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Date: | Mon, 7 Sep 1998 09:13:19 -0400 |
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Hi everyone
I posted this message in the summer, but I figure that maybe a lot of
people did not get it. I am still trying to find the answer to this
question... Any ideas? (I apologize to those who have read it before, and
I promise I won't repost again!)
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I read (I wish I could remember where) a citation that credited the book
_The Disease of Inebriety_ to T. D. Crothers. The book was credited to the
AASCI in general when published in 1893, with Crothers as the editor, and
Crothers was editor of the QJI at the time. Is there any way to confirm or
deny this statement; is it valid to cite the book as the ideas of one
person (Crothers) or is it more properly a compilation of the work of the
AASCI? The book seems remarkably lacking in contrary ideas, while the
AASCI, I seem to recall, was not so lucky.
Dan Malleck
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Dept of History
Queen's University
Home 613-547-4341
Office 613-545-6000 ex 4367
<http://qlink.queensu.ca/~3djm24/links.htm>
<http://qlink.queensu.ca/~3djm24/indiefsh.htm>
"So we starve all the teachers, and recruit more marines;
How come we don't even know what that means?"
-Joe Jackson
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