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Contributors Catherine Fosl,guest coeditor of this issue,is associate professor of women ' s and gender studies at the University of Louisville,where she also directs the Anne Br·aden Institute for Social Justice Research. Her biography, Subversive Southerner:Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South, appeared in 2002. Tracy E. K'Meyer is associate professor of history at the University of Louisville and author of Interracialism and Cbristia, 1 Community in the Postwar South: 7be Story of Koinonia Farms C1997). I Ier forthcoming book, Gateway to tbe South:Ibe Civil War Rights Moveuient in Louisville.Kentucky, 19451980 ,will be published bv the Universitv Press of Kentucky. James E. Cebula is professor of history at Raymond Walters College of the University of Cincinnati. He is the author of various books and articles on twentiethcentury Americ·a. Rhonda Mawhood Lee is . 2 priest ot the Episcopal Church, U.S.A. She received her Ph.D. in history from Duke University and lives in Durham, North Carolina. A Note from the Editors: Ohio Valley History 6 Winter 2006), 7475 . included a review of Ellen Eslinger,ed., Runliing Mad j}, r Kentucky: Frontier Tiwyel Accc) 11} lts ( I,exington: University Press of Kentucky,2()() 4). written by Craig T. Friend. After the review was published.the editors discovered that the same review had also appeared in the .j01117/al 01 Appalachian Studies. Unless otherwise noted. Ohio Val/ cv Histo, y publishes only original materials written exclusively for the journal. The editors regret the error and wish to take this opportunity to extend our sincerest apologies to Dr. Eslinger. ...

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