Word: print
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Early German prints are on exhibition in the Print Room of the Fogg Museum. Among the engravings shown are examples of the work of Master E. S. and Martin Schongauer, and a large number of splendid impressions from Albrecht Durer's most important plates, including the St. Jerome in his Cell, the Knight, Death and the Devil, and Melancholia. Durer's followers,--the Little Masters, the Behams, Altdorfer, Aldegrever, and Pencz, are represented by typical engravings...
...already completed their sketches to enter them in the competition than to encourage new men to attempt the work. At all events it is very important, according to those in charge that the design be in by Friday, since that allows only two weeks in which to choose and print the cover. All sketches should be handed in to R. P. Parker '22, Apthorp House...
...exhibition of early German engravings will open today in the Print Room of the Fogg Art Museum. The exhibition which contains several pictures by the father of engraving, Albrocht Duror, will remain about a month...
...first appearance it made an effort to break away from the somewhat stultifying literary atmosphere of the Advocate by printing a series of articles, some of them rather objectional, intended to set the college-world both thinking and talking. Since those first two numbers it has been gradually declining into a more commonplace and normal state in which it is satisfied to print the usual type of college article and story. Its first number of the present year is sufficient proof that it had forgotten the purpose with which it set out. Such titles as "The Football Team," "Harvard...
...toward the contemporary than the collegiate literary, the unusual than the unexpected. In the University as elsewhere there is a wealth of liberal thought and discussion which at the present has little chance of being represented in any college publications. Much of it the Advocate does not desire to print, and more would never be turned in to it because of the Advocate's policy of standing by the conventional. If the Harvard Magazine were to tap this stored-up fund of liberal theory and practice it would encourage a rich flow of vital and thought-provoking material...