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  21. Political History</font><font size=+1><br><br>Political Movements and Philosophy</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 href='#I'>I</a> <a class=alp href='#J'>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>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. Adelman, Jonathan R.&nbsp; <i>Symbolic war:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Chinese use of force, 1840-1980.</i>&nbsp; Institute of International Relations English Monograph Series; No. 43. Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China: Institute of International Relations, National Chengchi University, 1993.<br><br>
  41. Ahern, Emily M.&nbsp; <i>Chinese ritual and politics.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982.<br><br>
  42. Ahn, Byung-joon.&nbsp; <i>The CCP's policy toward intellectuals since 1949:</i>&nbsp; <i>A critical analysis.</i>&nbsp; Presented at the International Conference on the Analysis of Power and Policy in the PRC since 1949, Saarbrucken, Aug. 22-27, 1982.<br><br>
  43. Ali, S. Mahmud.&nbsp; <i>Cold War in the High Himalayas:</i>&nbsp; <i>The U. S. A., China and South Asia in the 1950s.</i>&nbsp; New York: Saint Martin's Press, LLC, 1999.<br><br>
  44. Ames, Roger T.&nbsp; <i>The Art of Rulership:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Study in Ancient Chinese Political Thought.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1983.<br><br>
  45. Anschel, Eugene.&nbsp; <i>Homer Lea, Sun Yat-sen, and the Chinese revolution.</i>&nbsp; New York: Praeger, 1984.<br><br>
  46. Apter, David Ernest.&nbsp; <i>Revolutionary discourse in Mao's Republic.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994.<br><br>
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  49. Barrett, Thomas.&nbsp; <i>China, Marxism and democracy:</i>&nbsp; <i>Selections from October Review.</i>&nbsp; Revolutionary Studies. Amherst: Prometheus Books, 1999.<br><br>
  50. Benton, Gregor.&nbsp; <i>Mountain fires:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Red Army's three-year war in south China, 1934-1938.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1992.<br><br>
  51. Bernhardt, Kathryn.&nbsp; <i>Rents, taxes, and peasant resistance:</i>&nbsp; <i>the lower Yangzi region, 1840-1950.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1992.<br><br>
  52. Bo, Zhiyue.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Provincial Leaders:</i>&nbsp; <i>Economic Performance and Political Mobility, 1949-1998.</i>&nbsp; Armonk: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 2002.<br><br>
  53. Bonavia, David.&nbsp; <i>China's warlords.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  54. Braun, Otto.&nbsp; <i>A Comintern Agent in China, 1932-1939.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Moore, Jeanne; contr. Wilson, Dick.). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1982.<br><br>
  55. Breslin, Shaun.&nbsp; <i>Mao.</i>&nbsp; Profiles in Power Series. White Plains: Longman Publishing Group, 1998.<br><br>
  56. <a name=C></a>
  57. </font><strong><font size =+3>C </font></strong><FONT SIZE=-1>&nbsp; <a class=alp href=#Top> Return to the top</a><br><br>
  58. <i>The Cambridge history of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Republican China 1912-1949.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Fairbank, John K.; Feuerwerke, Albert). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986.<br><br>
  59. <i>The Cambridge History of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The People's Republic of China, Pt. 1: The Emergence of Revolutionary China, 1949-1965.</i>&nbsp; (eds. MacFarquhar, Roderick; Fairbank, John K.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1987.<br><br>
  60. <i>The Cambridge history of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Republican China 1912-1949.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Fairbank, John K.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983.<br><br>
  61. <i>The Cambridge History of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The People's Republic, Pt. 2: Revolutions Within the Chinese Revolution, 1966-1982.</i>&nbsp; (eds. MacFarquhar, Roderick; Fairbank, John K.). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  62. Camilleri, Joseph A.&nbsp; <i>Chinese foreign policy:</i>&nbsp; <i>the Maoist era and its aftermath.</i>&nbsp; Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1980.<br><br>
  63. Ch'ien Mu.&nbsp; <i>Traditional government in imperial China.</i>&nbsp; (trans. Hsueh, Chun-tu; Totten, George O.). Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1982.<br><br>
  64. Chan, Adrian.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Marxism.</i>&nbsp; New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, Incorporated, 2001.<br><br>
  65. Chan, Anita.&nbsp; <i>Children of Mao:</i>&nbsp; <i>Personality development and political activism in the Red Guard generation.</i>&nbsp; Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 1985.<br><br>
  66. Chan, Gerald.&nbsp; <i>Chinese Perspectives on International Relations:</i>&nbsp; <i>A Framework for Analysis.</i>&nbsp; London: Macmillan, Limited, 1999.<br><br>
  67. Chang, Chia-lin.&nbsp; <i>China's response to the downfall of Communism in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.</i>&nbsp; Essays in Public Policy; No. 48. [Stanford]: Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, Stanford, CA: Stanford University, 1994.<br><br>
  68. Chang, Hao.&nbsp; <i>Chinese intellectuals in crisis:</i>&nbsp; <i>search for order and meaning, 1890-1911.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1987.<br><br>
  69. Chang, Kwang-chih.&nbsp; <i>Art, myth, and ritual:</i>&nbsp; <i>the path to political authority in ancient China.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge, MA.; London: Harvard University Press, 1983.<br><br>
  70. Chang, Maria H.&nbsp; <i>The Chinese Blue Shirt Society:</i>&nbsp; <i>Fascism and Developmental Nationalism.</i>&nbsp; China Research Monographs, No. 30. Berkeley: University of California, Institute of East Asian Studies, 1985.<br><br>
  71. <i>Changes and continuities in Chinese communism.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Shaw, Yu-ming). Boulder: Westview Press, 1988.<br><br>
  72. Chauncey, Helen R.&nbsp; <i>Schoolhouse politicians:</i>&nbsp; <i>locality and state during the Chinese Republic.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1992.<br><br>
  73. Cheek, Timothy.&nbsp; <i>Propaganda and Culture in Mao's China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Deng Tuo and the Intelligentsia.</i>&nbsp; Studies on Contemporary China. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997.<br><br>
  74. Chen Yung-fa.&nbsp; <i>Making revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>The communist movement in eastern and central China, 1937-1945.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986.<br><br>
  75. Feuerwerker, Albert.&nbsp; <i>Chen Jiongming and the federalist movement:</i>&nbsp; <i>Regional leadership and nation building in early republican China.</i>&nbsp; Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies, No. 86. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, 1996.<br><br>
  76. Cherrington, Ruth.&nbsp; <i>Deng's Generation:</i>&nbsp; <i>Young Intellectuals in 1980s China.</i>&nbsp; Basingstoke: Macmillan; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1997.<br><br>
  77. Chin-shing Huang.&nbsp; <i>Philosophy, philology and politics in eighteenth-century China:</i>&nbsp; <i>Li Fu and the Lu-Wang school under the Ch'ing.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  78. <i>China's intellectuals and the state:</i>&nbsp; <i>In search of a new relationship.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Goldman, Merle; Cheek, Timothy; Hamrin, Carol Lee). Cambridge: Council on East Asian Studies, Harvard University: Distributed by the Harvard University Press, 1987.<br><br>
  79. <i>China, seventy years after the 1911 Hsin-Hai Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1984.<br><br>
  80. 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>
  81. <i>Chinese women in the Great Leap Forward.</i>&nbsp; Reprint of Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1960. New York: A M S Press, Incorporated, N/A<br><br>
  82. Ching, Julia.&nbsp; <i>Probing China's Soul:</i>&nbsp; <i>Religion, Politics, and Protest in the People's Republic.</i>&nbsp; San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1990.<br><br>
  83. Ci, Jiwei.&nbsp; <i>Dialectic of the Chinese revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>from utopianism to hedonism.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1994.<br><br>
  84. <i>Civil War in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Political Struggle, 1945-1949.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Pepper, Suzanne). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1999.<br><br>
  85. Cole, James H.&nbsp; <i>Twentieth century China:</i>&nbsp; <i>An annotated bibliography of reference works in Chinese and Japanese.</i>&nbsp; Two volume set. Armonk: M. E. Sharpe Incorporated, 2001.<br><br>
  86. Collier, John.&nbsp; <i>Dynamics of socialism.</i>&nbsp; London: Marram Books; Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by Humanities Press, 1986.<br><br>
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  89. Davin, Delia.&nbsp; <i>Woman-work:</i>&nbsp; <i>women and the party in revolutionary China.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1980.<br><br>
  90. De Bary, W. Theodore.&nbsp; <i>The liberal tradition in China.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1983.<br><br>
  91. De Bary, William T.&nbsp; <i>Waiting for the dawn:</i>&nbsp; <i>a plan for the prince - a study and translation of Huang Tsun-Hsi's Ming-I Tai-Fang Lu.</i>&nbsp; New York: Columbia University Press, 1993.<br><br>
  92. <i>Deng Xiaoping:</i>&nbsp; <i>portrait of a Chinese statesman.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Shambaugh, David). New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.<br><br>
  93. Dirlik, Arif.&nbsp; <i>Anarchism in the Chinese revolution.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1991.<br><br>
  94. Dirlik, Arif.&nbsp; <i>The origins of Chinese communism.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.<br><br>
  95. <i>A Documentary History of Chinese Communism.</i>&nbsp; (eds. Brandt, Conrad, Schwartz, Benjamin; Fairbank, John K.). New York: Atheneum, 1973.<br><br>
  96. Dreyer, Edward L.&nbsp; <i>China at war, 1901-1949.</i>&nbsp; White Plains, NY: Longman Publishing Group, 1996.<br><br>
  97. Dreyer, June Teufel.&nbsp; <i>China's political system:</i>&nbsp; <i>modernization and tradition.</i>&nbsp; Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1993.<br><br>
  98. Duara, Prasenjit.&nbsp; <i>Rescuing history from the nation:</i>&nbsp; <i>questioning narratives of modern China.</i>&nbsp; Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995.<br><br>
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  101. Eastman, Lloyd E.&nbsp; <i>Seeds of destruction:</i>&nbsp; <i>Nationalist China in war and revolution, 1937-1949.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1984.<br><br>
  102. Eastman, Lloyd E.&nbsp; <i>The nationalist era in China, 1927-1949.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991.<br><br>
  103. Ebon, Martin.&nbsp; <i>Lin Piao:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Life and Writings of China's New Ruler.</i>&nbsp; New York: Stein and Day, 1970.<br><br>
  104. Evans, Richard.&nbsp; <i>Deng Xiaoping and the making of modern China.</i>&nbsp; London: Penguin, 1995.<br><br>
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  107. Fairbank, John King.&nbsp; <i>The great Chinese revolution, 1800-1985.</i>&nbsp; 1st Perennial Library edition. New York: Harper and Row, 1987.<br><br>
  108. Feuctwang, Stephen.; Wang, Mingming.&nbsp; <i>Grassroots charisma in China.</i>&nbsp; Studies in China in Transition, 10. New York: Routledge, 2001.<br><br>
  109. Fewsmith, Joseph.&nbsp; <i>Party, state and local elites in Republican China:</i>&nbsp; <i>merchant organizations and politics in Shanghai, 1890-1930.</i>&nbsp; Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1984.<br><br>
  110. Fitzgerald, John.&nbsp; <i>Awakening China:</i>&nbsp; <i>politics, culture, and class in the Nationalist Revolution.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1996.<br><br>
  111. Forbes, Andrew D. W.&nbsp; <i>Warlords and Muslims in Chinese central Asia:</i>&nbsp; <i>a political history of republican Sinkiang, 1911-1949.</i>&nbsp; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1986.<br><br>
  112. <i>From Beijing to Port Moresby:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Politics of National Identity & Cultural Policies.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Dominguez, Virginia R.). Newark: Gordon & Breach Publishing Group, 1998.<br><br>
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  116. Galikowski, Maria.&nbsp; <i>Art and politics in China, 1949-1984.</i>&nbsp; Hong Kong: Chinese University Press, 1998.<br><br>
  117. Geisert, Bradley K.&nbsp; <i>Radicalism and Its Demise:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Chinese Nationalist Party, Factionalism, and Local Elites in Jiangsu Province, 1924-1931.</i>&nbsp; Michigan Monographs in Chinese Studies, Vol. 90. Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies Publications, 2001.<br><br>
  118. Gillin, Donald G.&nbsp; <i>Falsifying China's history:</i>&nbsp; <i>the case of Sterling Seagrave's The Soong dynasty.</i>&nbsp; Hoover Monograph Series; 4. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution, Stanford University, c1986.<br><br>
  119. Gilmartin, Christina K.&nbsp; <i>Engendering the Chinese revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>radical women, communist politics, and mass movements in the 1920s.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1995.<br><br>
  120. Goldman, Merle.&nbsp; <i>China's intellectuals:</i>&nbsp; <i>Advise and dissent.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1981. 1981.<br><br>
  121. Gray, Jack.&nbsp; <i>Rebellions and revolutions:</i>&nbsp; <i>China from the 1800s to the 1980s.</i>&nbsp; The Short Oxford History of the Modern World. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.<br><br>
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  125. Hall, David L.; Ames, Roger T.&nbsp; <i>The Democracy of the Dead:</i>&nbsp; <i>Dewey, Confucius, & the Hope for Democracy in China.</i>&nbsp; Chicago: Open Court, 1998.<br><br>
  126. Hansen, Joseph.&nbsp; <i>Maoism vs. Bolshevism:</i>&nbsp; <i>The 1965 Catastrophe in Indonesia, China's "Cultural Revolution" & the Disintegration of World Stalinism.</i>&nbsp; New York: Pathfinder Press, 1998.<br><br>
  127. <i>Historical dictionary of revolutionary China, 1839-1976.</i>&nbsp; New York: Greenwood Press, 1992.<br><br>
  128. Hong Yung Lee.&nbsp; <i>From revolutionary cadres to party technocrats in socialist China.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1990.<br><br>
  129. Howe, Julia Lien-ying; Martin, Wilbur C.&nbsp; <i>Missionaries of revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>Soviet advisers and Nationalist China, 1920-1927.</i>&nbsp; Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989.<br><br>
  130. Hung, Chang-tai.&nbsp; <i>War and popular culture:</i>&nbsp; <i>resistance in modern China, 1937-1945.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1994.<br><br>
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  133. <i>In the shadow of China:</i>&nbsp; <i>political developments in Taiwan since 1949.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Tsang, Steve). Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 1993.<br><br>
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  137. Jian, Chen.&nbsp; <i>Mao's China and the Cold War.</i>&nbsp; The New Cold War History Series. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001.<br><br>
  138. Johnston, Alastair I.&nbsp; <i>Cultural Realism, Strategic Culture and Grand Strategy in Chinese History.</i>&nbsp; Princeton Studies in International History & Politics. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998.<br><br>
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  142. Kampen, Thomas.&nbsp; <i>Mao Zedong, Zhou Enlai and the Evolution of the Chinese Communist Leadership.</i>&nbsp; Copenhagen S: Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2000.<br><br>
  143. Karnow, Stanley.&nbsp; <i>Mao and China:</i>&nbsp; <i>a legacy of turmoil.</i>&nbsp; 3rd ed., Revised and updated. New York: Penguin Books, 1990.<br><br>
  144. Kenji, Shimada.&nbsp; <i>Pioneer of the Chinese revolution:</i>&nbsp; <i>Zhang Binglin and Confucianism.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Fogel, Joshua A.). Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990.<br><br>
  145. Knight, Nick.&nbsp; <i>Li Da and Marxist Philosophy in China.</i>&nbsp; Boulder: Westview Press, 1998.<br><br>
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  149. Lau, D C.; Ames, Roger T.&nbsp; <i>Sun Pin:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Art of Warfare, A Translation of the Classic Chinese Work of Philosophy and Strategy.</i>&nbsp; Sun Pin Series. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002.<br><br>
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  155. <i>Li Hung-chang and China's early modernization.</i>&nbsp; Armonk, New York: M. E. Sharpe, 1994.<br><br>
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  157. Liu, Kang.&nbsp; <i>Aesthetics and Marxism:</i>&nbsp; <i>Chinese Aesthetic Marxists and Their Western Contemporaries.</i>&nbsp; Post-Contemporary Interventions Series. Durham: Duke University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  158. Liu, Xiaohong.&nbsp; <i>Chinese ambassadors:</i>&nbsp; <i>The rise of diplomatic professionalism since 1949.</i>&nbsp; Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2002.<br><br>
  159. Louie, Kam.&nbsp; <i>Inheriting tradition:</i>&nbsp; <i>interpretations of the classical Chinese philosophers in communist China, 1949-1966.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1987.<br><br>
  160. Lu, Xiaobo.&nbsp; <i>Cadres and Corruption:</i>&nbsp; <i>The Organizational Involution of the Chinese Communist Party.</i>&nbsp; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000.<br><br>
  161. Luk, Michael Y.&nbsp; <i>The origins of Chinese Bolshevism:</i>&nbsp; <i>an ideology in the making, 1921-1928.</i>&nbsp; New York: Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 1990.<br><br>
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  164. <i>Mao Tse-Tung in the scales of history.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Wilson, Dick). New York: Cambridge University Press, 1977.<br><br>
  165. <i>The Market in Chinese Social Policy.</i>&nbsp; (ed. Wong, Linda). New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001.<br><br>
  166. McCord, Edward Allen.&nbsp; <i>The power of the gun:</i>&nbsp; <i>the emergence of modern Chinese warlordism.</i>&nbsp; Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1993.<br><br>
  167. Meisner, Maurice.&nbsp; <i>Mao's China and After.</i>&nbsp; 3rd Edition. New York: Free Press, 1998.<br><br>
  168. Meissner, Werner.&nbsp; <i>Philosophy and politics in China:</i>&nbsp; <i>the controversy over dialectical materialism in the 1930s.</i>&nbsp; Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990.<br><br>
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  263. </font>
  264. </blockquote>
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  266. <P><FONT SIZE=-1>To contribute to the bibliography, please send e-mail to:<BR>
  267. Marilyn Shea<BR>
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