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The Contributors MARION TROUSDALE: Mrs. Trousdale teaches English at the University of Maryland. She is presently writing a thesis on Renaissance theater at University College, London. JOHN FERGUSON: Visiting professor of classics, University of Minnesota, Professor Ferguson has published widely on classical subjects, and religious and international affairs. He is the author of numerous books, and has written four religious plays. LEONARD QUIRINO: Professor Quirino is currently an associate professor of English at Western Connecticut State College in Danbury, Connecticut. EMIL ROY: Professor Roy is a member of the English Department of Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois. He has published numerous articles on modern drama. KONRAD SCHOELL: Mr. Schoell received his Ph.D. from the University of Freiburg , Breisgau, in 1966. He is presently assistant lecturer of Romance Literature at the Technical University of Berlin. He is the author of Das Theater Samuel Becketts, Munich, 1967, and is preparing a book on French drama since World War II. RICHARD ALAN DAVISON: Has published articles in Emerson Society Quarterly , Literature and Psychology, CLA Journal, and Studies in Short Fiction. He is the Director of English Graduate Studies at Seattle University. PATRICIA MEYER SPACKS: Professor Spacks is a member of the English Department at Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts. She is the author of five books and numerous articles on eighteenth century poetry and on modern drama and fiction. DOUGLAS McDERMOTT: Assistant Professor of Dramatic Art, University of California, Davis, Professor McDermott is a specialist in American theater history. He is presently writing a history of the American theater. PHYLLIS Z. BORING: Mrs. Boring is an assistant professor of romance languages at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J. She has published other articles on contemporary Spanish theater in current issues of Kentucky Romance Quarterly and Romance Notes. FERDINAND LEON: Mr. Leon teaches foreign languages in the Los Angeles City Schools, and writes for television. He has completed a book on the dramatic uses of time in Tennessee Williams' plays which will be published this year. ERIC SALMON: Mr. Salmon is a British actor and director whose productions include Samson Agonistes at the Edinburgh Festival in 1956, ten films for N.E.T., and many others. He has also Wl'itten extensively on theater for various publications. He is the Director of Theatre and Chairman of the Drama Department at the University of Saskatchewan, Regina Campus. ...

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