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...place in the issue is the place that in an undergraduate magazine should by rights be the strongest, the fiction. One thinks longingly of the vigorous college stories of Paul Mariett and Lucien Price, the exquisite child stories of Chester Brown, the dramatic tales of High Society by Edward Sheldon; and wonders where the story-tellers are keeping themselves. In this number, they are not very well represented. "The Boy and Glenvil," by Mr. Burlingame, cries for compression, for composition in the painter's sense, the focusing of detail on the central figure and suppression of irrelevancies; "The Cursed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Hagedorn Reviews Monthly | 5/8/1913 | See Source »

...assignment of Frederick Sheldon Travelling Fellowships for 1913-14 three have been made to members of the Senior class as follows: T. Coggeshall, of Allston, for travel in Europe, and for the study of Social Ethics at Manchester College, Oxford; D. E. Dunbar, of Springfield, and A. P. Gradolph, of Toledo, C., for travel and study in Europe...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Travelling Fellowships to Seniors | 4/10/1913 | See Source »

Kismet will prove of double charm to the Harvard man since it is not only a play of remarkable excellence, a genuine novelty in stage entertainment capitally done, but also, as it happens, the work of a not very old alumnus. Mr. Edward Knoblauch, unlike the other Edward--Mr. Sheldon--has until comparatively recently been better known, or at least equally well known, in England as here. Indeed, Kismet came to America only after it had won signal favor in London in 1911, and this not because Mr. Knoblauch chose that the British stage should foster his work but that...

Author: By G. SANTAYANA ., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 3/27/1913 | See Source »

...test case of Warfield v. Fallon et als., brought by the Wilson Club of the University against the registrars of Cambridge to decide whether students may vote was adjudged yesterday in favor of the petitioner. The case was first brought before Justice Sheldon of the Supreme Judicial Court sitting in Suffolk County. He referred it to the whole bench, which sent it down because of a mistake in the reservation, and the case was tried before Justice Braley. As the decision now stands, the fact that students are not self-supporting and that their parents reside in a town...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STUDENTS ALLOWED TO VOTE | 3/22/1913 | See Source »

...High Road," though dull in spots, yet gives us Mr. Sheldon at his best...

Author: By G. H., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 1/21/1913 | See Source »

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