Word: fitzgibbons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Reese won a new trial and was sentenced to two consecutive life terms plus 75 years. During his stay in jail, he rediscovered a forgotten interest in art, and, encouraged by Hoodlum Priest Dismas Clark (TIME, March 3. 1961) and St. Louis Judge David FitzGibbon, studied painting and drawing. Once in prison, he organized art classes. Soon Reese and his students were exhibiting (and winning prizes) in outside art shows. When cramped quarters caused the classes to be stopped, Reese asked for a few months in solitary confinement. In the company of his own thoughts. Reese became a cartoonist...
Equally important to Reese is another artistic success: five of his paintings now hang in the chambers of Judge FitzGibbon, who was among the first to find something worth saving in a man condemned...
Though both teams were undefeated in EITL play going into the match, Princeton simply had too much for Harvard. At first and second singles the Tigers sport two of the East's best collegiate players Drayton, Nabers and Herb Fitzgibbon. Although matches further down the ladder wore generally closer, Princeton was too strong to be seriously challenged...
...fact it will be favored right through the season until Princeton. The Tigers are so good this year that their last year's number one man, Drayton Nabers--undefeated in league play last year--has been supplanted on top by the best college tennis player in the East--Jim Fitzgibbon. And Nabers is fighting to hold second over Tom Lynch, another sophomore...
When the Kissing Had to Stop, by Constantine Fitzgibbon. A piece of political science fiction about how England turns into a Soviet satellite, the book chillingly denies the proposition that Britons never, never, never will be slaves...