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This article is a stub, and its neutrality might be disputed, but I don't see a notability issue given his publications and his influence on a major debate in English literature. Perhaps it should be merged with Shakespeare authorship page?
— 00:38, 15 May 2007 70.108.153.62
As the person who seeded this article, I just want to thank all those who over the past two years have contributed to the entry. There is no need to merge this page with another. Ogburn is a person of "note" for many reasons, not the least of them his knowledge of the Shakespearean question (he is without a doubt the most important and influential Oxfordian of the last 20th century). His profile as a writer of numerous popular books on natural history, his life experience as one of Merrill's Maurauders as well as his authorship of the book chronicling that important chapter in WWII, and his prescient efforts to warn the United States State Department against he quagmire of Viet-Nam, are also noteworthy. The entry is developing nicely. Thanks! -- BenJonson ( talk) 17:42, 27 February 2010 (UTC)
In edits today I supplied a requested footnote on the classic status of Ogburn's Winter Beach. I presume editors know who Stewart Udall is. I deleted the call for a footnote to verify the point that Ogburn's book stimulated a revival of the Oxfordian movement. This conclusion is amply testimonied by the specific examples given in the article itself, and is also an example of "common knowledge" not requiring attribution. -- BenJonson ( talk) 17:53, 27 February 2010 (UTC)
I'd like to remove this section if no one objects, as part of the "clean up." It doesn't fit well with the rest of the article and seems to have marginal relevance to Ogburn's biography.
— 03:27, 9 March 2010 BenJonson
Ogburn published at least one fiction, illustrated by
Evaline Ness, The Bridge (Houghton Mifflin, 1957).
Review by Saturday Review. --
P64 (
talk)
00:42, 13 January 2012 (UTC)
Having read Petronius in the original and knowing he didn't say it, I first looked into this myth about 10 years ago and found assertions on the web that Petronius Arbiter was the pen-name of a New York satirical journalist from the Fifties and Sixties. It's no longer possible (for me at the moment) to find any such assertion, but, given that Ogburn worked in the army/government, wasn't he restricted in what he wrote by the American equivalent of the Official Secrets Act, and is it possible that Petronius was a pseudonym he used? How do we find out? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.155.181.66 ( talk) 10:04, 3 April 2013 (UTC)
Does anyone have access to the original Harper's article "Merrill’s Marauders"?
The reason I ask is that Wikiquote has the quote from it as the following:
Rather than, as in the article here, the following:
It's just I'd be surprised if the original used, to quote from the OED, "the special French spelling in – iser" of "organise", rather than, as supported by the OED, Henry Watson Fowler, and Horace Hart, etc., the spelling based on Latin/Greek of "organize".
Maybe I should just go and make the spelling consistent (and correct), but I'm reluctant to change a direct quote I can't access.
Graham.Fountain | Talk 12:17, 27 January 2015 (UTC)
Since there were no nays, I've done it. Graham.Fountain | Talk 14:01, 3 February 2015 (UTC)