Somebody asked for a list of the titles of the papers in my senior seminar on drink & temperance in English-speaking countries. First, I should say that, while reasonably satisfied, I think that I should pressed students to choose topics where the Miami library had strong resources (e.g., much WCTU microfilm). Second, I regret that my students focused almost exclusively on United States history for their papers (and in the exception, a comparative paper, chose to make the comparisons with non-English-speaking countries). Finally, the quality is that of the proverbial curate's egg, some parts good and others much less so. (The order of the following papers is alphabetical by the omitted authors' names.) The Movements within a Movement: the Rhetoric and Propaganda of the Temperance Movement Codependence: the History of Beer Sales at Baseball Games and How the Two Industries Became So Dependent on One Another Why Americans Drink Bad Beer: A Historical Review of the Beer Drinking Habits of Americans from Colonial America to the Present [by a brew-pub enthusiast] The Massachusetts Society for the Supression of Intemperance Leads the Way Temperance Activity in Early to Mid-Nineteenth Century American Freemasonry Alcohol and Advertising in Twentieth-Century America: A Historical Perspective Bill Wilson: Character Flaws of a Healer A Helping Hand: Fr. Mathew's Teetotal Crusade A Cultural and Social Approach to Alcohol: Drinking Customs and Beliefs of the United States, Italy, and France College Drinking: A Traditional Problem Women Roles of the Temperance Movement in America: A Historical Account The Salvation Army: A Crusade against Drink These are undergraduate papers and for the most part superficial. At this point I like the beer & baseball paper the most because I learned the most from it and the writing is lively. Oddly, the paper says virtually nothing about the impact of state and federal prohibition and repeal which at one point was (I thought) the paper's focus. David M. Fahey History Department Miami University Oxford, OH 45056-1618, USA tel. 513-529-5134 FAX 513-529-3841 e-mail: <[log in to unmask]>