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The Library Committee of the Union has announced its second annual prize essay contest, open to all members of the Union. The two best essays, according to the decision of the judges, will be awarded prizes of $100 and $50. The contest will be conducted under the following conditions:
1.--Any subject may be written upon that lends itself to treatment as an essay.
2.--The writing will be judged for its literary quality and should be of the sort that might appear in any first class periodical.
3.--A first prize of one hundred dollars ($100) and a second prize of fifty dollars ($50) will be offered.
4.--The judges will be: Professor John Tucker Murray '99, Professor K. G. T. Webster '93, and Professor Edward K. Rand '94.
5.--The successful manuscripts will become the property of the Harvard Union, unless otherwise decided by the Library Committee.
6.--Manuscripts must be typewritten.
7.--An upper limit of twenty-five hundred (2500) words is set, and the manuscripts must have at the end a definite count of the number of words.
8.--Manuscripts shall be due at the Library of the Union on or before 11.00 o'clock on Monday night, January 16, 1922.
9.--Contestants must hand in their manuscripts under an assumed name, and must also hand in a sealed envelope containing their true name, with their assumed name written on the outside.
10.--Any infringements of the above conditions shall be sufficient for rejection of manuscripts.
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