Word: sheldon
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...attempt at a modern reproduction of the "Dance of Death," a difficult task. There is an atmosphere of weirdness and mystery about the showman and his tent in the great forest; but the author fails to vitalize sufficiently the figure of the young man. "The Inevitable," by E. B. Sheldon, is a pleasing little sketch portraying in symbolic form the passing of childhood. The only fiction in this number is "The Man Who Won," by H. B. Child. The story has a good climax, but the characters do not stand out clearly...
MODERN LANGUAGE CONFERENCE. "Some English Etymologies." Professor Sheldon. Common Room, Conant Hall...
MODERN LANGUAGE CONFERENCE. "Some English Etymologies." Professor Sheldon. Common Room, Conant Hall...
...resignations of the following men were accepted, to take effect September 1, 1907: L. Hatch, assistant in English; E. B. Sheldon '08, assistant in English...
...prose begins with some commonplace, and fortunately also common-sense, words of the editors to Freshmen. Then it rambles through Mr. Ford's "Varied Outlooks," which are so very varied that few readers will know what the author wishes them to see. It is better in Mr. Edward Sheldon's "Among Those Sailing." There are good things in the story; but the hero and heroine, probably unlike any lovers who ever lived that were worth their salt, stop in their mutual declaration of love to compare themselves with Mr. and Mrs. Browning. Mr. Rogers MacVeagh's "Anonymously Dedicated...