Word: steins
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Writers, who feel that they must find a new medium for their ideas, will be offered their chance when Gertrude Stein speaks before the Signet Society on Monday evening at eight o'clock in the Clubhouse on Dunster Street. For her topic, she has chosen. "Grammar and Poetry," or was it "Grammar is Poetry, Poetry, Grammar Grammar...
Scholarships granted in the Graduate School of Education are: Austin Scholarships: Thomas J. Curtin 1G.Ed. of Everett and Edward Gregory 1G.Ed. of Culver, Indiana. Faculty Scholarships: William S. Goodhue of Cambridge and Jeanette M. Stein of Oakfield, New York. University Scholarships: Barney Feldman 1G.Ed. of Lynn, Thomas M. Harris 2G. Ed. of Howell, Tennessee and George Mokaba 2G.Ed. of Cambridge. Phi Delta Kappa Scholarship: Milton E. Mickelson 2G.Ed. of Brookline...
...Suppose no one asked a question. What would the answer be?" With this proposition, impressionistic, word-jumbling Gertrude Stein, most famed of U. S. literary expatriates, greeted the first corps of U. S. newshawks she had seen in 31 years. Author Stein, hearty, hefty, dressed in a coarse, mannish suit and thick woolen stockings, was sailing up New York Harbor to begin a lecture tour. Over her close-cropped grey hair was pulled a tweed deer-stalker's cap. To the disappointment of newshawks, she gave an intelligible interview: "I do talk as I write but you can hear...
...forget anybody who ever wrote anything" a new writer, 26-year old Armenian William Saroyan, published his first book of short stories this month. Despite Mr. Saroyan's too evident desire to avoid classification, however, he is easily catalogued as belonging to that school of writing dominated by Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and Edith Sitwell, so aptly labeled by Max Eastman as "the cult of unintelligibility...
Advertising Manager Kraus sells a number of things beside garters, including belts, suspenders, girdles, dress shields, sanitary aprons, baby pants - all made by A. Stein & Co. Despite the rise of Nudism, Paris garters are sold in 65 foreign countries, and in a good year A. Stein & Co. makes nearly $1,000,000. (But last year it made only $280,00.) The concern was started in a one-room plant in Chicago in the 1880s by Albert Stein, a German immigrant, to turn out ladies' fancy garters with rabbits' feet and silver buckles and the blazing armbands favored...