Article

Alumni Publications

April 1945 James M. Langley '18.
Article
Alumni Publications
April 1945 James M. Langley '18.

Stanley Jones '18 has a story 24 Hours fromCairo in the December issue of Promenade. Jones is also contributing the High Hat department in Judge Magazine. A publication of his which escaped mention in this column is a novel Net Results published in Canada.

American Ski Annual, 1944-1945 contains an article Who's to Carry On? by Stephen J. Bradley '39.

War and Group Psychotherapy by Dr. Donald A. Shaskan '30 and Miriam Jolesch, has been reprinted from the October issue of The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry.

Albert E. Kahn '34 is one of the editors of New Currents, a Jewish Monthly. In this magazine he writes a column each month entitled The Enemy Within. He is also writing a series of articles for Reader's ScopeMagazine called Dangerous Americans. The third number of this series appears in the February issue.

Why be Raggedy Marines? by Major James A. Donovan Jr. '39 appears in the December issue of Marine Corps Gazette.

Volume 5 of Naval Documents, published under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, deals with the U. S. wars with the Barbary Powers. This volume is filled with material relating to Gen. William Eaton, a graduate of Dartmouth in the class of 1790. A novel dealing with the invasion, in 1805, of Northern Africa by Gen. William Eaton entitled Written in Sand by Mrs. Josephine Young Case has been published by the Houghton Mifflin Company.

Lester B. Granger '18 is the author of A Hopeful Sign in Race Relations which has been reprinted from the November issue of Survey Graphic.

Early Starrs in Kent and New England, by Hosea Starr Ballou, a volume of 141 pages, has been published by the Starr Family Association of Boston. These articles originally appeared in The New England Historicaland Genealogical Register. They have been arranged and edited for the present volume by William Carroll Hill '02.

S. Avery Raube '30 is the author of Foreman Training in the Anthracite Industry, which is Studies in Personnel Policy, no. 66 of the National Industrial Conference Board, Inc.

Stalin at 65—The World's Least-KnownGreat Man Has Become Savior, Symbol andLiving Legend to Russians, by Richard E. Lauterbach '35, was in the Jan. 1 Life.

Builders of the World Ahead contains an address by Charles G. Bolte '41 entitled Leadership Among the First Million.

Richard Lee Strout '19 is the author of AManger in New Hampshire which appeared in the Dec. 16 issue of The Christian ScienceMonitor.

Lt. V. A. Sherrrian.'38 is the author of TheBattle of Vella Gulf which appears in the January issue of the U. S. Naval Institute Proceedings.

Simon & Schuster, New York, have just published at $3.75 First of the Many, a Journal ofAction With The Men of the Eighth AirForce, by Capt. John R. (Tex) McCrary and David E. Scherman '36.

The First of the Many were the original officers, the combat crews and ground crews of the BritainBased Bth U. S. Army Air Force. They were the first American invaders of Germany.

In this book are told the true stories of some of these men and their deeds as related by them to Captain McCrary. He himself shared ten missions with them as photographer-gunner. The book is profusely illustrated with 128 pages of excellent photographs. Most of these were taken by David E. Scherman, Life Magazine staff photographer and formerly attached to the Bth Air Force. This volume has a foreword by Lt. Gen. Ira C. Eaker.

Local Planning is Practical, What One NewEngland City [Concord, N. H.] Has DoneThrough Planning in Six Years, a pamphlet of 15 pages, has been prepared for the Community Development Committee of the New England Council by