Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A list of Rollins College's standing and former presidents. The school has currently had 15 different presidents. The school has currently had 15 different presidents. Interim Presidents are not included in this category.
Hooker was during his time at Rollins a teacher, trustee, pastor, and president. [3] he taught classes in multiple subjects and was known to be a cheery man by students. [2] he resigned from his role as president due to health concerns. [2]
President Hamilton Holt decided to require all professors to make a "loyalty pledge" to keep their jobs. In March 1933, Holt fired John Andrew Rice, an atheist scholar and unorthodox teacher, whom Holt had hired, along with three other "golden personalities" (as Holt called them), in his push to put Rollins on the cutting edge of innovative education, for refusing to sign the loyalty pledge.
Claudine Gay, Harvard’s first Black president, faced similar criticism for offering lawyerly answers at the same hearing before a U.S. House committee on antisemitism on college campuses.
Joyner served as a vice president and dean at Rollins College. [2] She later became president of Wittenberg University. [2] Joyner was president of Saint Xavier University from 2017 to 2023. [2] On July 12, 2023, she became the ninth president of St. Norbert College. [1] She is its first female president. [1]
A retired US Coast Guard captain stepped down as president of a college in Massachusetts on Tuesday after CNN revealed that he had been accused of sexual misconduct ...
[1] [2] [3] From 1969 to 1978 he was president of Wabash College, [4] [5] and from 1978 to 1990 he was president of Rollins College. [6] [7] [8] During his time at Rollins, he returned the focus of the college to its roots as a liberal-arts college, raised faculty salaries, built a new college library and a dedicated classroom building for the ...
Grant Cornwell is an American educator, academic, and liberal education advocate. Since 2015, he has served as the 15th president [1] of Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida, following his role as president of the College of Wooster in Ohio.