Word: copelanders
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...defeated. Lavine (B. U.) 5-4, Suck (B. U.) defeated J. S. Oettinger '30, 5-3, D. I. Modell '30 defeated Lavine (B. U.) 5-2, C. B. Hollister '29 defeated Woolfson (B. U.) 5-2. Modell defeated Suck (B. U.) 5-2, Woolfson (B. U.) defeated M. N. Copeland '29 5-3, Hollister defeated Lavine (B. U.) 5-4, Woolfson (B. U.) defeated Berliner 5-4, Holister defeated Suck...
...beliefs and interests. All men who may be interested are requested to write to G. W. Smith '29, secretary. The following political figures will address the club sometime during the next few months: Newton D. Baker, former Secretary of War; Senator Thaddeus H. Caraway of Arkansas; Senator Royal S. Copeland of New York; Senator Carter Glass of Virginia; and Assistant Professor W. L. Elliot of the department of History, Government and Economics...
...club for purposes of organization and preparation for the Presidential campaign. Senator Dill, who will probably discuss disarmament, will be one of several prominent speakers invited by the Democratic Club to outline important issues of the campaign. Other speakers in the near future will be Senators Class and Copeland and former Secretary of War Baker...
Harvard men throughout the world, dismayed by news that Professor Charles Townsend Copeland ("Copey") had resigned, took heart again last week. For a quarter century the light in Hollis 15 was a signal to Harvard generations that the wit of the Yard was receiving his friends, was perhaps also giving one of his famous impromptu readings. Last week news came that the light will continue to burn. Professor Copeland will keep his rooms, will occasionally lecture-will inevitably "read aloud from a book." Wrote Author Conrad Aiken in the Harvard Crimson: ". . . One of those resignations of which the acceptance...
Charles Townsend Copeland has been one of those rare scholars who have truly appraised the personal relation between teacher and pupil. He relied more on direct contact than on lectures, books and formulas, but his courses nevertheless have been popular, and the fame of his readings has traveled far beyond collegiate circles. But it has been by summoning the members of his composition course "English 23," to his rooms in Hollis to read aloud their themes to him, and by gathering others together on winter evenings to exchange ideas about everything this side of the moon, that his influence...