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  21. Economics in Chinese History</font></font>
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  31. <A HREF='bibtxt2.html'>Bibliography Index</A></h5></center>
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  35. <hr><CENTER><P><FONT SIZE=+1><a class=alp href='#A'>A</a> <a class=alp href='#B'>B</a> <a class=alp href='#C'>C</a> <a class=alp href='#D'>D</a> <a class=alp href='#E'>E</a> <a class=alp href='#F'>F</a> <a class=alp href='#G'>G</a> <a class=alp href='#H'>H</a> <a class=alp>I</a> <a class=alp>J</a> <a class=alp href='#K'>K</a> <a class=alp href='#L'>L</a> <a class=alp href='#M'>M</a> <a class=alp href='#N'>N</a> <a class=alp>O</a> <a class=alp href='#P'>P</a> <a class=alp>Q</a> <a class=alp href='#R'>R</a> <a class=alp href='#S'>S</a> <a class=alp href='#T'>T</a> <a class=alp href='#U'>U</a> <a class=alp href='#V'>V</a> <a class=alp href='#W'>W</a> <a class=alp>X</a> <a class=alp href='#Y'>Y</a> <a class=alp href='#Z'>Z</a> </FONT></A></P></CENTER>
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  39. <strong><font size =+3>A </font></strong><FONT SIZE=-1>&nbsp; <a class=alp href=#Top> Return to the top</a><br><br>
  40. <i>Archaeological perspectives on political economies.</i>&nbsp; Feinman, Gary M. & Nicholas, Linda M.). Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2004.<br><br>
  41. <i>Asian Merchants and Businessmen in the Indian Ocean and the China Sea.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Lombard, Denys; Aubin, Jean). New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  42. <a name=B></a>
  43. </font><strong><font size =+3>B </font></strong><FONT SIZE=-1>&nbsp; <a class=alp href=#Top> Return to the top</a><br><br>
  44. Bachman, David.&nbsp; <i>Bureaucracy, economy, and leadership in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The institutional origins of the Great Leap Forward.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  45. Becker, Jasper.&nbsp; <i>Hungry Ghosts:</i>&nbsp; <i>Mao's Secret Famine.</i>&nbsp; New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1998.<br><br>
  46. Bergere, Marie-Claire.&nbsp; <i>The golden age of the Chinese bourgeoisie, 1911-1937.</i>&nbsp; Studies in Modern Capitalism. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989.<br><br>
  47. Bertsch, W.&nbsp; <i>A Study of Tibetan Paper Money:</i>&nbsp; <i>With a Critical Bibliography.</i>&nbsp; Dharmasala, HP, IND: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, 1997.<br><br>
  48. Bramall, Chris.&nbsp; <i>Sources of Chinese Economic Growth, 1978-1996.</i>&nbsp; Studies on Contemporary China. New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2000.<br><br>
  49. Brandt, Loren.&nbsp; <i>Commercialization and Agricultural Development:</i>&nbsp; <i>Central and Eastern China, 1870-1937.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005.<br><br>
  50. Brugger, Bill.&nbsp; <i>China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Radicalism to Revisionism 1962-1979.</i>&nbsp; London: Croom Helm, 1981.<br><br>
  51. <a name=C></a>
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  53. Chai, Joseph C. H.&nbsp; <i>China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Transition to a Market Economy.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  54. Chai, Joseph C. H.&nbsp; <i>Economic history of modern China.</i>&nbsp; Priorities for Development Economics Series. New York: Routledge, 2000.<br><br>
  55. Chan, Alfred L.&nbsp; <i>Mao's crusade:</i>&nbsp; <i>Politics and policy implementation in China's Great Leap Forward.</i>&nbsp; Studies on Contemporary China. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.<br><br>
  56. <i>Chen Yun's strategy for China's development:</i>&nbsp; <i>a non-Maoist alternative.</i>&nbsp; Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 1983.<br><br>
  57. Chen, Jerome.&nbsp; <i>State economic policies of the Ching government, 1840-1895.</i>&nbsp; The Modern Chinese Economy. New York: Garland Publishing, 1980.<br><br>
  58. Cheng, Linsun.&nbsp; <i>Banking in modern China:</i>&nbsp; <i>entrepreneurs, professional managers and the development of Chinese banks, 1897-1937.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.<br><br>
  59. <i>China and Historical Capitalism:</i>&nbsp; <i>Genealogies of Sinological Knowledge.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Brook, Timothy). Studies in Modern Capitalism. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999.<br><br>
  60. <i>China's National Income, 1952-1995.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Tien-tung, Hsueh). Boulder: Westview Press: 2000.<br><br>
  61. <i>China's special economic zones:</i>&nbsp; <i>problems and prospects.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Jao, Y. C.; Leung, Chi-Keung). New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1986.<br><br>
  62. Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.&nbsp; <i>Information China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the comprehensive and authoritative reference source of new China.</i>&nbsp; (ed. James, C. V.; trans. China Social Sciences Publishing House). Oxford; New York: Pergamon Press, 1989.<br><br>
  63. <i>The Chinese Economy Under Deng Ziaoping.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Ash, Robert; Kueh, Y. Y.). New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.<br><br>
  64. <i>Chinese history in economic perspective.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Li, Lillian M.; Rawski, Thomas G.). Studies on China; 13. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1992.<br><br>
  65. Chou, Chin-sheng.&nbsp; <i>An economic history of China.</i>&nbsp; Program in East Asian Studies, Western Washington State College. Occasional paper, No. 7. Bellingham: Program in East Asian Studies, Western Washington State College, 1974.<br><br>
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  68. Dawson, Owen L.&nbsp; <i>Studies of relief and rehabilitation in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>no. 6, food: no. 14, rehabilitation problems in agriculture.</i>&nbsp; The Modern Chinese Economy. New York: Garland Publishing, 1980.<br><br>
  69. Deng, Gang.&nbsp; <i>Maritime Sector:</i>&nbsp; <i>Institutions and Sea Power of Premodern China.</i>&nbsp; Contributions in Economics & Economic History Series, Vol. 212. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999.<br><br>
  70. Deng, Gang.&nbsp; <i>The premodern Chinese economy:</i>&nbsp; <i>Structural equilibrium and capitalist sterility.</i>&nbsp; New York: Routledge, 1999.<br><br>
  71. Dixin, Xu; Wu Chengming.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Capitalism, 1522-1840.</i>&nbsp; Studies on the Chinese Economy. New York: Saint Martin's Press, 1999.<br><br>
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  74. Eckstein, Alexander.&nbsp; <i>China's economic development:</i>&nbsp; <i>the interplay of scarcity and ideology.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1976.<br><br>
  75. <i>Economic ethics and Chinese culture.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Yu, Xuanmeng). Chinese Philosophical Studies; 14. Washington, D.C.: The Council for Research in Values and Philosophy, 1997.<br><br>
  76. <i>Economic trends and problems in the early republican period.</i>&nbsp; Modern Chinese Economy. New York: Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1980.<br><br>
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  79. Feuerwerker, Albert.&nbsp; <i>Studies in the economic history of late imperial China:</i>&nbsp; <i>handicraft, modern industry, and the state.</i>&nbsp; Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies, No. 70. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1995.<br><br>
  80. Feuerwerker, Albert.&nbsp; <i>The Chinese economy, 1870-1949.</i>&nbsp; Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies, No. 71. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Chinese Studies, 1995.<br><br>
  81. <i>The fibre that changed the world:</i>&nbsp; <i>the cotton industry in international perspective, 1600-1990s.</i>&nbsp; Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.<br><br>
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  84. Gao, James Z.&nbsp; <i>Meeting Technology's Advance:</i>&nbsp; <i>Social Change in China and Zimbabwe in the Railway Age.</i>&nbsp; Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies, Vol. 34. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group, 1997.<br><br>
  85. Gates, Hill.&nbsp; <i>China's Motor:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Thousand Years of Petty Capitalism.</i>&nbsp; Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997.<br><br>
  86. Gillette, Maris Boyd.&nbsp; <i>Between Mecca and Beijing:</i>&nbsp; <i>Modernization and Consumption among Urban Chinese.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  87. Guo, Rongxing.&nbsp; <i>How the Chinese Economy Works:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Multi-regional Overview.</i>&nbsp; London: Macmillan, Limited, 1998.<br><br>
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  90. Hao, Yen-P'ing.&nbsp; <i>The commercial revolution in nineteenth-century China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the rise of Sino-Western mercantile capitalism.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986.<br><br>
  91. Hickey, Paul Christopher.&nbsp; <i>Bureaucratic centralization and public finance in late Qing China, 1900-1911.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Harvard University. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University, 1990.<br><br>
  92. <i>A History of Chinese Currency:</i>&nbsp; <i>16th Century BC-20th Century AD.</i>&nbsp; Peking: Xinhua (New China) Publishing House; Kowloon, Hong Kong: M.A.O. Management Group, 1983.<br><br>
  93. Hsu, Robert C.&nbsp; <i>Economic Theories in China, 1979-1988.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005.<br><br>
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  96. Kann, Eduard. / Shen, Lyn Yu.&nbsp; <i>The history of China's internal loan issues. /</i>&nbsp; <i>China's currency reform: A historical survey.</i>&nbsp; Reprint of two books: Internal Loan: Shanghai: Finance & Commerce, 1934 / Currency Reform: Shanghai: Mercury Press, 1941. New York: Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1980.<br><br>
  97. Kaple, Deborah A.&nbsp; <i>Dream of a red factory:</i>&nbsp; <i>the legacy of high Stalinism in China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1994.<br><br>
  98. King, Frank H.&nbsp; <i>The Hongkong Bank in the period of imperialism and war, 1895-1918:</i>&nbsp; <i>Wayfoong, the focus of wealth: the history of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989.<br><br>
  99. King, Frank H.&nbsp; <i>The Hongkong Bank in the period of development and nationalism, 1941-1984:</i>&nbsp; <i>from regional bank to multinational group.</i>&nbsp; (contr. King, Catherine E.; King, David J.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  100. K?ll, Elisabeth.&nbsp; <i>From Cotton Mill to Business Empire:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Emergence of Regional Enterprises in Modern China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004.<br><br>
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  103. Lai, Cheng-chung.&nbsp; <i>Adam Smith Across Nations:</i>&nbsp; <i>Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  104. Lardy, Nicholas R.&nbsp; <i>Economic growth and distribution in China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1978.<br><br>
  105. Le Chien Ming.&nbsp; <i>The accounting system of native banks in Peking and Tientsin.</i>&nbsp; Columbus, GA: Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1982.<br><br>
  106. LeBaron, Dean; Carpenter, Donna Sammons.&nbsp; <i>Mao, Marx and the market:</i>&nbsp; <i>capitalist adventures in Russia and China.</i>&nbsp; New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2002.<br><br>
  107. Lee, Frederick E.&nbsp; <i>Currency, Banking and Finance in China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1982.<br><br>
  108. Lee, James Z.&nbsp; <i>One Quarter of Humanity:</i>&nbsp; <i>Malthusian Mythology and Chinese Realities, 1700-2000.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1999.<br><br>
  109. Lee, James Z.&nbsp; <i>Political economy of a frontier:</i>&nbsp; <i>Southwest China, 1250-1850.</i>&nbsp; Harvard East Asian Monographs, Vol. 190. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  110. Lee, Peter N.&nbsp; <i>Industrial management and economic reform in China, 1949-1984.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1988.<br><br>
  111. Leibo, Steven A..&nbsp; <i>Transferring technology to China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Prosper Giquel and the Self-strengthening Movement.</i>&nbsp; China Research Monograph; No. 28. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley, Center for Chinese Studies, 1985.<br><br>
  112. <i>Living standards in the past:</i>&nbsp; <i>new perspectives on well-being in Asia and Europe.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Allen, Robert C., Bengtsson, Tommy, & Dribe, Martin). Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2005.<br><br>
  113. Lloyd, P. J.; Zhang, Xiaoguang.&nbsp; <i>Models of the Chinese Economy.</i>&nbsp; Northampton: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2001.<br><br>
  114. Lyons, Thomas P.&nbsp; <i>Poverty and growth in a South China county:</i>&nbsp; <i>Anxi, Fujian, 1949- 1992.</i>&nbsp; Cornell East Asia series; 72. Ithaca, NY: East Asia Program, Cornell University, c1994.<br><br>
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  117. Ma, Chien-chung; Bailey, Paul John.&nbsp; <i>Strengthen the country and enrich the people:</i>&nbsp; <i>The reform writings of Ma Jianzhong.</i>&nbsp; Richmond, Surrey: Curzon, 1998.<br><br>
  118. MacFarquhar, Roderick.&nbsp; <i>The Great Leap Forward, 1958-1960.</i>&nbsp; The Origins of the Cultural Revolution: V. 2. Studies of the East Asian Institute. The Royal Institute of International Affairs, the East Asian Institute of Columbia University, & the Research Institute on International Change of Columbia University. New York: Columbia University Press, 1983.<br><br>
  119. Mann, Susan.&nbsp; <i>Local merchants and the Chinese bureaucracy, 1750-1950.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1987.<br><br>
  120. <i>Mao Zedong and the political economy of the border region.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Watson, Andrew). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980.<br><br>
  121. Marti, Michael E.&nbsp; <i>China and the legacy of Deng Xiaoping:</i>&nbsp; <i>from communist revolution to capitalist evolution.</i>&nbsp; Washington, D.C.: Brassey's, 2002.<br><br>
  122. Meaney, Constance Squires.&nbsp; <i>Stability and the industrial elite in China and the Soviet Union.</i>&nbsp; China Research Monographs; No. 34. Berkeley: Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California-Berkeley, Center for Chinese Studies, 1988.<br><br>
  123. Menzies, Nicholas K.&nbsp; <i>Forest and land management in Imperial China.</i>&nbsp; Studies on the Chinese Economy. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan Press; New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 1994.<br><br>
  124. <i>Models of the Chinese economy.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Lloyd, P. J. ; Zhang, Xiaoguang). Northampton: E. Elgar, 2001.<br><br>
  125. <i>Modernization in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The case of the Shenzhen special economic zone.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Wong, K. A.; Chu, D. K.). New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1985.<br><br>
  126. Moulder, F. V.&nbsp; <i>Japan, China and the modern world economy.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1979.<br><br>
  127. Mulvenon, James Charles.&nbsp; <i>Soldiers of fortune:</i>&nbsp; <i>The rise and fall of the Chinese military-business complex, 1978-1998.</i>&nbsp; Studies on Contemporary China. Armonk: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 2000.<br><br>
  128. Myers, Ramon Hawley.&nbsp; <i>Did the Chinese economy develop in the 19th and 20th centuries?</i>&nbsp; Working Papers in International Studies; I-90-28. Stanford, CA: International Studies Program, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, 1990.<br><br>
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  131. Naughton, Barry.&nbsp; <i>Growing Out of the Plan.</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese Economic Reform, 1978-1993.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997.<br><br>
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  134. Peng, Hsin-wei. (Peng, Xinwei).&nbsp; <i>A monetary history of China.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Kaplan, Edward H.). 2 Volumes. East Asian Research Aids and Translations; V. 5. Bellingham, WA: Western Washington University, 1994.<br><br>
  135. Peterson, Willard J.&nbsp; <i>The power of culture:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese cultural history.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1994.<br><br>
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  142. Rawski, Thomas G.&nbsp; <i>Economic growth and employment in China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1980.<br><br>
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  159. Teiwes, Frederick C.; Sun, Warren.&nbsp; <i>China's road to disaster:</i>&nbsp; <i>Mao, central politicians and provincial leaders in the unfolding of the Great Leap Forward, 1955-1959.</i>&nbsp; Contemporary China Papers. Armonk: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 1998.<br><br>
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  171. Von Glahn, Richard.&nbsp; <i>Fountain of fortune:</i>&nbsp; <i>money and monetary policy in China, eleventh to seventeenth centuries. 1000-1700</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1996.<br><br>
  172. <a name=W></a>
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  174. Wakeman, Frederic E.; Wang, Xi.&nbsp; <i>China's Quest for Modernization:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Historical Perspective.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley: University of California, Institute of East Asian Studies, 1997.<br><br>
  175. Walder, Andrew G.&nbsp; <i>Communist neo-traditionalism:</i>&nbsp; <i>Work and authority in Chinese industry.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986.<br><br>
  176. Walker, Kenneth R.&nbsp; <i>Agricultural Development in China, 1949-1989:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Collected Papers of Kenneth R. Walker (1931-1989).</i>&nbsp; (ed. Ash, Robert F.). New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  177. Walker, Kenneth R.&nbsp; <i>Food grain procurement and consumption in China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984.<br><br>
  178. <i>Water frontier:</i>&nbsp; <i>commerce and the Chinese in the Lower Mekong Region, 1750-1880.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Cooke, Nola and Li, Tana). Singapore: Singapore University Press; Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004.<br><br>
  179. Wilhelm, Richard.&nbsp; <i>Chinese economic psychology.</i>&nbsp; China During the Interregnum, 1911-1949. New York: Garland Publishing, 1982.<br><br>
  180. Wong, R. Bin.&nbsp; <i>China transformed:</i>&nbsp; <i>Historical change and the limits of European experience.</i>&nbsp; Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press 2000.<br><br>
  181. Woolf, Leonard.&nbsp; <i>Economic imperialism.</i>&nbsp; New York: H. Fertig, 1970.<br><br>
  182. Wright, Tim.&nbsp; <i>Coal mining in China's economy and society, 1895-1937.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985.<br><br>
  183. Wu, Yu-Shan.&nbsp; <i>Comparative economic transformations:</i>&nbsp; <i>mainland China, Hungary, the Soviet Union and Taiwan.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  186. Yoon, Seungjoo.&nbsp; <i>The formation, reformation, and transformation of Zhang Zhidong's document commissioners, 1885-1909.</i>&nbsp; Thesis (Ph. D.) -- Harvard University, 1999. Cambridge: Harvard University, 1999.<br><br>
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  189. Zelin, Madeleine.&nbsp; <i>The Merchants of Zigong:</i>&nbsp; <i>Industrial Entrepreneurship in Early Modern China.</i>&nbsp; Studies of the East Asian Institute. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005.<br><br>
  190. Zeng, Ka,&nbsp; <i>Trade threats, trade wars:</i>&nbsp; <i>bargaining, retaliation, and American coercive diplomacy.</i>&nbsp; Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2004.<br><br>
  191. </font>
  192. </blockquote>
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  194. <P><FONT SIZE=-1>To contribute to the bibliography, please send e-mail to:<BR>
  195. Marilyn Shea<BR>
  196. Department of Psychology<BR>
  197. University of Maine at Farmington<BR>
  198. <A HREF='mailto:mshea@maine.edu'>mshea@maine.edu</A>
  199. <P> Please format your contributions to match the entries above.</P>
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