fully than in the calendar announcement the nature and purpose of his new voluntary course in English Literature and the Art of Reading Aloud. As stated before, this course will cover a great variety of authors ranging chronologically from Shakespeare to Mr. Rudyard Kipling. Novels and plays-with some account of famous modern performances-will make a large proportion of the course. Meetings are to be held once a week: and the hour will be divided between reading aloud. and informal speaking by the instructor...
...wish to remind the students once again of the new voluntary course in Literature and the Art of Reading Aloud, which will meet for the first time today. Mr. Copeland has increased the scope of the course since the first announcement, adding much to its attractiveness. As it now stands it is distinctly a novelty in the way of courses at Harvard, nothing of the kind ever having been given before. Mr. Copeland is anxious to have it make a place for itself on its own merits. He naturally wishes it to reach as large a number...