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• Civil Liberties and the Arts

Selections from

Twice a Year, 1938·1948

Edited, with Introduction, by William Wasserstrom

Dorothy Norman founded

Twice a Year

in 1938 out of a profound

concern for the freedom of man in a world marked by disregard for

the individual, and an equally profound belief that the arts must

have a forum for action in the cause of civil liberty.

Twice a Y ear

published a diversity of fiction, poetry, essays, and

art, unified only by the journal's central purpose. In this anthology,

Kafka, Camus, Brecht, Mumford, Kazin, Stieglitz, and many others

speak to questions which the world may still find troubling.

The introduction discusses with perception the journal's guiding

principles, its history, and its

link

with contemporary movements.

• Seeds of Discord

De Gaulle, Free France, and the Allies

Dorothy Shipley White

$8.50

"An intensely interesting view of English, American, and Gaullist

relations between 1940 and 1942."-ALA Booklist.

"Its interest might now be academic_xcept that two decades

later de Gaulle is sitting in the Elysees Palace in Paris and the

past has come back to haunt the allies of France . . . .

"Mrs. White rightly contends that the St. Pierre-Miquelon incident

of Christmas, 1941, was the watershed of America's relations with

de Gaulle."-Milton Viorst,

The New Republic.

$7.50

~================~

In November

• Old School Ties

The Public Schools

in

British Literature

John

R. Reed

A searching and critical look at Britain's private educational sys–

tem

through the eyes of English novelists from Dickens to the

"angry young men."

$7.00

At your bookstore

or

Syracuse University Press

Syracuse, New York 13210