Books

Alumni Articles

MARCH 1966
Books
Alumni Articles
MARCH 1966

J. Almus Russell '20 wrote "Transplanting Sugar Maples for Summer Shade" in TheOutdoor Journal, February 1966, Vol. 3, No. 9.

Alexander Laing '25 is the author of the following articles: "The Nation and Its Parts," The Nation, September 20, 1965, Vol. 201, No. 8, pp. 212-218; "Lowell's Trilogy," The Nation, January 24, 1966, Vol. 202, No. 4, pp. 103-105.

Robert T. Simonds '25 is the author of "An Alternative to the 'Seaboard Formula' " in the Public Utilities Fortnightly for January 20, 1966.

A poem by Prof. Richard Eberhart '26, "The Vastness and Indifference of the World," appeared in the February 12, 1966 issue of The Saturday Review.

"The History of Oncology" by Dr. Oliver S. Hayward '31 was printed in three parts in the August, September, and October 1965 issues of Surgery.

Poet Reuel Denney '32, Professor of American Studies at the University of Hawaii, is the author of "The Skimming Sports, Once Over Lightly" in Malamalama, winter 1966, published by the University of Hawaii.

An article by Gay E. Milius '33 entitled "A Line About Line Noise" appeared in the January 1966 issue of 73 Magazine.

Jeffrey O'Connell '51, Professor of Law at the University of Illinois College of Law, co-authored an article, "Basic Protection - A New Plan of Automobile Insurance," for Journal of Risk and Insurance, December 1965, Vol. XXXII, No. 4, pp. 539-548.

"Tax Planning for Builders" is the title of an article by Neil R. Bersch '53 in the December 1965 issue of Home Builders Journal.

Norman R. Carpenter '53 is the author of a short piece on foreign policy entitled "American Initiatives: The Myth of New Realities" which appeared in the January 1966 American Bar Association Journal and another on the antitrust laws and trade associations entitled, "The Businessman's Guide to Conventions or How to Avoid Guilt by Association" in the January 1966 issue of Bench and Bar, the journal of the Minnesota State Bar Association.

Recent articles by Richard L. Morrill '55 include "Distribution of Migration Distances," Papers and Proceedings, Regional Science Association, XI, 1963, pp. 75-84; "The Nature, Use and Abuse of Regions," Proceedings, Regional Science Association, Western Section Papers, Arizona State University, 1965, pp. 110-118; "The Negro Ghetto: Problems and Alternatives," Geographical Review 55, 1965, pp. 339-361; "System Benefits from Road Network Improvement," Criteria for Highway BenefitsAnalysis, Highway Economic Studies, University of Washington, 1965.

Richard H. Warner '58 is the author of "The Kozuchovo Campaign of 1964 or The Conquest of Moscow by Preobrazenskoe" which appeared in Jahrbücher für GeschichteOsteuropas, December 1965.