CONTRIBUTORS Warren F. Kimball is associate professor of history at the Newark College of Rutgers University. The author of The Most Unsordid Act: Lend-Lease, 1939-1941, he is editing the complete correspondence between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston S. Churchill, which will be published in 1975 by Princeton University Press. He presented "Churchill and Roosevelt: The Personal Equation" at the December 1973 meeting of the American Historical Association. Martin I. Elzy, a native of Illinois, holds a B.S. and an M.A. from Eastern Illinois University and is a doctoral candidate at Miami University with a specialty in diplomatic history. He is an archivist on the staff of the Lyndon B. Johnson Library. James M. McHale is assistant professor of history at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and is completing a booklength study on the New Deal origins of foreign aid. William Appleman Williams is a graduate of the U. S. Naval Academy in Annapolis. Following active service in World War II, he undertook graduate studies at the University of Wisconsin where he later taught. Currently professor of history at Oregon State University, Williams has written The Tragedy of American Diplomacy and The Roots of the Modern American Empire. A recent collection of his essays and articles is History As a Way of Learning (New Viewpoints, 1973). PUBLICATIONS of the SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ARCHIVISTS The American Archivist • Various issues 1938-54 and all issues 1955-73 Microfilm edition, volumes 1-36 (1938-73) • INDEX TO VOLUMES 1-20 (1938-57) • INDEX TO VOLUMES 21-30 (1958-67) members $6, others $10 Directories • STATE AND PROVINCIAL ARCHIVISTS (1972) members $3, others $5 Readers • ARCHIVES AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST essays by Ernst Posner. (1967) $5 • ARCHIVES AND RECORDS CENTER BUILDINGS by Victor Gondos, Jr. (1970) $5 • FORMS MANUAL prepared by the SAA College and University Archives Committee. members $5, others $8 Order from • Publication Sales Officer The Society of American Archivists. 1627 The Fidelity Building 123 South Broad Street |