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CONTRIBUTORS 143 CONTRIBUTORS IVAN ARGUELLES Uves in Brooklyn. CAROL BERGE teaches at the University of New Mexico in Albuerque. She writes poetry and fiction and is the editor of Center. PHIL BOIARSKI's work appeared in NS 6 and NS 10. PATRICK BRANTLINGER teaches at Indiana University and is currently on a Guggenheim in CaUfornia. TERESA DE JESUS is the pseudonym of a poet in Santiago de ChUe. DAVE ETTER Uves in UUnois. NORMAN FINKELSTEIN is from Atlanta, Georgia. SUSAN FIRER is a poet in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She has a book forthcoming with New Rivers Press. BRENDA GALVIN had a poem in the last issue. JULIAN GITZEN has taught in Iran and Kansas, and now teaches in AustraUa. He co-edits an Australian journal of creative writing caUed Biala. HUNT HAWKINS had a poem in NS 10. M. KASPER is from Massachusetts. HENRY J. LASKOWSKI Uves in Urämie, Wyoming. JANE MARCUS has pubUshed in previous issues. ERWIN MARQUIT teaches at the University of Minnesota, and is on sabbatical in the GDR for a year. CHARLES E. MAY teaches at CaUfornia State University in Long Beach. DAVID McKAIN Uves in New London, Connecticut. ROGER MITCHELL is in England again. JONAH RASKIN is the author of The Mythology ofImperialism and In Pursuit ofB. Traven and Kenny Love. REG SANER has work forthcoming in Poetry, Atlantic, Ohio Review and others. RICHARD SCHAAF Uves in New Haven, Connecticut. WILLIAM J. SCHÄFER had an essay in NS7 on Truman Nelson. PAUL SOLYN is currently a grants director in Oregon. D. E. STEWARD Uves in CharlottesviUe, Virginia. BRIAN SWANN teaches at Cooper Union in New York. He has had work in previous issues. GORDON TANAKA lives in Cypress, CaUfornia. BARBARA UNGER teaches at Rockland Community CoUege. WILLIAM F. VAN WERT teaches at Temple University in PhUadelphia . JOHANNA VOGELSANG is an artist in Washington, D.C. ALANWALD lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. TOM WAYMAN Uves in Vancouver, and has poems in previous issues of MR. JIRI WYATT's reviews have appeared in NSlO and others. STEPHEN ZELNICK Uves in Philadelphia. JACK ZIPES eidts the New German Critique. NOTES Among the publications that have come in the mail, here are three magazines (two of them new) that should interest MR readers. 1) ArsenalISurrealist Subversion, No. 3, Spring 1976. Editor: FrankUn Rosemont. Address: 2257 North Janssen Avenue, Chicago, IL 60614. Describes itselfas an "EngUsh-language Journal of the International SurreaUst Movement," and, as far as I know, is the only surreahst organ that has not forgotten that movement's left poUtical origins. Edited with vigor. 2) Main Trend: A Publication ofthe Anti-Imperial Cultural Union, No. 1, May 1, 1978. Editorial office: P.O. Box 814, Cooper Station, New York, NY 10003. The person who sent MR a copy of this issue siad that Main Trend would be trying to dp roughly what MR is trying to do but for wider consumption. Articles cover strikes, poUtical activities and cultural events and treat them aU with a view to "exposing bourgeois culture and. . . creating revolutionary, anti-imperialist culture." 3) The Unrealist: A Left Literary Magazine, a magazine pubUshed by The UnreaUst Press, Box 53, Prince, WV 25907. Editors: Mary Joan Coleman, PJ. Laska, Warene Uska. First issue arrived in the mail today (July 18, 1978). Contents include poetry, fiction, criticism, essays, reviews. An article on poUtical poetry, one on Bukowski, an interview with Don West ("A People's Poet"). Looks very promising. ...

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