“Boston.”

February 28, 1933

(Feb.) Fortune. In the article, the magazine declares, “[The Bostonian] has so completely lost his leadership in the arts that his former influence has become a subject for satire. . . The Bohemia is self-conscious and gawky. The speakeasies, in a city which cannot overcome its aversion to dining out even in the interests of alcohol, are short-lived and unappetizing and glum . . and Boston restaurants are bad, outside of the Olympia with its Levantine dishes and Durgin & Park’s with its prime beef, because Boston society makes no demands upon them.”