Abstract

Pennsylvania: Still a Keystone

Kauffman, Reginald Wright | March 7, 1923 issue

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The politico-economic behavior of Pennsylvania is made it a keystone state of the U.S. It is still that; but Pennsylvanians don't say so. Pennsylvanians don't say anything about it, and their silence is a symptom of their disease; nevertheless, they hope that there's will become the Keynote State, and therein lies their chance of cure. For Pennsylvanians are suffering from over-immunization against the present epidemic of radicalism, and so soon as they are convinced that the plague has run its course, or that at least they are safe, they shall recover from their reaction.

See Also:

PENNSYLVANIA -- Politics & government; PENNSYLVANIA -- Social conditions; RADICALISM; CULTURAL movements; POLITICAL science; PENNSYLVANIA; UNITED States
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