Word: ross
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...fifteen minutes genus Harvard was subjected to decimation at the hands of the three, but Helen Ross, Radcliffe '43, did come to Rheinhart's reduce with an admission that he was a better man than she in Chem...
...Aydelotte, "Y" General Secretary Eugene Epperson Barnett, 16 college and seminary presidents (headed by Princeton's Harold Willis Dodds and Union's Henry Sloane Coffin), ten Methodist bishops, five Episcopal bishops, and such other ecclesiastic bigwigs as John R. Mott, Reinhold Niebuhr, Edgar DeWitt Jones, Roy G. Ross, Daniel A. Poling...
...address you in a state of considerable panic and alarm," wrote Editor Harold Ross of The New Yorker to the Governor of Connecticut. "I write in sheer terror," he concluded. In between was a communication having to do with invasion-not by a foreign enemy, but by New Yorkers. Mr. Ross understood that a park might be laid out near his estate outside Stamford, and what he feared was picnickers from Harlem and The Bronx. He was fearfully against it. PM called Mr. Ross undemocratic. The President of the Borough of The Bronx called him "a grandee," a "socalled editor...
...Smith, a native of Washington, D.C., was registered as a certified public accountant in Massachusetts in 1924. He has been in the industrial banking business in Boston and leaves Lybrand, Ross Brothers and Montgomery to accept the Harvard position...
John Ballantine '42 contributes a boldly reasoned article, amply supported with facts, on the post-war industrial situation, and the adjustments that will be necessary to avoid economic collapse. Perhaps the tritest of the articles is the opening one by Editor Irwin Ross '40, who naively thinks that an allied declaration of the rights of man would win the Burmese knife-slingers over to our side...