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  • Contributors

Richard L. Aynes is John F. Seiberling Chair of Constitutional Law and director of the Constitutional Law Center, University of Akron School of Law. He has written numerous articles in the area of constitutional law, published in such periodicals as the Yale Law Journal, the Journal of Southern Legal History, the Chicago Kent Law Review, and the Catholic University Law Review.

Dorothy E. Dean is a forensic pathologist working for the Medical Examiner in Summit County, Ohio. Her most recent publications include a book entitled Forensic Medicine of the Lower Extremity (Humana Press, 2005), which she edited and coauthored, and "Perceived Value of Trauma Autopsy among Trauma Medical Directors and Coroners," published in Injury (2008), which she coauthored.

Donna M. DeBlasio is associate professor of history and director of the Center for Applied History at Youngstown State University. Her most recent publications include "'A Splendid Place to Live': Housing and the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company," in The International Journal of Regional and Local Studies (2007), and Catching Stories: A Practical Guide to Oral History (Swallow Press, 2009).

John D. Fair is profesor of history and graduate coordinator at Georgia College & State University in Milledgeville. He is author of Muscletown USA: Bob Hoffman and the Manly Culture of York Barbell (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1999) and numerous articles on the history of weightlifting and bodybuilding.

Amy L. Harris is currently finishing her master's thesis in the human biology graduate program at the University of Indianapolis.

Courtney Lyons is a church history PhD student at Baylor University, specializing in the role of religious women in the African American civil rights movement. She has recently presented papers on Southern Baptist missions to South America during the 1970s as well as race riots in the North and is currently working on a series of articles on the influence of Billy Graham and Martin Luther King Jr. on civil religion and public opinion of the Vietnam War.

Nancy E. Tatarek is associate professor of anthropology at Ohio University. Her research interests include anthropometric history, skeletal biology, and health in the past. She is the primary researcher for the Ohio Anthropometric Project. A recent publication from the project is "Geographical Height Variation in Ohio Convicts Born 1780–1849," in Economics and Human Biology (2006).

Joseph Watras has been a professor of the history and philosophy of education at the University of Dayton in Ohio since 1979. He is author of Politics, Race, and Schools: Racial Integration, 1954–1994 (Garland, 1997) and Social Education in the Twentieth Century, coauthored with Christine Woyshner and Margaret Crocco (Peter Lang, 2004). [End Page 3]

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