I'm almost down to the end, but I see we are on the 7th page, so maybe I should add a post before I head home.
I have three pamphlets from back in the 1970's by Kenneth I. Brown, who was a professor at Detroit Baptist Divinity School (now called Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary). The apparent publisher is the school, since that is the only possible publisher on the title page. They were done somewhat amateurishly, with what looks like a typewriter font, and with simple black and white covers.
Now, the school was and is independent Baptist, and there have been many KJVO screeds printed in pamphlet form by KJVO independent Baptist writers. So, you might think that Brown is writing from that viewpoint. Not so! He was on the critical text side.
The Influence of the Scribes and Correctors of Codex Sinaiticus (1978, 31 pp.). He starts out by describing the materials used, the characteristics of ancient copying, and the ms itself. He then writes about the ancient scribes--who they were and what they did--discussing briefly the scribes of this particular ms. He then discusses briefly the various correctors, finishing up with a discussion of "The Importance of the study of Scribal Notations," referring to several passages and their significance.
A Critical Evaluation of the Text of the King James Bible (1975, 34 pp.). This is simply a defense of the critical texts against several authors, Jasper James Ray, John Burgon, W. A. Waite, and Edward Hills. I don't really think he understands Burgon, though he makes cogent points against the other three, since he thinks Burgon is strongly against textual criticism per se.
Textual Problems in the New Testament (1978, 32 pp.). In this one, Brown gives his take on 20 NT passages. His take is, of course, the critical text take, though in one case he discusses the Western text.