Word: rollos
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Louis Wiley, shrewd business manager of the New York Times, told them that "cooperation is the important reason for modern progress." Dr. Rollo G. Reynolds of Columbia Teachers' College told them that "America is the first country in the world that has dared to educate all of her people. . . . When I went to school I was educated so that I could get a good job and make a lot of money. You young folks today are educated instead to make your contributions to the great experiment of democracy...
...Hamilton Fish Armstrong, Editor of Foreign Affairs, at luncheon. The other guests included: Paul D. Cravath, John W. Davis, Herman Har-jes, Otto H. Kahn, Thomas W. Lament, Russell C. Leffingwell, James H. Perkins, Seward Prosser, Benjamin Strong, Paul M. Warburg, Walter Lippmann, Julian Mason, Frank A. Munsey, Rollo Ogden, Frank L. Polk...
Among the most valuable books in the entire bequest, it is reported, is a complete collection of the Rollo books, written some years ago for young people. They were given to Miss Lowell, it appears in her childhood, and kept until today when they have attained a considerable value. Single copies from the series are frequently to be found, but an entire set is believed to be extremely rare...
...relative immunity which the principle of coeducation has enjoyed, in the guerrilla warfare against American learning has been shattered almost beyond repair by Mr. Rollo Brown, of the English Department, in the current number of Harper's Magazine. In asserting that the liberal arts are being slowly driven into obscurity in coeducational institutions, because men do not care to participate in classes in which women predominate, Mr. Brown has raised a question of distinctly more than passing interest...
...gathering of prominent business and professional men, invited by Rollo Ogden, Editor of the New York Times, to hear the Rt. Rev William Lawrence '71 of Boston, Bishop of Massachusetts, broadcast a message to America, on Monday evening, March 31, will be held at the Harvard Club of New York. The change from the University Club, originally announced as the place of gathering, to the Harvard Club was largely the result of the interest excited, the number who wished to attend, and the desire of Harvard men to hear the message and discuss it with the Bishop. The subject...