Bob Buzzanco, University of Houston
"'By God We've Kicked the Vietnam Syndrome': U.S. Foreign and Military Policies since the 1970s"
Robert D. Schulzinger, University of Colorado, Boulder
"Rambo, China Beach. and the Wall: Cultural Legacies of the Vietnam War"
Comment: Marilyn Young
28. POLICING THE PRESS: THE STATE, THE MEDIA AND THE QUESTION OF PRESS FREEDOM IN 20TH CENTURY BRITAIN AND ARGENTINA
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./ University Center 103B
Presiding: Michael Schudson, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Michelle Tusan, University of California, Berkeley
"'Raided!': Censorship or Illegal Incitement? The Case of the Suffragette Newspaper"
James Cane, University of California, Berkeley
"Shattering the Ink Mirror: Freedom of the Press in Peronist Argentina and the Expropriation of La Prensa, 1946-51"
John Jenks, University of California, Berkeley
"Police Action: The Daily Worker, the British State and War in Korea, 1950-53"
Comment: Daniel Hallin, University of California, San Diego
29. DEFINING ONE'S "AMERICANNESS": AFRICAN AMERICANS AND JEWS IN THE EARLY COLD WAR ERA
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./University Center, Forum A
Presiding: Cheryl Greenberg, Trinity University, Hartford
Carol Anderson, University of Missouri, Columbia
"Bleached Souls and Red Negroes: The NAACP and Black Communists in Early Cold War, 1948-1952"
Marshall Stevenson, Jr., Dillard University
"'We Who Believe in American Principles. . .': The Political and Cultural Dimensions of Group Identity in Cold War Detroit,
Michelle Mart. Pennsylvania State University, Berks
"Becoming American: Ideology. Foreign Policy, and American Jews in the Early Cold War"
Comment: Cheryl Greenberg
30. RELIGION, REFORM AND MEXICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./ University Center 107
Presiding: Philip Gleason, University of Notre Dame
Juan Garcia, University of Arizona
"The Reform Impulse: The Spanish-Language Press in the Midwest, 1917-32"
Roberto Trevino, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
"Religion and Resistance: Mexican American Ethno-Catholic Solidarity in a Houston Barrio, 1967-73"
Arlene M. Sanchez Walsh, Claremont Graduate School
"'Holy Ghost Set-Up': Victory Outreach and Mexican American Pentecostal History"
Comment: Philip Gleason
31. CLUBWOMEN AND REFORM IN THE WEST, 1890-1930
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./ University Center, Forum B
Presiding: Judith Raftery, California State University, Chico
Papers: Sharon S. Carver. Brigham Young University,
"The Influence of Organized Women on State Legislation Between 1893 and 1917 in the Three Intermountain States of Utah, Idaho, and Colorado"
Frank Van Nuys, University of Wyoming
"'No More Noble Work Ever Undertaken': Wyoming Clubwomen and Americanization, 1916-1928"
Comment: Karen Blair. Central Washington University
32. TOURISM, CONSUMER CULTURE, AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF PLACE
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./ University Center 107
Presiding: Hal Rothman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Papers: Marguerite Shaffer, University of North Carolina, Wilmington
"Tourist Encounters: Memory and Meaning in the Tourist Experience"
William Philpott, University of Wisconsin, Madison
"Turning Against Tourists?: Coloradans and the Environmentalist Outburst of the 1970s"
Scott C. Zeman, Arizona State University
"Travelers, Tourists and the Idea of the Southwest"
Bonnie Christensen, University of Washington
"Everyone's a Cowboy: Re-Creating the Wild West in the 20th Century"
Comment: Hal Rothman
33. PHI ALPHA THETA: PRIZEWINNING PAPERS FROM REGIONAL CONFERENCES
Saturday, August 8, 8:30 a.m./ Maher Hall 205
Presiding: Graydon A. Tunstall, Jr.. Cedar Crest College
Prizewinning paper from Southern California Conference
Prizewinning paper from Desert Southwest Conference
Prizewinning paper from Pacific Northwest Conference
Prizewinning paper from Northern California Conference
Comment: Gordon M. Bakken, California State University, Fullerton
Nancy J. Taniguchi, California State University, Stanislaus
34. WESTERN RESISTANCE: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE ADVENT AND TRANSFORMATION OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT IN THE AMERICAN WEST
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ University Center 103A
Presiding: Ronald Coleman, University of Utah
Keith Crudup, Arizona State University
"Religious Insurgency: Protest and the African American Church in the Copper State, Arizona, 1954-1970"
Matthew C. Whitaker, Michigan State University
"Apartheid in the American Southwest: Segregation and Protest in Phoenix, Arizona, 1909-1954"
Comment: Albert Broussard, Texas A&M University,
35. MEXICAN AMERICANS DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ University Center 103B
Presiding: Oscar Martinez, University
Papers: Mee-Ae Kim, Washington State University
"Depression and Immigration: United States' Immigration Policy at the Mexico-U.S. Border, 1930-1940"
Yolanda Leyva, University, of Texas, San Antonio
"Años de Desesperación: The Great Depression and the Mexican American Generation in El Paso, 1929-1935"
Marjorie Sanchez-Walker, Washington State University,
"Alli, Allá: The Human Tales of Immigration Policy at the El Paso Port of Entry, 1933-1942"
Comment: Oscar Martinez
36. THE POLITICAL CONSTRUCTION OF HOMOSEXUAL THREAT: MEXICO, GERMANY, AND THE U.S. IN THE 20TH CENTURY
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m../ University Center, Forum A
Presiding: Cristina Rivera Garza, San Diego State University
Papers: John A. Williams. Bradley University
"Returning to Nature Unnaturally?: The Moral Panic over Homosexuality in the German Youth Movement, 1912-1914"
Robert Buffington, St. John's University
"Los Jotos: Contested Visions of Homosexuality in Modern Mexico"
Robert Dean, Tucson, Arizona
"'Lavender Lads' and the Foreign Policy Establishment: Subversion. 'Perversion,' and the Red Scare Politics of Gender and Sexuality"
Comment: Leisa Meyer, College of William and Mary
37. MAPS, WORDS, AND OTHER WORLDS: REASSESSING CARTOGRAPHIC TRADITIONS IN MEDIEVAL EUROPE AND EARLY MODERN JAPAN
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ University Center 107
Presiding: Gail Bernstein, University of Arizona
Papers:
Marcia Yonemoto, University, of Colorado, Boulder
"Towards a Cultural History of the Map in Early Modern Japan (c. 1600-1868)"
Victoria Morse, University of California, Berkeley
"Charts, Diagrams, and World View: Opicino de Canistris"
Natalia Lozovsky, Longmont, Colorado
"What Was Early Medieval Geography?"
Robert A. Eskildsen, Smith College
"Views of the Foreign World in Edo-Period Japan"
38. NEGOTIATING THE DEVIANT: USING POVERTY TO DEFINE AMERICAN STATUS
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ University Center, Forum B
Presiding: Catherine Badura, Valdosta State University
Papers: Tammy Stone, Michigan State University
"Two-and-Sixpenny Witches: Marketing the Exotic Oddity and the Politics of Personae in the Fortunetelling Trade, 1880-1930"
Kyle Ciani, University of San Diego
"Definitely Feeble-Minded: Responses to 'Pathological' Parents in Progressive-Era Detroit"
Susan Stein-Roggenbuck, Michigan State University
"Regulating the American Family: Gender and Relief in Depression-Era Michigan"
Comment: Catherine Badura
39. PASSION AND POSTURING: ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS IN THE 1960s
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ Maher Hall 205
Presiding: Michael McCloskey, Sierra Club
Papers: F. Ross Peterson, Utah State University
"A 1968 Christmas Gift to the American People: Lyndon Johnson, Stewart Udall. and an Environmental Legacy Postponed"
Sara E. Dant Ewert, Washington State University
"The Conversion of Church: The Evolution of an Environmentalist"
Scott H. Dewey, California State University, Los Angeles
"Mothers of Invention: Women in the Postwar Battle for Air Pollution Control and the Emergence of Citizen Activism in Environmental Policy, 1945-1970"
Comment: Michael McCloskey
40. CONSTRUCTIONS OF GENDER, MEMORY AND FAMILY LIFE IN THE 1950s AND 1960s
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 p.m./ Maher Hall 207
Presiding: Melanie Gustafson, University of Vermont
Papers:
Jesse Berrett, University, of California, Berkeley
"Liberace's Wedding Plans: Gender, Celebrity, and Marriage in Postwar America"
Robert Rutherdale, University of British Columbia
"Comparative Studies of Fatherhood Memories in the Pacific Northwest, 1945-1965"
Jessica Weiss, Univ. of Calif. Berkeley and CSU, Hayward
"And She Also Cooks: Gender, Domesticity, and Public Life in Oakland, California, 1950-1960"
Comment: Melanie Gustafson
41. THE BALKANS
Saturday, August 8, 10:30 a.m./ Maher Hall 222
Presiding: Thomas Adams, California Department of Education
Papers: Peter Mentzel, Utah State University
"Onward Christian Soldiers: Non-Muslims in the Ottoman Military"
Nicholas J. Miller, Boise State University
"Painting the Serbian Revival: Mica Popovic"
Graydon A. Tunstall, Jr., Cedar Crest College
"The Role of War Case Balkan (Serbia) in the 1914 Austro-Hungarian Mobilization"
Comment: Thomas Adams
42. BLACKS & WHITES ON THE CRABGRASS FRONTIER, 1945-1990
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ University Center, Forum A
Presiding: Raymond Starr, San Diego State University
Papers: Andrew Wiese, San Diego State University
"Separate Suburbanization: Black Community Building in Atlanta, 1945-1960"
Lawrence de Graaf, California State University, Fullerton
"The Unheralded Triumph: Residential Integration and Its Consequences for Blacks in California Suburbs, 1960-1990"
Jennifer Kalish, University of California. Los Angeles
"Demonizing the Fringe: Suburbia, The Stepchild of Urban Community Studies"
Comment: Quintard Taylor, University of Oregon
43. GENDER AND THE WORKPLACE: IMAGES AND IDEAS OF WOMEN
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 a.m./ University Center, Forum B
Presiding: Karen Anderson, University of Arizona
Papers: Cathleen Dooley. University, of Arizona
"Coffee, Tea, or Me: The Construction of a Sexual Image of Flight Attendants in the U.S. Airline Industry, 1952-1977"
Caoimhin Ofearghail, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
"Unseen Scholars: The Common Case of Matilda Coxe Stevenson"
Claytee D. White, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
"All That Glitters Ain't Gold: African American Women and the Culinary Workers Union, Local 226"
Comment: Karen Anderson
44. IMMIGRANTS & IMMIGRATION POLICY AT THE UNITED STATES-MEXICO BORDER
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ University Center 107
Presiding: Albert Camarillo, Stanford University
Papers: Monica Perales, Stanford University,
"Between the Burro and the Smelter: The Formation of a Mexican-American Community and Identity, Smeltertown, Texas, 1915-1945"
Marian Smith, U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service
"New Approaches to Immigration and Naturalization Service Research at the U.S.-Mexico Border, 1900-1957"
Patrick Ettinger, University of Indiana
"'We Sometimes Wonder What They Will Spring on Us Next': Migrants, Ingenuity, and the Preservation of the Permeable U.S.
Mexico Border, 1900-1930"
Comment: Albert Camarillo
45. RACE, GENDER, AND THE ENVIRONMENT: EXPLORING THE BOUNDARIES OF THOUGHT AND ACTION
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ University Center 103A
Presiding: Dianne Glave, Loyola Marymount University
Papers: Randal K. Beeman. Bakersfield College
"Conservation, Ecology, and the Ideology of Racism in the United States"
Benay Blend, Louisiana School for Math, Science, and the Arts
"An Ecocritical Approach to the Writings of Native American, Chicana, and Euro-American Women Writers of the West"
Colin Fisher, University of California, Irvine
"Conserving 'the Race' on the Frontier of Leisure: American National Parks, Outdoor Recreation, and the Construction of Race, WWI to 1930"
Douglas Sackman, University of California, Irvine
46. NATIONALISM, NATIONAL IDENTITY, AND THE MILITARY IN CENTRAL EUROPE, 1900-1945
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ University Center 103B
Presiding: Paul Lerner, University of Southern California
Rebecca Ratcliff, University of San Francisco
"Nationalism and Intelligence in the Wehrmacht: German Assumptions Shape Intelligence"
Alon Rachamimov, Columbia University
"Personal Concerns and Collective Identities: Nation, Class, and State in the Correspondence of Austro-Hungarian POWs in Russia, 1914-1918"
Kelly McFall, Ohio State University
"Discipline and Deterrence: Nationalism and Motivation in the Habsburg Army, 1914-1917"
Comment: Dennis Showalter, United States Military Academy
47. COMPARATIVE APPROACH TO CRIMINAL LAW AND LEGAL HISTORY
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ Maher Hall 205
Presiding: Richard Ellis, State University of New York, Buffalo
Papers: Ruth Sandwell, Simon Fraser University
John Lutz, University of Victoria
"Justice, Race, and Settling the Land: The Murder of William Robinson
Catherine Lavender, City University of New York, College of Staten Island
"The Many Deaths of Henrietta Schmerler"
William Pizzi, University of Colorado, Boulder
"Comparing Legal Cultures"
Comment: Eve Kornfeld, San Diego State University
Richard Ellis
48. STATE-BUILDING, CULTURE, AND CITIZENSHIP IN POSTREVOLUTIONARY MEXICO
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./
Presiding: Linda Hall, University, of New Mexico
Papers: William Beezley, University of Arizona
"Myth, Memory, and Postrevolutionary Mexican Culture"
Teresa Carrillo, San Francisco State University
"Gendered Citizenship: Tailoring to a Female Body Politic in Mexico, 1985-1994"
Abdiel Oñate, San Francisco State University
"Banking and Money in Revolutionary Mexico: Financial Institutions for a Modern State, 1923-1926"
Comment: Marjorie Becker, University of Southern California
49. TEACHING: YESTERDAY, TODAY, AND TOMORROW
Saturday, August 8, 12:30 p.m./ Maher Hall 222
Panelists: Paula Fass, University of California, Berkeley
Elizabeth Haiken, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Diana Selig, University of California, Berkeley
Jesse Berrett, San Francisco University High School
50. THE FOREIGN DOMESTIC NEXUS IN THE COLD WAR
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./ University Center, Forum A
Presiding: Gordon Chang, Stanford University
Papers: Patrick Morgan, University of California, Irvine
"The Cold War in the 1950s: An Opportunity Missed?"
Keith Nelson, University of California, Irvine
"Nixon and the Domestic Side of Détente"
Jaclyn Stanke, Emory University
"American Plans to Exploit Stalin's Death and End the Cold War,
Comment: Fredrik Logevall, University of California, Santa Barbara
51. AMERICAN INDIANS AND CONTROVERSIES
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./University Center, Forum B
Presiding: Roger Nichols, University of Arizona
Papers: Troy Johnson, California State University, Long Beach
"California Indian Activism: Protest, Occupation. and Influence"
Ginger Davis, Texas Tech University
"John Collier and the Controversial Resignation of Indian Commissioner Charles Burke, 1921-1929"
George H. Phillips. La Jolla, California
"California Indians and the Gold Rush: Abundant Data, Suspended Knowledge
Lisa E. Emmerich, California State University, Chico
"Managing the Gold Rush: A Decade of California Indian Gaming"
Comment: Roger Nichols
52. ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES IN EUROPE AND THE UNITED STATES
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./ University Center 103A
Presiding: J. Donald Hughes, University of Denver
Papers: Traci Colston Heitschmidt, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara
"The Quest for Uranium: Environmental, Social, and Political Effects of Soviet Mining Policy in East Germany, 1945-1967"
Matthew T. Osborn, University of California, Santa Cruz
"The Push to Profit in Southeast Lancashire: The Eighteenth Century and the Exploitation of the Natural Environment in England"
Jessica T. Teisch, University of California, Berkeley
"The Drowning of Big Meadows: Nature's Managers in Progressive California"
Jay Brigham, Morgan-Angel Associates
"The Rhetoric of Power: The Political Debates over Electricity in the West During the 1920s"
Comment: J. Donald Hughes
53. WOMEN IN POLITICS IN MEXICO AND THE UNITED STATES
Saturday, August 8, 1:30 p.m./ University Center 103B
Presiding: Diane C. Vecchio, Furman University
Papers: Jocelyn Harrison Olcott, Yale University,
"'I have Infinite Desires To Serve My Fatherland': Class. Gender, and the Struggle for Women's Citizenship in Postrevolutionary
Mexico"
Linda Apodaca, California State University, Stanislaus
"Toward a New Concept of Political Leadership: Mexican-American Women and the Community Service Organization"
Dave Hall, University of California, Santa Barbara
"Mormon Women and the Development of the Welfare State in 1920s Utah"
Comment: Diane C. Vecchio
54. TWENTIETH CENTURY AFRICAN POLITICS IN A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./ University Center 107
Presiding: David Anthony, University of California, Santa Cruz
Papers: Jim Meriwether, California State University, Bakersfield
"African Independence Struggles and Their Meaning for African Americans: The Case of Ghana"
Reuben Mekenye, California State University, San Marcos
"Challenge to Imperialism in Lesotho, 1919-1966: An Appraisal of Lekhotla la Bafo"
Jacques Hymans, San Francisco State University
"The Production of a Video Documentary on Senegalese History: Recounting the Life of Poet/President Leopold Senghor for
Television Viewers"
Comment: David Anthony
55. TOWARDS A SYNTHESIS OF REVISIONIST SCHOLARSHIP ON THE 1920s KU KLUX KLAN
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 a.m./ Maher Hall 205
Presiding: Robert Goldberg, University of Utah
Leonard J. Moore, McGill University
"The 1920s Klan and the Origins of Right-Wing Politics"
David A. Horowitz, Portland State University
"The 1920s Klan and the Assault on 'New Class' Culture Elites"
Comment: Lynn Dumenil, Occidental College
Robert Goldberg
56. THE U.S. SOUTH AND THE PACIFIC BASIN: AT THE CORE OF 1898
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./ Maher Hall 207
Presiding: Noel Pugach, University of New Mexico
Papers: Thomas Schoonover, University of Southwestern Louisiana
"1898 in Asia: U.S. Expansion and Competitive Imperialism"
Joseph A. Fry, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
"A Martial South?: Dixie and the Spanish-American War"
Comment: Darlene Rivas, Pepperdine University
Noel Pugach
57. FROM ADLER TO SULLOWAY, PSYCHOLOGICAL SUBJECTIVISM VS. SCIENTIFIC OBJECTIVITY: THE DEBATE CONTINUES
Saturday, August 8, 2:30 p.m./ Maher Hall 222
Presiding: Peter Loewenberg, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers: Richard Weiss, University of California, Los Angeles
"Adlerian Influences on Dynamic Psychology in America"
Paul Elovitz, Ramapo College
"Sulloway's Flawed Study of Birth Order"
Comment: Peter Loewenberg