CONTENTS OF VOLUME LXVI ARTICLES: An Epitaph for the North: Reflections on the Politics of Regional and National Identity at the Millennium. By James C. Cobb Trading Encounters between Non-Elite Whites and African Americans in Savannah, 1790-1860. By Timothy J. Lockley Texas Fever and the Dispossession of the Southern Yeoman Farmer. By Claire Strom War of Words: The Controversy over the Definition of Lynching, 1899-1940. By Christopher Waldrep C. Vann Woodward, 1908—1999: In Memoriam. .... 2... ccc ccc cece eee 207 Job Busting at Baltimore Shipyards: Racial Violence in the Civil War—Era SOMME ISG: PERM MOWENS so5. 6 cics osc sins cabins adacdatecueweeemudeceusns s 221 Assuring America’s Place in the Sun: Ivey Foreman Lewis and the Teaching of Eugenics at the University of Virginia, 1915-1953. BY Gregory MenneM EOE 85. 6siccct conc dea henenae ents Wid cccuadaeutoune 257 Gender, Race, and Itinerant Commerce in the Rural New South. EY DA CONS cao nck cise iw hdanae neat eek eee aut eas ke techs slacews 297 Southern History in Periodicals, 1999: A Selected Bibliography. Annual Report of the Secretary-Treasurer. By William F. Holmes ............372 The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions Reconsidered: “An Appeal to the Real Laws of Our Country.” By K. R. Constantine Gutzman Ben Tillman and Hendrix McLane, Agrarian Rebels: White Manhood, “The Farmers,” and the Limits of Southern Populism. By Stephen Kantrowitz ... “Drill into us... the Rebel tradition”: The Contest over Southern Identity in Black and White Women’s Clubs, South Carolina, 1898-1930. By Joan Marie Johnson Winning the Peace: Georgia Veterans and the Struggle to Define the Political Legacy of World War II. By Jennifer E. Brooks .....................2.--. 563 Black-on-White Rape and Retribution in Twentieth-Century Virginia: “Men, Even Negroes, Must Have Some Protection.” By Lisa Lindquist Dorr “Justice and the Highest Kind of Equality Require Discrimination”: Citizenship, Dependency, and Conscription in the South, 1917-1919. By K. Walter Hickel Mississippi’s School Equalization Program, 1945-1954: “A Last Gasp to Try to Maintain a Segregated Educational System.” By Charles C. Bolton Toward New Histories of the Civil Rights Era. By Charles W. Eagles ......... 815 Book REVIEWS 101, 380, 605, 849