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The Contributors ERIC SALMON: Chairman of the Drama Department at the Vniversity of Saskatchewan Regina Campus; British actor and theater director whose directorial credits include Samson Agonistes at the Edinbu,rgh International Festival, plays in London and New York and films for NET; at present at work on a book about John Whiting; his article on his own New York production of Ugo Betti's Troubled Waters appeared in Modern Dramo. in 1968. CLAUDE R. FLORY: Professor of English at Florida State University, Claude Flory has edited Economic Criticism in American Fiction, a variety of historical and literary articles ineluding studies of Mark Twain and of Eugene O'Neill. GERALD MAST: Member of the Department of English at Richmond College, CUNY, Professor Mast has just finished a book on Harold Pinter. His A Short History Of the Movies will be published by Pegasus Press in October. He is currently working on a full-length study of Ionesco. ROBERT GREEN: Spent five years as Lecturer in the Literature Department, University College, Dar es Salaam. He has edited an anthology of verse and prose from East Africa, Just a Moment, God, published early in 1970. ANGELA BELLI: Associate Professor of English. St. John's University in New York. Her book, Ancient Greek Myths and Modem Drama: A Study in Continuity , was published by New York University Press in 1969. DENZELL SMITH: A member of the Department of English at the University of Maryland, Professor Smith has written on Shakespeare and Dryden, is Section Head for English, MLA. A.nnual Bibliography, and is co-editor of the forthcoming six-volume Recent Studies in Renaissance Drama to be published by the University of Nebraska Press. ALLEN THIHER: Assistant Professor of French at Middlebury College, Allen Thiher has written essays on Montherlant, Sartre, and Celine, and is finishing a book on Louis-Ferdinand (;eline. PHILIP G. HILL: Chairman of the Department of Drama and Speech at Furman University, Greenville, South Carolina. RENATE USMIANI: Teacher of drama and literary criticism at Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Mrs. Usmiani has written for Modern Drama and for the Canadian Humanities Association Bulletin. JOHN J. FRITSCHER: A member of the Department of English, Western Michigan University. CLAS ZILLIACUS: Has studied in Strasbourg, London, Dublin, and Salzburg, and has spent the past academic year at Columbia University as a Fulbright research scholar. He has been associated with the BBC, Radio Sweden, and the Finnish Broadcasting Company. Currently Mr. Zilliacus is teaching literature at the Swedish University of Finland. He has contributed to Scandinavian, English, and American journals. ...

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