Word: copelanders
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Professor C. T. Copeland '82, who this year succeeds Dean Briggs as Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory will give his first reading of the year, open to all undergraduates in the University, tonight at 7.30 o'clock in the faculty room of the Union. He will read at a meeting held under the auspices of the Advocate. While the meeting is primarily for new candidates for the Advocate, it will be open to all members of the University...
Each year Professor Copeland gives a number of public readings, though last year illness forced him to forego several. He has not announced what he will read tonight. Besides reading, Professor Copeland will speak briefly on the history of the Advocate...
Although he will be prevented from giving English 5 this year, Professor C. T. Copeland '82 intends to give the course next fall and for many years thereafter, he announced last night. It is only for this current academic year that he is unable to give Dean Briggs' former course and he expects to take charge...
Professor C. T. Copeland '82, now Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, for the first time has joined the roll of the teaching staff of University Extension, and this year will give his lectures, readings, and conferences on "Nineteenth Century English Literature...
Since the resignation of Dean Briggs, English 5, his famous course of composition, has enjoyed the migratory fate of the proverbial buck. Originally entrusted to Professor Copeland, who with great fanfare held a preliminary competition last spring to select the personnel of his course from the throngs of undergraduates and the graduates of "Harvard, Yale, and Pomona who besieged the doors of Hollis 11 last year, the course has since been transferred to Professor Robert M. Gay of Simmons College, an instructor of no small reputation, whose textbook on composition, "Writing Through Reading," is considered as satisfactory...