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...Fitzgerald??s family had been helping the Dunster resident pack her things into their minivan while it was parked on Cowperthwaithe Street...

Author: By Reed B. Rayman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Shuttle Bus Strikes Student's Father During Move Out | 5/24/2006 | See Source »

...Doctor Fitzgerald,” comment, Apr. 25), we do live in an age of restless materialism and social anomie. Perhaps, though the comparison is a touch facile, our coming of age in the irrationally exuberant 1990s is just as bankrupt as that of Tom and Daisy Buchanan of Fitzgerald??s Jazz Age. And it is quite likely, though I’ve never been to it, that the Fly’s annual Gatsby party is neither nostalgic nor ironic. Yet to read “Gatsby,” as Mahtani does, as a merely cautionary...

Author: By Simon N. Chin | Title: "The Great Gatsby" Not Just a Cautionary Tale | 4/28/2006 | See Source »

...final clubs at Harvard, it is the Fly’s grounds that most remind me of F. Scott Fitzgerald??s “The Great Gatsby.” They are considerably smaller than Gatsby’s 40 acres to be sure, but there’s that blue garden out the back, fenced (white) below a pink tree. Come springtime, awnings are raised, and the men and girls come and go like moths among—as Fitzgerald put it—the champagne and the stars...

Author: By Sahil K. Mahtani | Title: The Eyes of Doctor Fitzgerald | 4/25/2006 | See Source »

...High the Moon” – Ella Fitzgerald. “This song is one of the reasons I want to name my first daughter ‘Ella.’ I remember watching one of Ella Fitzgerald??s last concerts ever, but unfortunately I didn’t have the attention span back then to appreciate her ridiculously long and virtuosic scat solos...

Author: By Jennifer Y. Kan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard on Shuffle: Johann F. Cutiongco ’06 | 4/6/2006 | See Source »

...solo aesthetic than the album’s penultimate song “At Last.” The title is an allusion to the Ella Fitzgerald torch song of the same name, but Case does not cover it so much as pay it homage. Her vocals channel Fitzgerald??s composed intensity, but her lyrics forsake the saccharine literalism of the original for Dylanesque poetic abstraction. She sings: “And if death should smell my freedom as is passes beneath my window / let it leave me trembling at every bell that tolls...

Author: By Bernard L. Parham, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Neko Case | 3/9/2006 | See Source »

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