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...coaches and rehearses her singers until, she says, "they learn the music so well that it sails out of them." And the authentic version too. "It is important to start by going back to the original manuscript because so much in opera happened before the age of photography, when music copying began to be a more exact science." That kind of reverence for the printed notes does not keep Caldwell from having a little fun now and then. In the party scene from her 1972 Traviata, the champagne corks were popped in time to the music. Her 1973 Daughter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music's Wonder Woman | 11/10/1975 | See Source »

...Schlesinger Library yesterday turned down Kaptelov's request for other papers citing problems of manuscript control and literary rights...

Author: By Lou ANN Walker, | Title: Soviets Request Copies Of Harvard Collections | 10/29/1975 | See Source »

...archivist, Boris Ivanovitch Kaptelov, said yesterday he intends to request copies of the Leon Trotsky papers, as well as other papers, from Houghton Library. Kaptelov placed a request Friday for photocopies of several manuscript collections from the Schlesinger Library...

Author: By Lou ANN Walker, | Title: Soviets Request Copies Of Harvard Collections | 10/29/1975 | See Source »

Kaptelov requested from Schlesinger photocopies of parts of the manuscript collections of Vera Dean, Louise Stroughton, Mary Winsor and Eliza Bowditch van Loon, all of whom were American women who had travelled to or had special interest in Russia. The Schlesinger Library does not hold literary rights for several of the collections in question...

Author: By Lou ANN Walker, | Title: Soviets Request Copies Of Harvard Collections | 10/29/1975 | See Source »

...inconceivable--indeed, it is ludicrous--to suppose that the Department was influenced by an editorial in the Wall Street Journal; if my colleagues took note of that at all, it would if anything have the opposite effect of what the paper intended. The Department met to consider the manuscript on which its decision about tenure depended, and it considered that matter only. Dr. Kearns kept us informed, independently of the press furor, of the state of her manuscript and her plans for publication and asked us for our judgment as to its quality in its various versions. We responded. Decisions...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ALLEGATIONS AND GOVERNMENT | 10/14/1975 | See Source »

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