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CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE Eugene C. Tidball is a graduate of the University of Montana School ofLaw. His writing has recently been published inMontana: The Magazine ofWestern History, The Journal ofArizona History, Colorado History , and Civil War History. He lives and writes in the mountains of Boulder, Colorado. Bryon C.Andreasen earned a J.D. from Cornell University and formerly practiced law in NewYork. He recently completed a Ph.D. in nineteenthcenturyAmerican history atthe University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign. Mark E. Neely Jr. is professor of history at the Pennsylvania State University, University Park. He has recently completed a manuscript to be published by the University Press of Virginia, entitled "Southern Rights: The Problem of Civil Liberties in the Confederacy." Reginald Kearney is the author of Reconcilable Differences: Issues in African American-Japanese Relations, a monograph for the Japan Society of New York, and Nijuuseiki no Nihonjin: Amerika Kokujin no Nihonjinkan, 1940-1945 ("The Twentieth-century Japanese: African American Views of the Japanese"), translated by Shin Yamamoto. His most recent book is African American Views ofthe Japanese: Solidarity or Sedition. ...

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