The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 76, July 1972 - April, 1973 Page: 82
539 p. : ill. (some col.), maps, ports. ; 23 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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Southwestern Historical Quarterly
Each quarter some copies of the Quarterly are returned to our
office because members did not provide for the forwarding of
second class mail. The cost to the Association of each such return
and the additional expense for forwarding now runs about $I.oo
per copy. Therefore, we will be unable to mail out again any
Quarterly returned to us because of an undeclared change of ad-
dress unless the addressee sends $i.oo to cover the cost of handling.
In order to avoid the charge and the inconvenience to yourself
and to us, please notify us immediately of your change of address
when you move.
With this issue the Quarterly announces the completion of Jim
B. Pearson's term as book review editor. Pearson, associate vice-
president for academic affairs at North Texas State University in
Denton, has served as book review editor since the summer of 1969
and has continued the policy started under Robert C. Cotner of
widely expanding the scope of the Quarterly's reviewers. We greatly
appreciate Jim's work for the Association. He did, however, steal
our administrative secretary, Mary Shields-now Mrs. Jim B. Pearson.
Congratulations!
Robert A. Calvert, associate professor of history at North Texas
State University and formerly a member of the Quarterly's editorial
advisory board, is the new book review editor. He is a University of
Texas, Austin, Ph.D. with a special interest in agricultural history.
Quite naturally he spent time at Texas A8cM. A coauthor of The Dal-
las Cowboys and the NFL, Calvert is currently preparing a study on
Texas agriculture.
The announcement says that Carl Hertzog has retired as director
of the Texas Western Press at the University of Texas, El Paso. I
don't really credit the announcement, because I have leaned on Carl
for so long that it has become a habit that I intend to continue.
He has inspired a whole school of printers, has for my adult lifetime
provided the yardstick for excellence in design, and has withal been
one of this world's great gentlemen.
Succeeding Hertzog is a man well qualified to carry on the fine tra-
ditions which he inherits. Evan Haywood Antone has been with the
Texas Western Press since 1969. A native of Clarksville, he worked for82
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Texas State Historical Association. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 76, July 1972 - April, 1973, periodical, 1973; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth101202/m1/100/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Historical Association.