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The Contributors PETER URE: Joseph Cowen Professor of English and Language and Literature at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Author of Yeats the Play. wright, and two other books on Yeats. Editor of Richard II in the Arden Shakespeare, Seventeenth Century Prose, and John Eachard's Mr. Hobbs's State oj Nature Considered. MARJORIE J. LIGHTFOOT: Assistant Professor of English, Arizona State University. Her article in this issue is her first published article. DAVID R. CLARK: Associate Professor of English, the University of Massachusetts; author of W. B. Yeats and the Theatre of Desolate Reality (Dublin, The Dolmen Press); co·editor with Robin Skelton of The Massachusetts Review's recent "An Irish Gathering: Letters, Memoirs, Poems, Articles of Twentieth· Century Ireland." SISTER ALOYSE SCANLON, S.N.D. DE N.: Sister Aloyse Scanlon teaches in the Depart. ment of English at Seishin Junior College in Hiroshima, Japan. JOHN UNTERECKER: Department of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University; author of A Reader's Guide to William Butler Yeats (Noonday), Lawrence Durrell (Columbia University Press, 1964), editor Yeats (Prentice. Hall, Twentieth.Century Views). Professor Unterecker is currently in Ireland on a Guggenheim Fellowship to do work on Yeats and the Abbey. SIDNEY WARSCHAUSKY: Professor Warschausky is Chairman of Humanities at the Dearborn Campus of the University of Michigan. JOHN R. MOORE: Author, with Louis D. Rubin, of The Idea oj an American Novel (Crowell, 1961). Professor Moore has recently returned to Hollins College after a year's leave of absence, spent in Ireland where he worked on a book on Yeats. MARILYN GADDIS RoSE: Dr. Rose teaches Comparative Literature at Stephens Col· lege. Her articles and reviews on Julian Green have appeared in both Ameri· can and French publications. HELEN H. VENDLER: Professor Vendler is a member of the English Department of Smith College. She is the author of Yeats's Vision and the Later Plays (Harvard , 1963). DANIEL J. MURPHY: Mr. Murphy is a member of the English Department, Baruch School of Business, City College, New York. He has written the introduction to me Capricorn Book re·issue of Lady Gregory's Our Irish Theatre, scheduled for publication in January. 1965. ViVIAN MERCIER: Associate Professor of English, City College of New York. He ic author of The Irish Comic Tradition (Oxford. 1962). GABRIEL FALLON: Mr. Fallon is a director of the Abbey Theatre. He has COlI' tributed to many British and U.s. publications. ...

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