Word: authorization
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...play submitted. There is no rule prohibiting any contestant from competing for all three prizes. The manuscripts may be submitted between November 1, 1913, and February 1, 1914. They are to be signed by an assumed name and accompanied by a sealed envelope which will contain the author's real name...
...also reserves the right to print any others that may be of sufficient merit. Announcement of the results will be made at the time of the annual Advocate dinner on May 10. Each essay should be signed with an assumed name and accompanied by a sealed envelope containing the author's true name. The competition this year is not open to graduates, as was the case last year...
Plans are being made by the Harvard alumni of Charleston, S. C., for a memorial to Dr. Samuel Gilman 1811, the author of "Fair Harvard." They have issued an appeal for $1000, for the purpose of building a memorial room in the church in Charleston, where Dr. Gilman served as pastor for forty years...
...Harvard" was sung for the first time. Since that day "Fair Harvard" has been the hymn of the University, an inspiration to Harvard men the world over, wherever heard, recalling the thoughts and scenes and ideals of college days. Samuel T. Gilman, of the class of 1811, was the author of the famous ode, and it is now proposed by Harvard men in Charleston, South Carolina, to establish a room to his memory in the church in which he served for over forty years. While an undergraduate, Gilman was an editor of the "Harvard Lyceum," the first undergraduate publication. After...
...Thieves" was written while its author was in College, being published by a New York magazine. It was dramatized last fall. The play deals with the adventures of two thieves, one rich, the other poor, and ends with the conversion of the former to a better life by the poor man. The situations are very funny and the plot lends itself to an enjoyable comedy...