Edward C. Kirkland '16 discussed "Rhetoric and Rage over the Division of Wealth in the Eighteen Nineties" in Proceedings, American Antiquarian Society, October 1969.
J. Almus Russell '20 has written "To Hand Me Dill and Fennel, Too, And Sprigs of Caraway" in New Hampshire Profiles, May 1970.
Richard Eberhart '26 has had a number of his poems appear recently in various publications: "Stealth and Subtleties of Growth," "Emily Dickinson," "Man's Fate," "Fracture Within," "Hardy Perennial," and "Here and Now" in The Southern Review, Winter 1970; "Vision" and "To Kenya Tribesmen, the Turkana" in The VirginiaQuarterly Review, Spring 1970; "The Anxiety I Felt in Guanajuato" in Shenandoah, Spring 1970; in The New Yorker, "Despair" on February 14, 1970 and "Suicide Note" on March 26, 1970; "Love On" in Jeopardy, Winter 1970; "The Secret Heart" and "A Man Who Was Blown Down by the Wind" in The South Florida Poetry Journal; "Autumn" in The New York Quarterly Review, No. 1; "War" and "Logos" in New YorkPoetry, Vol. 1, No. 1; and "Will" in Saturday Review, March 28, 1970. In addition, thirteen of his poems have been included in A Little Treasury of Modern Poetry (third edition, 1970), eight poems in The NortonAnthology of Poetry, 1970, and eight poems in Maine Lines, 1970. His essay "The Gold Standard" was published in Robert Lowell,Portrait of the Artist in His Time.
Jeffrey O'Connell '51 is the author of two articles: "A Balanced Approach to Auto Insurance Reform" in the Colorado LawReview; Vol. 41, 1969, and "The Automobile Insurance Industry and Federal Takeover" in the University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 36, 1969; and chapters in two books: "Contradictions in Automobile Advertising" in Readings in General Sociology, 1969, and "Basic Protection for Traffic Victims" in III Selected Readings: Economics,Government, and Business, 1969.
David Rafael Wang '55 has had his poems, "Dyname," "The Rite," "The Woman," and "The Lapse," published in Sumac, Vol. 2, NOs. 2 and 3. Twelve of his translations are deluded in High Wedlock Then Be Honoured (Viking Press, 1970), and his rendition of a Chinese folk poem appears in TheSeneca Review, Vol. 1, No. 1.