Word: haired
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...other evening at a dancing club a young man in a gray suit, soft shirt, loosely tied scarf, shook his tousled yellow hair engagingly, introduced me to the beautiful lady with whom he was dancing and sat down. They were Mr. and Mrs. F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Scott seems to have changed not one whit from the first time I met him at Princeton, when he was an eager undergraduate bent upon becoming a great author. He is still eager. He is still bent upon becoming a great author. He is at work now on a novel which his wife...
...leaflets of advice on many subjects which can be used as the main part of many answers-leaflets on Party Suggestions, on Hope Chest and Trousseau, on Baby's Welfare-Diets up to 2 Years, on Reducing Weight-Diets and Baths, on Lifting Sagging Face, on Restoring Gray Hair. The whole gamut of human affairs from the cradle to the coffin is provided for in good advice. And in one year of this service Mr. Hearst befriended, and doubtless gained the valuable good will of 70,000 Gothamites, a number that in itself would produce a very respectable circulation...
...Yesterday young Sidis was wearing a cheap brown suit, much too tight for his fleshy frame. He had not been shaved; his reddish mustache was a ragged fringe that appeared to have been whacked off with a pair of manicure scissors. His mop of mouse-colored hair was in need of trimming. His necktie was in a hard knot that did not come within inches of his collar...
...great many people have been fooled," he said, "by the likeness of the plan to Professor Hudson's ideas. Already he has received numbers of letters complimenting him on winning a prize which he really did not win, though he came within a hair's breadth of doing so. From reading the plan there is every reason to believe that...
...which for a person so vitally interested in the theatre; is remarkable. He has done more than write a mere chronicle of the theatre. He has done something far more valuable--he has exploded for all times the prejudice, handed down to us from the last century along with hair sofas and other monstrosities, that the theatre is a contemptible profession. He shows it as an art which calls on all of its sister arts to contribute the best they have, and, after receiving these gifts, moulds them into a composite whole--the art of the theatre...