Word: rollos
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...Thomas '24 Scenery by Miss Eleanor Eustis, of the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. "The Crows Nest", by W. L. Manley 2G. The Greenhorn Kid, Mr. Conrad Salinger '23 Joe-joe, Cockney, A.B., Mr. Royal Beale Sp. Mr. Peterson, Mr. Leon Pierson Sp. Scenery by Mr. Rollo Wayne 2G. "The Other Once", by Arthur Ketchum 2G. The Connecticut Kid, Mr. J. J. Daly Sp. Ramblin' Red, Mr. H. F. Carleton 2G. The Other One, Mr. Warrick Scott '22 Scenery by M. Oenslager...
...opening in Lower Massachusetts Hall yesterday afternoon of the public exhibition of model, stage settings submitted in the first scenery designing competition recently conducted by the 47 Workshop, the decision of the judges was announced. First award has been made to Rollo L. Wayne 1G., a graduate of the University of Louisville, who designed model No. 8. Wayne also created the scenery for the third act of "Time Will Tell" in the last Workshop production. Honorable mention has been given to the following designers of either models or drawings: Henry R. Hitchcock '24 of Plymouth, No. 4; John McAndrew...
...result of Saturday's meet, the following eight men won the University track "H" for the first time: Frederic Stevens Allen '16, of Pelham Manor, N. Y.; Rollo Dacies Campbell '17, of Huntington, W. Va.; Robert Howell Davison '17, of Boston; George Anderson King, Jr., '18, of Washington, D. C.; Arthur Theodore Lyman, Jr., '16, of Boston; Thomas Ruston Pennypacker '16, of Cambridge; Edward Reese Roberts '16, of Cape Girardeau, Mo.; Arthur Edward Rowse, Jr., '18, of Arlington...
...consequently must be nearer the sparkling fountain of youth. This year, whatever may have occurred in the past, Lampy has not nodded, and now he crowns the end with this memorable little volume, that takes its place side by side with the earlier classic, the immortal journey of Rollo to Cambridge...
...Rollo Britten's note on "Poetic Drama" covers the ground sanely and concisely though it is about time we got away from Stephen Phillips even as a point of departure. To a non-Socialist Souther's "Socialism and Beauty" is not absolutely clear; the one thing the reviewer feels sure about is that it could have been written in a much more entertaining and vivid fashion. His "aesthete" is valuable if only for showing up the type for which the Monthly seems to have such admiration...