Word: manuscripts
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...manuscripts must be typewritten and marked clearly "Morosco Prize Competition," with the name and address of the author, as well as the year in which he or she was a member of English 47 or 47a. Sufficient postage for the return of the manuscript should be enclosed. All plays submitted must be at 195 Brattle street, Cambridge, October...
...voices, with or without accompaniment; (b) of either a sacred or secular character, and if the latter, of the type shown in Mozart, Chimbini and similar masters in polyphonic music; (c) must be submitted by an undergraduate or a member of any graduate school. The title page of the manuscript must be signed with an assumed name. All the competitive compositions must be in the hands of the committee by April...
...Farnsworth Room of Widener Library is to receive the original manuscript of the poem "I have a Rendezvous with Death" by Alan Seeger '10, from his mother Mrs. Charles L. Seeger, of New York, as soon as it is bound. The poem was written by Alan Seeger while at the front. It was scrawled in pencil on both sides of a small piece of paper. The Farnsworth Room already has a small volume containing three of Seeger's poems printed by his French associates in memory of him and his comrades. The poems are "I have a Rendezvous with Death...
...George Parker Winship '93, librarian of the Harry Elkins Widener Collection in the College Library, will give a conference on the illuminated manuscripts loaned to the Fogg Art Museum by John Pierpont Morgan '89 in the gallery of that museum this afternoon at 3.30 o'clock. The 25 or more books now at the Fogg Museum comprise some of the finest works in Pierpont Morgan's valuable collection of embellished manuscripts, which represent the art of many countries from the ninth to the 16th centuries. Of particular interest are two English volumes, the Bestiary of 1187 and the Windmill Psalter...
...better than any narrative in the present Advocate. If the fault has been with the editors in not utilizing such material, they should offer more encouragement to new contributors, though at the same time, if we may judge from the current number, they should be stricter in revision of manuscript. If the trouble has been either the bashfulness or indifference of writers, they should remember that it is good for themselves to be known to the public in any worthy way, and that a good contribution to a college periodical is a contribution to the general interest of our College...