Vol. 17 No. 3 1950 - page 300

300
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so often that they'd shortened his
name to Fitz. He'd been the only
really original student Hicks had
ever had, the sophisticate among
the clods. He had been hard to
take but he'd been a genius. They
were fri ends now and Hicks
thought of Fitzgerald as his
so~,
a
more brilliant, more intelligent part
of himself.
"I'd bet that your course is the
only one he failed," said Hicks.
"One makes mistakes."
"One makes mistakes," Hicks
mocked.
"If
I were to do it over
I'd begin with burning the Univer–
sity."
Grange was accustomed to Hicks'
outbursts. They were good friends
and Grange felt that Hicks was very
nearly a great man. He glanced
at the foreword and smiled. "It's
timely anyway. He says so himself."
Hicks laughed and when he
laughed his whole body shook. He
got up with difficulty. His legs
were poor and when he walked he
lurched forward as
if
he were
drunk. He walked to the door, then
back again and sat down with a
great heave. "And can you tell me
what was so timely about Newton's
theories. Or Einstein's for that mat–
ter."
Grange shrugged his shoulders
and thoughtfully lighted a ciga–
rette. He accepted the world with
calm. He was a tall man who in
the last few years had gained much
weight and could not yet move
without awkwardness. Hie k s
thought to himself that Grange
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