Word: scotts
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...play will probably be presented on Friday, December 6. The following have been given parts: Howard A. Cook '37, Laird McK. Ogle '37, T. M. deSaint Phalle '39, Peter L. Scott '38, Alexander M. Thackera '38, Richard Turner 1GB, Montfort S. Variell '37, and Sumner Willard '37. Howard R. Patch, Jr. '38 is stage director, and Monroe Stearns ocC is production manager...
Into Los Angeles from his $2,000,000 castle in Death Valley chugged Walter Scott ("Death Valley Scotty") in an old, rebuilt Franklin. Snorted he: "These city trails ain't no place for this locomotive. It's a specially made model for traversing the desert mountains into the Valley. . . . It goes 700 miles without stopping. Got a 100-gallon gas tank and carry ten gallons...
...practically the same words, Philip Barry has introduced to theatre audiences in the past decade a host of wonderful people, all gold. Dramatized versions of the folk Playwright Barry likes to gather about him, they were grown-ups whose adolescence had been recorded by F. Scott Fitzgerald. If they were poor, it was because they were heroically artistic. Usually, though, they were quite well off. The ladies wrapped their pretty shoulders in furs, danced in Palter DeLiso slippers, got their divorces in Paris. The gentlemen took the Harvard-Yale football game semiseriously, spoke an elliptical and charming language for which...
Died. Sir John Charles Montagu-Douglas-Scott, 71, Duke of Buccleuch and Queensberry, holder of 14 peerages, chieftain of the clan Scott, prospective father-in-law of George V's third son, the Duke of Gloucester (TIME, Sept. 9); in Selkirk, Scotland...
...Scott, who turned in a time of 5:38 4/5 for the three-quarter mile course, got off to a good start, but at the first bridge was caught by Meigs. Scott answered the challenge and had a one-quarter length lead by the second bridge, but Meigs continued to fight it out with him and was again even at the one-half mile mark...