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Jan. 12 Talk on Current Events, Miss Peabody

Jan. 14

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Man "

Dramatic Recital (Impersonation), "Arms and the
George Bernard Shaw

Flora Marie Haviland

Jan. 15-Lecture-Recital

Denis A. McCarthy

Original Poems

Jan. 21-Interpretation of Dante's "La Divina Commedia "

Jan. 26 Jan. 28

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Lucy C. McGee, M.S., Ph.M.

- Talk on Current Events, Miss Peabody

Recital, "The Taming of the Shrew " Shakespeare

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Beryl LeBaron

Recital, Folk Lore and Fairy Tales, First Year Class

Midsummer Night's Dream"

Shakespeare

Marjorie Postal

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Apr. 13 Lecture on China, John C. Ferguson, A.B., Ph.D., of Pekin

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"The Greek Spirit in Modern Art," Lecture-Recital
Miss Dorothy Emerson

Recital, Second Year Special Class

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Algernon Swinburne

Apr. 20- Lyrics from "Maria Stuart "

Apr. 22
Apr. 23

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Ann Puryear Wright

Recital by the Third Year Class

"The Rivals," Sheridan, and Miscellaneous Selections
Mr. Milton Matthews

Apr. 23 — Recital, The Public Speaking Class
Apr. 24 "The Cricket on the Hearth"

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Miss Helen F. Sturtevant

Charles Dickens

Poems of Alfred Noyes; "Romance" Charles Sheldon
Miss Gertrude Copeland

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Eleanor Abbott

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"Ghosts"

Ibsen

Miss Hortense Neilson

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May 5-Tennyson Tea. From "The Princess" and Songs

Tennyson Recital, Miscellaneous Program, Miss Evelyn Morterud and Mr. Harold Joslyn

May 6

May 7

"Enoch Arden "

Rev. Claude J. Pernin, S.J.

Tennyson

May 7 - Annual Banquet of the Alumni Association, Hotel Vendome May 8 - Recital, Second Year Special Class, Huntington Chambers Hall

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May 8 Reading of Shakespearean and Modern Drama, Miss Wil

helmina McLeod

May 9 Baccalaureate Exercises.

Desert,' or Progress"

May 11
May 11-

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"Browning's 'Death in the Pres. Curry

May 10 Mass Meeting of Graduates, Students and Friends
May 10 Recital of One Act Plays, Mayme English-Hensel
Recital, Miscellaneous Program, Jacob Sleeper Hall
Original Dramatization (at noon), "The Flaming Ram-
parts," Edith Delano, Miss Marjorie Sumpter
May 12- "The Land of Heart's Desire "

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Miss Ann Puryear Wright

Yeats

May 13 Graduation Exercises, Addresses by Erasmus Wilson, "The Quiet Observer" of the Pittsburg Gazette Times, and Mr. Frank W. Sanborn

May 13

May 13

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Reception of Trustees and Teachers

Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association

May 14 Closing Lesson

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It is necessary to do the truth.

-Maudsley.

TH

COURSES OF STUDY

HE regular and special courses of each year are divided into groups (see Horarium, pp. 32 and 33). Students may elect additional courses when their acquirements permit.

The work of each student is arranged after a careful study of his highest possibilities and his fundamental needs. All regular courses include work: First, for the development of mind, body and voice. Second, students are led from the first, to study literature, poetry and art through interpretation and artistic endeavor. Third, the student is given studies and contact with people in order to develop his social and sympathetic instincts. Fourth, early in their course the students are given a certain work which prepares them for professional attainments. Fifth, later, studies are assigned that will lead the student to comprehend the philosophic nature of all expression.

Certain courses, especially advanced and elective courses, are given in alternate years. A few are given only once in three years.

All regular courses include some work in each of the following fields: (1) Personal Growth and Development; (2) Creative Expression; (3) The Study of Literature and Art; (4) The Philosophy of Expression; (5) Professional Attainments; (6) Life and Social Relations. A synopsis of specific courses under each of these groups follows:

I.

GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT

Growth presupposes established natural conditions; and development is the co-ordination of man's thinking with natural growth conditions.

The technical courses for Voice, Body and Mind are the means used in the School of Expression to establish nature; and practice upon the various forms of oral expression establishes natural conditions in Speech, thus preparing for the fullest development in creative activity.

I. VOCAL EXPRESSION

Vocal Expression centers in the study of thinking and in its most direct revelations in modulations of voice and body. Attention, discrimination and sequence of ideas are established. This natural method secures intensity of individual impression, and shows the relation of impression to expression. The interpretation of literature is the means or test used. Each student is thus given a method of self-study and the direct use of his own creative powers.

First Year Courses: 1. Elements of Vocal Expression. 2. Foundations of Expression.

Second Year Courses: 3. Logic of Vocal Expression. 4. Imagination. 5. Assimilation and Participation. 6. Rhythm and Melody in Speech.

Third Year Courses: 7. Harmony of Expression. 8. Imagination and Dramatic Instinct.

Fourth Year Courses: 9. Psychology of Vocal Expression. 10. Unity and Tone Color.

II. TRAINING OF THE VOICE

The method of developing the voice is Technical and Psychic. The training is divided into two phases: a, the securing of right tone production; b, the improvement of speech.*

a. Development of Tone. First Year Course: 1. Qualities of Tone. 2. Simple problems in the Spoken Word associated with technical training. Second Year: 3. Principles of Vocal Training. 4. Emission of Voice. 5. Agility of Voice. Third Year: 6. Resonance. 7. Flexibility of Voice in Expression. 8. Dramatic Modulations of Voice.

b. Development of Speech. First Year: 1. Phonology. Second Year: 2. Pronunciation. Third Year: 3. Visible Speech.

* Methods of developing tone are based upon those of François Lamperti and are adapted to the voice in speaking. The work in articulation and speech elements is founded upon the Visible Speech of Prof. Alexander Melville Bell.

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