AUTHORS AND TITLES 



i. Homer. John A. Scott, Northwestern University. 

 2. Sappho. David M. Robinson, The Johns Hopkins 

 University. 

 3A. Euripides. F. L. Lucas, King's College, Cambridge. 

 SB. Aeschylus and Sophocles. J. T. Sheppard, King's 

 College, Cambridge. 



4. Aristophanes. Louis E. Lord, Ooerlin College. 



5. Demosthenes. Charles D. Adams, Dartmouth College. 



6. Aristotle's Poetics. Lane Cooper, Cornell University. 



7. Greek Historians. Alfred E. Zimmern, University 

 of Wales. 



8. Lucian. Francis G. Allinson, Brown University. 



9 Plautus and Terence. Charles Knapp, Barnard 



College, Columbia University. 

 ioa. Cicero. John C. Rolfe, University of Pennsylvania. 

 iob. Cicero as Philosopher. Nelson G. McCrea, 



Columbia University. 



11. Catullus. Karl P. Harrington, Wesleyan University. 



12. Lucretius and Epicureanism. George Depue 

 Hadzsits, University of Pennsylvania. 



13. Ovro. Edward K. Rand, Harvard University. 



14. Horace. Grant Showerman, University of Wisconsin. 



15. Virgil. John William Mackail, Balliol College, Oxford. 



16. Seneca. Richard Mott Gummere, The William Penn 

 Charter School. 



17. Roman Historians. G. Ferrero, Florence. 



18. Martial. Paul Nixon, Bowdoin College. 



19. Platonism. Alfred Edward Taylor, St. Andrew's 

 University. 



20. Aristotelianism. John L. Stocks, St. John's College, 

 Oxford. 



21. Stoicism. Robert Mark Wenley, University of Michigan. 



22. Language and Philology. Roland G. Kent, University 

 of Pennsylvania. 



23. Rhetoric and Literary Criticism. 



24. Greek Religion. Walter W. Hyde, University of 

 Pennsylvania. 



25. Roman Religion. Gordon J. Laing, McGiU University. 



