Word: fitzgerald
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...GREAT GATSBY-F. Scott Fitzgerald-Scribner-($2.00). Still the brightest boy in the class, Scott Fitzgerald holds up his hand. It is noticed that his literary trousers are longer, less bell-bottomed, but still precious. His recitation concerns Daisy Fay who, drunk as a monkey the night before she married Tom Buchanan, muttered: "Tell 'em all Daisy's chang' her mind." A certain penniless Navy lieutenant was believed to be swimming out of her emotional past. They gave her a cold bath, she married Buchanan, settled expensively at West Egg, L. I., where soon appeared one lonely...
HARVARD 1928 HUNTINGTON Jones c.f. Smith c. Heard 2b. Fitzgerald 1b. Pollard s.s. Wood 2b. Lord 1b. Radcliffe 3b. Linscott l.f. Lathrop r.f. Adams r.f. Terriot c. Hunneman 3b. Crosbie l.f. Chauncey c. Harris s.s. Barbee p. Walkley...
...Cambridge Latin 1. Goal, by Schoolnick. Referee, Mooney. Time, three 10-minute periods. SECONDS LATIN SCHOOL Pruyn, Whittall l.w. r.w. O'Connell, Harlow Durant, Collier c. c. Gibson, Gullian Peirson, Canning r.w. l.w. Joyce Righter, Bohlen l.d. r.d. Nelson Tilt, Dunkle r.d. l.d. Schoolnick Harding, Reid g. g. Fitzgerald...
...Aesthete: Model 1924, A Literary Lady, A Literary Enthusiast, A Critic, A Liberal, A Synthetic Gael, The second row is subplacarded Impressions-brief sketches of Cabell, Hergesheimer, G. B. Shaw and others; and Close-Ups -the big pieces of the exhibit, presenting among others George Jean Nathan, F. Scott Fitzgerald, George Moore and Mr. Boyd's countrymen -Yeats, Stephens and George W. Russell. These latter are the proper portraits of the exhibition, the "serious" work...
Married. Miss Dorothy Speare, author of Dancers in the Dark, a "wild young people" novel which?published three years ago?"did for Smith College what Scott Fitzgerald's This Side of Paradise did for Princeton," to one Franklin Butler Christmas; at Newton Centre, Mass. Say critics today : "Miss Speare artfully exploited the looseness of modern times, achieved literary notoriety, pecuniary laurels...