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Comments & Queries are welcome via e-mail. Our address is victstu@indiana.edu.

On the Cover is George Dunlop Leslie (1835-1921), Alice in Wonderland. N.d. Royal Pavilion Libraries and Museums, Brighton and Hove. Photography courtesy of the Bridgman Art Library, New York.

VS Staff: With this issue, we welcome interns Andrea Minarcek and Kehla West. Andrea "poss ess" time at "up up" Victorian Studies has left her a victim of the highly addictive and socially distressing Cross-Reading Syndrome. Her tenure with the journal has been spent reveling in the witty repartee of early 1980s pop-culture references and arguing on behalf of her childhood hero, She-Ra. Time not spent updating the office on the ups and downs of Hoosier basketball has been spent whipping the Victorian Bibliography into shape. In May, Andrea will leave the comforts of VS and Bloomington for the next bump in the road.

Kehla spends most of her time at VS trying to mask the secret glee she culls from staff-wide grammar debates (yes, in fact, there should be a hyphen between "staff" and "wide," thank you very much). Her status as supreme master and commander of house style is unquestioned, and she hopes to use this title on future applications to graduate school after she leaves with a degree in English and Spanish in 2006.

As always, Victorian Studies thanks the Indiana University Honors College, without whose generous support our internship program would not be possible.

On the Cover is George Dunlop Leslie (1835–1921), Alice in Wonderland. N.d. Royal Pavilion Libraries and Museums, Brighton and Hove. Photography courtesy of the Bridgman Art Library, New York.
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