Books

Faculty Authors

February 1945
Books
Faculty Authors
February 1945

Dr. Arthur Linksz and Wendell Triller are the authors of Biastigmatism: Evaluation andCriticism of the Refractive Technique Advocated by Marquez, which has been reprinted from the September issue of the AmericanJournal of Ophthalmology.

Doctors George Wald and Hermann M. Burian are the authors of The Dissociationof Form Vision and Light Perception in Strabismic Amblyopia, reprinted from the September issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology. Dr. Burian is also author of an article Motility Clinic reprinted from the August number of American Journal of Ophthalmology.

Professor Robert J. Beitel Jr. is the author of Manual of Instructions for Use of Simplified Space Eikonometer (Vectograph Model).

Philosophy East and West, edited by C. A. Moore and published by the Princeton University Press, contains two chapters by Professor W. T. Chan as follows: chapter 3 TheStory of Chinese Philosophy, and chapter 7 The Spirit of Oriental Philosophy.

Dr. Bernard Brodie of the Political Science Department on leave, and now Lieutenant in the USNR, is the author of the following articles: Revolution in the Pacific, which appears in the Autumn issue of the Virginia QuarterlyReview; Peace With Power, and Sea Power inModem War, both of which appear in the November issue of the Infantry Journal, and War With the Wolf Packs, which appears in the November issue of Sea Power (Special Navy Day Issue). Shipmates (Alumni Journalof the U. S. Naval Academy), is publishing in three installments beginning with the November issue, chapter 8 of Dr. Brodie's Guide toNaval Strategy. An entire chapter in the Brisish Year Book—Brassey's Naval Annual for1944—contains a 5000 word review by Capt. Russell Grenfell of Dr. Brodie's British edition of Layman's Guide to Naval Strategy.

A new edition of The Sea Witch by Alexander Laing '25 has just been published by Murray Hill Books, Inc. This edition is illustrated in color by Gordon Grant. The first edition of this book appeared in 1933. As there has been a steady sale ever since, an illustrated, gift edition of the book seemed desirable.