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  1. Harry Caplan. January 7, 1896 — November 29, 1980. The death of Harry Caplan brings to a close a career that is surely one of the most remarkable in the history of Cornell University. To record that Harry Caplan was a distinguished scholar and a superb teacher, important

  2. Dec 7, 2022 · rhetorica ad herennium. by. harry caplan. Publication date. 1968. Collection. internetarchivebooks; inlibrary; printdisabled. Contributor. Internet Archive.

  3. CAPLAN, HARRY (1896–1980), U.S. classical and medieval scholar. Born in Hoag's Corner, New York , Caplan spent his entire career, except for various visiting professorships, at Cornell University , where he received his doctorate in 1921 and served on the faculty from 1919 to 1967, being appointed professor in 1930 and serving as chairman for ...

  4. Harry Caplan. CAPLAN, HARRY (1896–1980), U.S. classical and medieval scholar. Born in Hoag's Corner, New York, Caplan spent his entire career, except for various visiting professorships, at Cornell University, where he received his doctorate in 1921 and served on the faculty from 1919 to 1967, being appointed professor in 1930 and serving as ...

  5. Professor of classical languages and literature, Cornell University. Harry Caplan received his B.A. in 1916, M.A. in 1917, and Ph.D. in 1921 from Cornell. He taught in Cornells Department of Public Speaking, 1919-1923, and in the Department of Classics, 1924-1980. Professor Caplan died in 1980.

  6. Harry. Caplan presents a history of rhetoric and oratory from the time of the ancient Greeks to the end of the 19th century. I would divide the body of his lecture into these nine segments: I. The origins of rhetoric, first in Sicily and then in Greece.

  7. Harry Caplan (1896–1980) was Goldwin Smith Professor of Classical Languages and Literatures at Cornell University.