Reginald H. Colley '09 was one of three co-authors of "1959 Cooperative Marine Piling Project: 1. Marine-Block Preservative Evaluation Experiments," published this year by the American Wood-Preservers' Association, and was a member of the Association's committees on "Creosote and Creosote-Coal Tar Solutions" and "Methods for Evaluation of Wood Preservatives" which prepared reports on those subjects.
The Foreword for Report on Titanium:The Ninth Major Industrial Metal, a book by Samuel G. Williams, was written by Charles E. Brundage '16.
The April 1966 issue of Trinity CollegeLibrary Gazette, published by the Trinity Library Associates, has as its leading article, "Come Back to Ruritania" by Allerton C. Hickmott '16.
Two recent articles by Robert M. Stecher '19 M.D. were "The Gregor Mendel Memorial Symposium" in the Alumni Bulletin of Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Fourth Quarter 1965, and "Przewalski's Horse," subtitled "Its History, Its Nature, and Its Threatened Survival," in the Spring 1966 issue of The Explorer, published by the Natural Science Museum of Cleveland, Ohio.
The July 1966 issue of The Reader's Digest contains an article by Harland Manchester '21, condensed from an earlier version in The Kiwanis Magazine, entitled "You Name It - We Rent It."
An essay, "Masscom as Guru," by W. H. Ferry '32 appears in Mass Communications, one of a series of Occasional Papers published by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.
Robert W. Workum '54 of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, is the author of "Lower Paleozoic Salt, Canadian Arctic Islands," published in the Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 181-191.
Gerald R. Greenfield '6l, senior engineer, S & ID, North American Aviation Corp., presented a paper on "Cost Analysis of Reliability Programs" at the Seventh Annual West Coast Reliability Symposium in May, and it has subsequently been published in the Proceedings of that symposium held at the University of Southern California.
STUDENT PRANKSTERS STILL EXIST. The College awoke on the morning ofJune 3 to find the south face of Baker Library's clock, facing the campus, turned intoa Mickey Mouse watch. Unappreciative Buildings and Grounds men took it down.