Word: pegasuses
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...following officers were elected on the Advocate: John J. Slocum '36, president; John A. Strauss '36, Pegasus; James L. LeB. Boyle, 2nd '36, secretary; Robert S. Chafee '36, treasurer; Gerard J. Piel '37, business manager. Those added from the Critic board were Charles R. Cherington '35, John P. Coolidge '36, George L. Haskins '35, and Henry V. Poor...
...shall pass over Mr. Cherington's stout assertation of the virility of Critic contributors and ignore his attribution to Advocate authors of the most marked physical characteristics of Pegasus, as hardly being in the good taste which he demands...
...Robinson, Spender and Auden are not typical citizens of their respective countries. Old Poet Robinson, Maine-born, Harvard-bred, chose the uncrowded profession of poet at an early age. Establishing himself in Manhattan "in a sordid stall on the fifth floor of a dreary house," he kept himself and Pegasus fed by doing odd jobs, was once a construction inspector on the subway. Only U.S. poet ever reviewed by a U.S. President, Robinson got more attention when Theodore Roosevelt wrote an encomium of his poetry in the Outlook, and offered him a consulship in Mexico. Robinson declined the consulship, accepted...
...only objection to your review (TIME, Aug. 27) of my book, Pegasus Pulls a Hack, is a commercial...
...Honor of the Family}, sentimental comedy (Lady for a Day) and DeMillery (Cleopatra), often works in two or more pictures simultaneously. Married, he lives in a small house in Hollywood. His grandfather was a spiritualist, his father a country publisher. He studies navigation, owns and sails a schooner named Pegasus. Embarrassed by autograph seekers, he says: "If they guess who I am, I sign. If they guess someone else, I don't. Who do they think I am? Well, I'll just let you guess that...