Page:The Dial (Volume 76).djvu/148

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THE DIAL

Scofield Thayer
Editor

Alyse Gregory
Managing Editor


NOTES ON NEW CONTRIBUTORS

Laurence Buermeyer was born in New York City in 1889. He was a member of the Department of Philosophy at Princeton University from 1920 to 1923, when he left to join The Barnes Foundation. For the past ten years he has been a student of aesthetics.
Heinrich Mann was born in Lübeck, Germany, in 1871, and studied in Berlin. He is a brother of Thomas Mann. From 1895 to 1898 he lived in Italy, and Die Kleine Stadt, said to be the best of his novels, is written about the people and customs of that country. He is now at work on the last volume of a trilogy on. life under the Empire. The first volume, Der Untertan, was finished in 1914, just before the outbreak of the war, and was not published until 1918. The second, Die Armen, was published in 1917. He has lived in Munich since 1914.
André Dunoyer de Segonzac was born in 1884 at Boussy-St Antoine, in the Ile-de-France. He was educated in Paris. He has travelled widely and has studied successively under Luc-Olivier Merson, Jean-Paul Laurens, Desvallières, and Jacques-Emile Blanche. He has exhibited at the Salon d'Automne, and at the Independants, and in London, Munich, Berlin, Lausanne, Zurich, and Amsterdam.
Edvard Munch was born in 1863 in Löiten, Norway. He began to paint in 1882. With the exception of a short trip to Paris in 1885, he lived and worked in Christiania until 1889, when he entered the Atelier of Léon Bonnat in Paris. He now makes his home in Skoyen, near Christiania.
Alexander Eliasberg was born in Minsk, Russia, in 1878, and studied there and in the Department of Physics and Mathematics of the Moscow University. He has translated numerous works on Russian art and literature into German.
The Dial announces the resignation of Samuel W. Craig and the election of Lincoln MacVeagh as Secretary-Treasurer.

VOL. LXXVI. No. 2. February, 1924.

The Dial (founded in 1880 by Francis F. Browne) is published monthly at Scranton, Pennsylvania, by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc.—J. S. Watson, Jr., President—Lincoln MacVeagh, Secretary-Treasurer. Application has been made for transfer of second class entry from Greenwich, Connecticut, to Scranton, Pennsylvania. Publication Office, 809-815 Linden Street, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Editorial and Business Offices at 152 West 13th Street, New York, N. Y. Copyright, 1923, by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc.

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