Word: copey
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Several famed Harvard personalities shared the limelight of '34,s last year. "Copey" moved out of the Yard (for reasons of health, not noise, as originally suspected). The beloved Dean Briggs died toward the end of the year, and President Eliot was eulogized in a Centenary observance in his honor. Guest personalities in Cambridge included Walter Lippmann '10, who delivered the Godkin lectures, and Alistaire Cooke, imported to direct the Hasty Pudding show, entitled "Hades! The Ladies...
...this training in writing, Reed was to study under two of the great names in Harvard history--Charles T. Copeland, known as "Copey," and George P. Baker, known for his "47 Workshop." In addition, Reed studied literature with such giants as George L. Kittridge, and Bliss Perry...
Depression despair was abated in December as President Lowell celebrated his seventy-fifth birthday. Almost a year later, however, the College was saddened when it was announced that Charles Townsend Copeland, the beloved Copey, was moving from his Hollis 15 suite to a new home on Concord Avenue in Cambridge. At the age of seventy-two, the man who had read his way4When the Class of 1933 entered Harvard, the wing was being added to the sprawling mass in the North Yard that is Langdell Hall, making it the largest law library in the world. Twenty-five years later, Langdell...
...dormitory will be called Pennypacker Hall, Dean Leighton disclosed yesterday, named after Henry Pennypacker of the Class of 1888, until 1933 the all-powerful chairman of the Committee on Admissions. Pennypacker, a mustached Copey-looking man, was headmaster of the Boston Latin School from 1910 to 1920, in which year he moved across the river to direct Harvard admissions for 13 years...
...aura of ritual reserve carried over from the classroom to Copey's personal encounters. Physically...