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Notes On Contributors
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Notes On Contributors

CYPRIAN BLAGDEN, of Longman, Green & Co., in London, is the author of various important works on seventeenth-century publishing history.

W. CRAIG FERGUSON has studied at the Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-upon-Avon and is now completing his doctoral dissertation, a study of the Elizabethan printer, Valentine Simmes. He is a teacher of English in the Queen Elizabeth Collegiate School in Kingston, Ontario.

HAROLD JENKINS, Professor of English at Westfield College, University of London, has made Shakespeare and the Renaissance drama his special study.

JOHN RUSSELL BROWN is Lecturer in English at the University of Birmingham. His edition of Webster's White Devil is scheduled for publication by Methuen in the new Revels series of Elizabethan drama.

ARTHUR BROWN is Lecturer in English at University College, London. He is at present engaged on an edition of Thomas Heywood for the Clarendon Press and also an Arden Shakespeare.

CYRUS HOY received his doctorate from the University of Virginia and is Associate Professor of English at Vanderbilt University. The next installment of his study of Fletcher's collaborators is scheduled for SB, vol. XIV.

D. F. MCKENZIE, a graduate of the University of New Zealand, is at present at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he is writing a history of the Cambridge University Press.

ARTHUR FRIEDMAN, Professor of English at the University of Chicago, is completing his edition of Goldsmith for the Clarendon Press.

EDGAR F. SHANNON, JR., formerly Associate Professor of English, is the newly inaugurated President of the University of Virginia. He is engaged on an edition of Tennyson's letters for joint publication by the Clarendon and Harvard University Presses.

H. TREVOR COLBOURN is Assistant Professor in American History at the Pennsylvania State University. He received his doctorate in 1953 from Johns Hopkins for a study of Thomas Jefferson's historical justification of American independence, and has recently completed a book on the historical perspective of the Founding Fathers. He is currently Secretary to the Pennsylvania Historical Association.


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KENNETH POVEY is Librarian of the University of Liverpool. A study of the results of a large-scale investigation of problem books with the Martin lamp is expected for a future SB.

CHARLES B. GULLINS is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Washington. His edition of the English and Latin poems of Sir Robert Ayton will be published by the Scottish Text Society. The research for the edition was largely done while he was a Fulbright student at King's College, University of Durham.

ROBERT K. TURNER, JR., received his doctorate from the University of Virginia and is Assistant Professor of English at the Virginia Military Institute. He is especially interested in the bibliographical and textual problems of The Maid's Tragedy and Philaster.

ROBERT HAIG is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Illinois, where he interests himself in the printing history of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

DONALD J. GREENE is Assistant Professor of English at Brandeis University, after receiving his doctorate from Columbia. His book The Politics of Samuel Johnson has recently been published by the Yale University Press.

G. BLAKEMORE EVANS is Professor of English at the University of Illinois, and editor of the Journal of English and Germanic Philology. The Society will shortly publish the first volume of a colotype series of seventeenth-century Shakespearean prompt-books under his editorship.

JOHN C. WESTON, JR., Assistant Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts, received his doctorate at the University of North Carolina and has been Instructor at the University of Virginia.

ROBERT H. WOODWARD received his doctorate from Indiana University with a dissertation on Harold Frederic. He has been teaching his special interest, American Literature, at San Jose State College since 1954.

MATTHEW J. BRUCCOLI received his M.A. from the University of Virginia. He is currently associated with the Bibliography of American Literature project.

RUDOLF HIRSCH is the expert on incunabula for the University of Pennsylvania Library.

HOWELL J. HEANEY is Bibliographer in the Rare Book Department of the Free Library of Philadelphia.