Word: copelanders
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...voting an unDemocratic subsidy, which is what the debenture plan amounts to. But Northern, city Democrats could give as their only reason a partisan desire to put President Hoover in a hole. As in 1924, they found themselves playing catspaw for the Progressive Republicans. New York's Copeland, for example, said he would vote for the debenture plan, but "hold his nose" while he did so. Shifter Nye. North Dakota's Nye (Progressive) had declared against the debenture plan. Last week, under threats of political reprisals from his state, he said he would now support it. He added...
...forearm ached painfully. The President could write only with difficulty. In one day he had shaken 1,757 hands at the rate of 43 per minute. From their Congressmen, citizens obtain letters entitling them to a presidential handshake. In one day last week, New York's Senator (Dr.) Copeland. who last month cautioned President Hoover to mind his health, sent 188 handshakers to the White House...
This evening at 8.30 o'clock, C. T. Copeland '82, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Emeritus, will read at the Union from the works of the great Victorians, including Browning, Dickens, Tennyson, and Thackeray. Preceding his reading, he will deliver a short address on Browning and Tennyson in particular...
Professor Copeland will be introduced by L. T. Grimm '29, vice-president of the Union. The meeting is open only to members of the Union...
...York's Senator Copeland is a physician. He has crusaded for fresh air in the Senate chamber. Last week he went to the White House, sniffed the air in the President's office, remarked professionally that it was much too hot. President Hoover got up and raised the window...