Word: faulkner
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...banner-waving. Among the banner men are Thomas Edward Shaw (Col. Lawrence), Richard Aldington, John Cowper Powys. Laboriously punting upstream Author Hanley owes much of the success of his early efforts to the wake of Richard Aldington and Poet Robert Graves in his country. John Dos Passes and William Faulkner...
IDYLL IN THE DESERT?William Faulkner?Random House ($3.50). If you are collecting Faulkner items, Idyll in the Desert would be a good morbid one to get. An unpublished short story by the author of Sanctuary and The Sound and the Fury, it was limited to 400 copies, each signed by the author, has already been sold out. The story, told by an old mail-carrier of the Southwest with many false starts and digressions, relates the sad fate of a nameless woman. Married to a rich husband in the East, with two children, she left them to come...
...following Juniors will sit at the polls; R. W. Baker, Jr.; E. S. Bosley; Lincoln Bryant, Jr.; J. H. Crandon; Demarest Davenport; E. B. Faulkner; J. R. Fletcher; Arthur Foote, H; Richard Friedman; Jan Hasbrouck; John Heard, Jr.; F. W. Jenness; F. P. Locke; R. M. MacGregor; J. M. Murrey; James de Roode; J. F. Russell; Peter Shuebruk; S. H. Stackpole; D. N. Smith; R. C. Wells; and Otte Wittmann...
Robert Henry ("Roy") Faulkner, 45, resigned the presidency of Auburn Automobile Co- He was succeeded by Errett Lobban Cord, 37, chairman of the company and president of it prior to February 1931 when Mr. Faulkner was elected. Company press releases made clear that Mr. Faulkner will no longer be connected with the Cord organization in any capacity, declared that Mr. Cord's return to active management of Auburn was his own idea. When Mr. Faulkner accepted the position, Auburn stock sold at $200. A strong pool, which had already been operating for some time, later lifted...
...last week Lightkeeper William Faulkner heard a crash far out in Cobequid Bay, Nova Scotia. Then came a noise like an explosion and cries for help. Faulkner ran out to the beach, roused neighboring fishermen. In the darkness they could see nothing; but again came the anguished shouts from the bay. The tide was out. For two miles from the beach stretched a sea of soft red mud on which no man could walk. For two hours the shouts could be heard while the watchers waited for the tide to rise. Just as a boat was floated, the shouts died...