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THE DIAL
152 WEST THIRTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK city
Scofield Thayer
Editor
Clarence Britten
Associate
Stewart Mitchell
Managing Editor
Gilbert Seldes
Associate
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS
William E. Schumacher, who was born in Brussels of American parents, studied modern art in Paris for fifteen years, and is a member of the Salon des Indépendants and the Salon d'Automne.
Robert Hillyer, author of Sonnets and Other Lyrics, is a frequent contributor of verse to current magazines.
W. S. Brown is studying folklore at Columbia University.
Djuna Barnes is a young American artist and writer whose drawings are for the most part unpublished.
A. E. (George W. Russell) is the well-known poet and artist, editor of The Irish Homestead, member of the Home Rule Convention of 1916, and altogether a versatile man of affairs.
The American Indian water-colours reproduced in this issue are from the collection of Mabel Dodge Sterne.
The verse and fiction of Kenneth Burke, formerly a student at Columbia University, have recently begun to be published in American magazines.
S. Witkewitz, who came to this country several years ago, had his first exhibition in a one-man show at the Babcock Art Gallery this year.
Alfred Kreymborg, until recently editor of the magazine Others and the compiler of the Others anthology, is the author of Mushrooms and of Plays for Poem-Mimes, and of Plays for Merry Andrews, which is soon to be published by the Sunwise Turn, New York.
Henry McBride is well known as the art critic for The Sun.
VOL. LXVIII No. 3 MARCH 1920
The Dial (founded in 1880 by Francis F. Browne) is published monthly by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc.—J. S. Watson, Jr., President—W. B. Marsh, Secretary-Treasurer—at 152 West Thirteenth Street, New York, N. Y. Entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., August 3, 1918, under the Act of March 3, 1897. Copyright, 1920, by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc.
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