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Advice to prospective husbands will be given free by Ensigns Stein, Murray, Selzer, and M. C. Smith. They're all still wearing good conduct bars, too. Hmmm. (This was brought to our attention by Long John Smith of the Miss. hills...

Author: By The PEARSON Twins, | Title: *The Lucky Bag* | 3/27/1945 | See Source »

WARS I HAVE SEEN-Gertrude Stein -Random House...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Stein on War | 3/12/1945 | See Source »

...many people," observed Gertrude Stein's U.S. publisher, Bennett Cerf, in his best-selling Try and Stop Me, "even claim to understand the intricacies of Miss Stein's prose style. But millions admire her rugged and magnificent personality." Pennsylvania-born Gertrude Stein has now lived out one world war and most of a second in her adopted France, viewed many another war from afar in the course of her 71 years. Wars I Have Seen, which she claims that even Publisher Cerf should be able to understand, is mostly about the present war. It is, naturally, very different...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Stein on War | 3/12/1945 | See Source »

Looking over the Sunday liberty list, we failed to find Casey "the Rabbit" O'Donnell partaking in the luxury. Could it be that his recent "H.P." has converted him into a bookworm--and then there's always the Charles River in June. Fred Stein has a sage remark or two about the cleaning service in Boston and requests that anyone who would like "vastly superior" service to contact his father, who is a dry-cleaning magnate--in Detroit. If this questionable weather continues, "T.C.U." Thomas says he's going home to Texas. Murray threatens to report him absent from muster...

Author: By The PEARSON Twins, | Title: Lucky Bag | 11/28/1944 | See Source »

...Tillotsen, who calls Brown his Alma Mater, was seen prodding Fritz Stein into accepting some liberty last week-end. The results are unknown, but Freddie was pretty sharp in Monday's classes, so perhaps James wasn't very persuasive. The amount of mail Don McClure received from Texas leads us to believe that this quiet, longhorn is already making plans for his leave

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Lucky Bag | 11/28/1944 | See Source »

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