Rare Books
Were you there when they crucified my Lord : a Negro spiritual in illustrations
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Didn't My Lord Deliber Daniel: orchestral score
Manuscripts
A full autograph orchestral score; an arrangement of the African American spiritual "Didn't My Lord Deliber Daniel." It was found in the music files of film composer Dmitri Tiomkin; the score is believed to be part of Tiomkin's research for the score for "The Negro Soldier" (1944), from Frank Capra's "Why We Fight" series during World War II.
mssHM 84111
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My Lord's Warming Pan. Comic burletta, 2 acts
Manuscripts
No application. Prod. (as My Lord; or, The Warming Pan) Olympic, Dec. 15, 1823. MS: dated by Larpent Dec. 8; previous title, My Lord! or a Peers Warming Pan, changed on cover and title-page.
LA 2391
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When Time Stood Still in Arcady - Will you be my valentine?
Manuscripts
A collection of approximately 30,000 items which consists of letters, manuscripts, documents, diaries, sketches, photographs, printed material, and scrapbooks related to the lives and work of Charles Erskine Scott Wood and Sara Bard Field Wood. The collection includes material about William Maxwell Wood (1809-1880), C.E.S. Wood's father; papers from C. E. S. Wood's army career, including materials from West Point, Alaska, and the Indian campaigns in the Pacific Northwest; C. E. S. Wood's activities in the development of eastern Oregon (note: there are no papers belonging to Wood's law office); Sara Bard Field's reports on the McNamara case, her life in San Francisco and her associations with journalists, labor leaders, Soviet sympathizers, pacifists, and artists; materials related to Sara Bard Field's work for woman suffrage and women's rights; and C. E. S. Wood and Sara Bard Field Wood's cultural circle, including letters from other writers, critics, publishers, social reformers, artists, sculptors, theatrical figures and musicians. Persons represented in the collection include politicians, journalists, cultural leaders, artists, suffragists, authors, and musicians: Charles Altschul, Roger Nash Baldwin, Alva Belmont, Albert M. Bender, William Rose Beňt, Henriette de S. Blanding, Alfred Brennan, Maurice Browne, George De Forest Brush, Beniamino Bufano, Witter Bynner, Bennett Cerf, Samuel Langhorne Clemens, Clarence Darrow, Kenneth Durant, Max Eastman, Gilson Gardner, Inez Haynes Gillmore, William Hanley, Walter Morris Hart, Childe Hassam, Nan Wood Honeyman, O.O. Howard, Robinson Jeffers, Willard Maas, Alexander Meiklejohn, Eugene Meyer, Josephine Miles, Harriet Monroe, Richard L. Neuberger, Frederick O'Brien, Mrs. Fremont Older, Fremont Older, Lemuel Parton, Alice Paul, Lute Pease, Louis Freeland Post, John Cowper Powys, Llewelyn Powys, Alexander Phimister Proctor, John W. Redington, Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, Muriel Rukeyser, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Theodore Spiering, Lincoln Steffens, Walter Steilberg, Doris Stevens, Genevieve Taggard, Mark Van Doren, Mabel Vernon, Langdon Warner, Olin Levi Warner, Julian Alden Weir, Marie de L. Welch, George P. West, Frances G. Wickes, Ella Winter, Emma Wold, Erskine Wood, Art Young, and Ella Young.
mssWD
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Oblivion
Rare Books
"The term 'shadowland' that Maisel uses when discussing the Oblivion photographs is appropriate. When you cast a shadow on a fact, you create doubt. When you shadow someone, you follow them invisibly. Shadowland is what the military calls those blacked-out areas where they wish to operate unseen, whether they are testing an experimental aircraft or interrogating people beyond lawful means. It is a land of spies and spooks, a place where ghosts live, and what Los Angeles looks like in Oblivion. The city is almost recognizable in Maisel’s negative prints and yet not quite, as if we are seeing both more of what we know and less"--Publisher's description.
653254
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Rall, Ted. 1993, Nov. 20. "Where Were You When J.F.K. Was Shot?"
Manuscripts
The collection consists of original cartoons, book proposals, and manuscripts. The correspondence deals with Rall's personal and business matters, including letters to and from his fans.
RL 990

The rose of delight, or, An excellent nevv song in the praise of His Grace James D. of Monmouth: My female wishes may they never end, for I great Monmouth still will be thy friend, while I retain my poor immortal soul, I'le joy with thee, and wanting thee condoul. Tune of, No, no 'tis in vain to sigh and complain
Rare Books
ESTC R215643 ; A song - "Notwithstanding the frown that descends from the Crown on my Lord that once was so dear," ; Place and date of publication from Wing
180180