Word: fitzgeraldized
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...steps of the White House was organized by present and future members of Winthrop House in a meeting last night. Officers who will conduct the organization's drive are: C. L. Jackson '34, of Houston, Texas, president; O. A. Lemke, Jr. '35, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, vice-president; L. G. Fitzgerald, of Montclair, New Jersey, secretary; V. B. Kramer '35, of Cincinnati, Ohio, chairman of the Membership Committee...
...Dall, R. E. Doremus, T. B. Dorman, L. B. Drimmer, V. L. Eaton, R. L. Eveleigh, R. D. Fallon, R. W. Farlow, John Farquhar, J. N. Field, H. A. Fierst, B. L. FitzGerald, William Floyd, B. S. Foss, Howard Foster, Maurice Franks, N. S. Green, J. T. Back, A. B. Hallowell, H. G. Hanan, Richmond Harrison, B. C. Hart, George Haskins, E. W. Bolmes, L. R. Houston, C. S. Houston, D. W. Hull, Alvan Hyde, F. E. Johnson, A. M. Kelley, F. W. Knowlton, Robert Kramer, Amory Lawrence, W. D. Lewis...
...constitutes the largest single industry in the country, supplying nearly one-half of the annual consumption of foodstuffs." It must solve problems of preservation, needs experts. Frozen Foods. The quick freezing of foods is becoming "America's fastest-growing industry," declared Clarence Birdseye and Gerald A. Fitzgerald of Gloucester, Mass. More than 100 food products are now frozen for market. Food, moving on endless belts, is swiftly turned to ice at 25° to 30° below zero Fahrenheit. There are mobile freezing machines which may be moved into truck gardens, orchards and berry patches. Among many "quick-freezing...
...while William Samuel Paley was still a student at the University of Pennsylvania, Author Francis Scott Fitzgerald wrote a story called "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz," published it in his Tales of the Jazz Age. Buried on his remote estate a man found a massive diamond; he could buy anything he wanted by merely chipping off a sliver. He lived in super-Oriental luxury, owned hundreds of shirts, hundreds of neckties, socks, shoes. His house was fitted with every kind of comfort-giving device: buttons that brought soft music from an unseen orchestra, beds that tilted and slid...
Jazz has made radio broadcasting, and young William Samuel Paley has kept step with the jazz age. Long ago he set himself up in the world like a Fitzgerald hero. Two years ago he moved into a three-story penthouse on svelte Park Avenue, from which he could look down on a building called the Ritz Tower. The apartment was decorated by Theatrical Designer Lee Simonson. It had a dressing room with racks for 100 shirts, 100 neckties, a fancy barroom reached by an aluminum staircase. His modernistic bedroom held a big bed equipped with push buttons for books, chromatic...