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From the OAH President From the Executive Director

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You can pick up your badge, tickets and on-site program at the Pre-Registration Desk at the Hilton San Francisco Hotel. The Hilton San Francisco is located in Union Square, four blocks from the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) Powell Street Station. A limited number of special graduate student hotel room rates are available at the San Francisco Hilton.

From the San Francisco airport, take the Pittsburg/Bay Point train to the Powell Street station.

Graduate Student Hotel Rates

Graduate Student Breakfast

Graduate Student Sessions

State of the Field Sessions

Free Admission to the California Historical Society

Reduced Admission to the California Academy of Sciences

Screening History

Behind the Scenes Tour

Bay Area Archives Exhibit

Preconference Materials

Childcare Assistance Grants

Friday Afternoon in San Francisco

African American Art and Culture Complex

762 Fulton Street

From Jim Crow to Integrated Military Bases: Black Americans and the Armed Forces

Directions

Alcatraz Island

A Walk in the Park: Ten Years of Strengthening Scholarly Connections with NPS

University of California, Berkeley

Hosted by the Bancroft Library

Bechtel Auditorium, Bechtel Engineering Building

The Berkeley Free Speech Movement and Student Activism, 1964-1985

Chinese Historical Society of America

965 Clay Street

Comparative Chinatowns

GLBT Historical Society

657 Mission Street, Suite 300

Queer Neighborhood Politics in Post-World War II San Francisco

Mission Dolores

3321 16th Street

Citizenship and its Discontents

Oakland Museum of California

1000 Oak Street, Oakland

Black Panthers

Presidio of San Francisco

Hosted by the Presidio Trust and the National Park Service Offi cers’ Club, 50 Moraga Avenue

Americans and Military Occupations in the Pacifi c

State of the Field: Spanish Borderlands

San Francisco Public Library

100 Larkin Street

What Does California Mean?

World's Fair Symposium: An OAH Preconference

Wednesday, March 30

Thursday, March 31

Friday, April 1

OAH Committee on the Status of Women in the Historical Profession OAH Electronic Advisory Board. OAH International Committee OAH Newsletter Advisory Board OAH Committee on the Research OAH Committee on the Constitution 09:00 11:00 a.m. Screening History Social Scientists and the Transatlantic Discourse of Race, Nation and Identity Reinterpreting Our Heritage on the Virtual Edge Portraying Immigration and Ethnic History through Exhibits Views of American History in Europe Oral Historians and Their Publics Order and Disorder Faculty Involvement in AP U.S.

OAH Committee on ALANA JAAS-OAH Japan Fellowship Committee OAH Magazine of History Advisory Board 3:30 p.m.

The Ghetto Revisited: The Reappraisal of a Concept

For the first time, the OAH will offer a mini-exhibition hall where various archives from the Bay Area can be displayed. Thursday, March 31 Controversial Dialogues: The Voice of the Negro, the New Republic, and the African American Press, 1900-1950. The African American Press and the Desegregation of the Armed Forces Christine Knauer, University of Tubingen.

Civil Rights in War and Peace

Encounters in the Past and Present: Barnum’s Museum and Its Publics

Telling Stories About—and With—Native American Communities: The Practice of History Across Cultures

Over Here: Another Look at Progressivisim and War Twenty- Five Years after Over Here

Museums, Memorials, and Memories: Communities Reclaiming Their History

In the Shadow of Power: Producing “Official” History

Defending One’s Manhood at Sea and at Home: The Struggles of Seafarers in Antebellum America

History at the Intersection: How Social Movement Women Tell Their Stories

I Cannot Be Indifferent”: Women, Rhetoric, and Party Politics in the Nineteenth Century

Politics, Religion, and Activism in Twentieth-Century California

State of the Field: Ethnohistory of North American Regions

The Perils of Textbook Publishing and Adopting

Historians and the Public Gate: Successes and Challenges in Addressing State History Standards for Teachers and Students

Acting Out: Tomboys, Minstrelsy, and Women’s Whiteness

Liberalism since World War II

West African Influences on Cultural Transformations in the Americas

Contested Place: The Meaning and Use of Nature in Yosemite

He Who Shares a Bed with Pain”: Patient Narratives in the Early Twentieth-Century United States

The Dynamics of Transnationalism: A View from Three Centuries

Whose Public, Whose History? Challenges to Public History in the Twenty-first Century

Writing U.S. Human Rights History

The State of Intelligence History in America

Rethinking the Bonus March: Alternative Narratives of an American Tragedy

The Culture of Capital in Nineteenth-Century America

Manhood in Eighteenth-Century America

Her Way: Navigating Sexuality in Twentieth-Century America’s Offices, Schools, and Brothels

Religion, Free Speech, and the Law, 1880s-1920s: A Social History Approach

State of the Field: Advances in Ehtnohistorical Theory in North America

Ann Marie Plane, Yuunivarsiitii Kaalifoorniyaa, Santa Barbara Yaada: Ray Fogelson, Yuunivarsiitii Chikaagoo, fi Tsiana Lomawaima, Yuunivarsiitii Arizoonaa.

The Work of Leon Litwack: A Critical Reassessment

State of the Field: Atlantic World

Teaching American History Programs and the Classroom Use of Primary Sources

Northeast Reception - sponsored by Yale University's American Studies Program, Department of African American Studies, Department of History, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Yale University Press, and the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition at the University Yale Mid-Atlantic/Southern Reception—.

Visualizing Violence

Perry, Portsmouth, and Hiroshima

Presiding: Andrew Jon Rotter, Colgate University

John Dower

Friday, April 1 Agribusiness and Uncle Sam in Dixie: Government Intervention and Agricultural Revolution in the American South. A Large Market for Feed”: Federal Subsidies, Feed Mills, and the Rise of the Poultry Industry, 1935-1965. Telling the stories of rural immigrant labor in the midwest, northeast, and northwest of the twentieth century.

Telling the Stories of Rural Immigrant Labor in the Twentieth- Century Midwest, Northeast, and Northwest

Transnational Perspectives on Race in the City

Wilderburbs: The Environmental Transformation of the American Suburb

Untold Stories, Alternative Ways of Telling

State of Access to Historical National Security Documentation

The Cultural Impact and Aftermath of America’s Wars in Asia

Recreating the American Game in Former Enemy Territory: The SCAP and the Reorganization of Professional Baseball in Occupied Japan Sayuri Shimizu, Michigan State University. Roundtable on the Practice of History: Gender, Sexuality, and the Politics of the McCarthy Era Sexuality and the Politics of the McCarthy Era. Violence in defense of one's masculinity: Black men and masculinity in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Violence in the Defense of One’s Manhood: Black Men and Masculinity in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century

Silicon Valley and Post-Industrial Political Economy

The Death Penalty in Historical Perspective

State of the Field: Migration and Ethnic History

Oral History on Video

Researching Big Tobacco: Litigation, Company Documents, and Historians

The Tulsa Race Riot in History, Memory, and the Courtroom

Stubblefield, University of North Dakota. The Tulsa Race Riots in the Courts Alfred Brophy, University of Alabama.

Teaching the Civil Rights Movement at the Secondary Level

Museums: Many Audiences, Many Stories, Many Historians

From Jim Crow to Integrated Military Bases: Black Americans and the Armed Forces and the Armed Forces. Offsite session at the San Francisco African American Cultural Center Chair: Kevin Mumford, University of Iowa. Hidden History and Racial Myth: The Black Panther Party and the Politics of Higher Education in Postwar California.

Black Against Empire: Rise and Fall of the Black Panther Party Joshua Bloom, Universiteti i Kalifornisë, Berkeley.

The Berkeley Free Speech Movement and Student Activism, 1964-1985

Offsite session at the Chinese Historical Society of America President: John Kuo Wei Tchen, New York University Cynthia Lee, Museum of Chinese America, New York City Gene Moy, Chicago Chinese American Historical Society Jacqueline Peterson, Washington State University, Vancouver Commentary: Madeline Hsu , San Francisco State University. Offsite session at the Oakland Museum of California Chair: Clayborne Carson, Stanford University The Legacy of the Black Panther Party.

Queer Neighborhood Politics in Post-World War II San Francisco

Rethinking America’s Longest War

Vietnam in History and Memory

Moderator

Chair: Ronald Walters, Johns Hopkins University Social Science and the Mid-Century Jewish Identity Wars Susan A. Du Bois's Narrative of African-American Racial Identity and Fernando Ortiz's Narrative of Cuban Transculturalism Alessandra Lorini, University of Florence. The language of race: American social scientists' public discourse in a transatlantic perspective Daria Frezza, University of Siena.

Reinterpreting Our Heritage: A Roundtable Discussion

On the Virtual Edge: The Implications of Online Scholarship for American Historians

Portraying Immigration and Ethnic History Through Exhibits

Displays of American History in Europe: History Versus Mass Culture

Oral Historians and Their Publics

Order and Disorder: Cultural Transformations in Early American Urban Areas

Language and Ritual in Early American Encounters

A Roundtable Discussion

State of the Field: Visual and Material Culture

The Work of Joyce Appleby: A Critical Reassessment

State of the Field: Religion

Mingling “Fact” with “Fiction”: Helping Teachers Integrate Literature into their History Classrooms

Tear Down this Wall”: Building Collaboration between Schools of Education and Departments of History

Military History: Why it Matters and How You Might Teach it

Western Urban History

Animosity, Ambivalence, and Empire: The United States and the Panama Canal

The Blues as Metaphor and Reality: Historical Connections

Faculty Involvement in the Advanced Placement U.S

History Program

Picture This: Images, Visualization, and Design in History

Supermarkets and American Society: Consumers, Technology and Culture

Military Historians and Their Audiences

Popular Musics, Historical Publics: Using Popular Music to Teach Social History in the Classroom and Beyond

Disability History: Moments in the Movement

State of the Field: Economic History

Teaching History with Historic Maps on the Web: A Workshop

The Work of Howard Lamar: A Critical Reassessment

The Crisis of the University Press

Histories of Health: Analyzing Public Health Responses to Mental Illness, Disabilities, and Venereal Diseases in

Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century America

Rural California History

OAH Presidential Address and Awards Ceremony

Patriot Acts: Public

History in Public Service

James O. Horton, The George

Washington University

The San Francisco Bay Guardian commented: “If Ruben Blades and Los Lobos joined forces with Louis Jordan, Johnny Otis, Sam the Sham and War, condensing their explosiveness into a nine-piece party orchestra, it might sound like Dr.

Popularization of U.S. Space Exploration

A Usable Past: Labor History from Schools to Streets

Interpreting Prints in History Research: Papers and Conversation Concerning Approaches

Assessing the New Cold War History

Historians Confronting Racial Meta-Narratives

White Resistance and the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement

Histories and Legacies

Building Meaningful K-16 Partnerships in the Teaching American History Program: A Roundtable Workshop on

New Perspectives on the Integration of Baseball

State of the Field: Rural History

Telling the Story of the Barbary Wars in Jeffersonian America

The Legacy and the Memory

Economic Activity and Social Structure: Linking Business and Industry to Race, Class, and Gender

Railroads and the American West

State of the Field: Race as a Historical Concept

Local Communities, American Communities

A K-16/Museum Collaboration

Race, Crime, and Redemption: Stories from the Atlantic World

Pacific War and Reconciliation in U.S.-Japan-Asia Relations

Detective Stories: Case Studies in American Political Surveillance

Public Historians and Their Publics: Toward a Practical Theory of Public Professionalism

Cultivating New Audiences for Agricultural History

Teaching the American History Survey: An Interactive Panel Discussion of the Methods and Madness of the Survey Course

Presenting the Star-Spangled Banner: The Stories Behind the Icon

American Indian Gaming: Sovereignty and Self-Determination in Motion

Race and Nation Across National Boundaries

Baseball in California

Islamic Communities in the United States

Civil Rights Activism and Practical Politics

38 CCain, Victoria 52 Camarillo, Al 47 Camarillo, Albert 48 Candeloro, Dominic 52 Candida-Smith, Richard 52 Capozzola, Christopher 34 Carlton, David L. 38 CCain, Victoria 52 Camarillo, Al 47 Camarillo, Alberto Candidaic 28 Domin. -Smith, Richard 52 Capozzola, Christopher 34 Carlton, David L.

Participant Index

T ODAY

I NSURING OUR F UTURE

T OMORROW

Bequests

Retirement Funds

Life Insurance

C ALIFORNIA A CADEMY OF S CIENCES

Organization of American Historians

If you wish, you can join OAH online at: . All OAH members receive the OAH Newsletter, the Annual Meeting Program, and the Journal of American History or OAH Magazine of History, as well as other benefits and services. For additional information on OAH membership benefits or institutional subscriptions, visit

Receive the OAH newsletter and the annual meeting program, and also choose between receiving the Journal of American History or the OAH Magazine of History. Formwalt, OAH, ex officio Matthew Frye Jacobson, Yale University Winston James, Columbia University Jane Kamensky, Brandeis University James Kloppenberg, Harvard University Elaine Tyler May, University of Minnesota OAH Magazine of History Advisory Board. Basker, The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Karen Cobb Carroll, NBCT, Guilford County Schools.

Steven Schwartz, Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History President Cynthia Stout, Jefferson County Public Schools. Reiff, University of California, Los Angeles Roy Rosenzweig, George Mason University Committee on Community Colleges Kenneth G. Berry, Community College Humanities Association, ex officio Thomas Burnell Colbert, Marshalltown Community College Doris Dwyer, Community College of Western Nevada.

Don Maxwell, Journal of American History, ex officio Bernard Mergen, George Washington University Pablo Pozzi, Universidad de Buenos Aires, President Shane White, University of Sydney. Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York Paul Martin Wolff, Williams and Connolly, LLC.

2004-2005 OAH Committees

OAH Past Officers

Richard Current Leonard Curry Kenneth Davison Merton Dillon Robert Divine Arthur Dudden Søster Mary Elizabeth, CHS George Engberg J. Merton England Robert Ferrell Sidney Fine Galen Fisher Betty Fladeland John Hope Franklin David Fuller Larry Gara Wendell Garrett Lawrence Gelfand Ralph Goodwin Norman Graebner William Greever Gene Gressley William Hagan Lawrence Hanson Louis Harlan Lowell Harrison Elwin Hartwig Samuel Hays Richard Hewlett C. Mary Ann Brady Vernon Braswell Kinley Brauer Lynn Brenneman Lynne Brickley Euline Brock Nwabueze Brooks Richard Brown Robert Brown William Brown, Jr.

James West Davidson Richard Davies Calvin Davis Cullom Davis David Brion Davis Lawrence Davis Thomas Davis Thomas Davis III Kenneth Davison Vincent DeSantis Carl Degler Lawrence de Graaf Alan Derickson Sarah Deutsch Charles Dew. John Gignilliat Glen Gildemeister Tim Gilfoyle Gordon Gillson Harvey Goddard Nancy Godleski Ralph Goodwin Brian Gordon Martin Gordon Sidney Gottesfeld John Pike Grady Alan Graebner Norman Graebner William Graebner George Green Julie Greene Victor Greene William Greer, Jr. Harry Readnour Edwin Reed Thomas Reeve II Willis Regier Reid John Reid Robert Reid John Reilly C.

Richard Sherman James Francis Shigley Dwight Smith Paul Smith Wilson Smith Richard Sonderegger John Spencer. Sidney Gottesfeld Robert Gough Terrence Gough Lewis Gould Joseph Gowaskie John Grabowski John Pike Grady Alan Graebner William Graebner Harvey Graff Henry Graff Leo Graff, Jr. Joseph Hawes James Hawk Hugh Hawkins Ellis Hawley Robert Haws Robert Hay Zuster Mary Hayes Richard Haynes Willard Hays Frederick M.

Lyn Rainard Jack Rakove Stephen Randall Michael Rapp Alan Raucher Harry Readnour Patrick Reagan Edwin Reed James Reed Linda Reed Thomas Reeve II Gary Reichard Donald Reid John Reid Robert Reid Janice Reiff John Reilly David Reimers. Richard Allen Richman Thomas Richter Martin Ridge Steven Riess William Riley Paul Ringenbach William Ringenberg Moses Rischin Boyd Rist Donald Ritchie Robert Ritchie Charles Ritter John Roach James Roark William Robbins Jere Roberson James Robertson Jo Ann Robinson Raymond Robinson David Robson George Robson, Jr.

Tote Bags

Regional Receptions

Northeastern Reception

Mid-Atlantic/Southern Reception

Midwestern Reception

Friday Afternoon Exhibit Hall Refreshments

Presidential Reception and

University of Georgia Press 161 University of Illinois Press 136, 137 University of Massachusetts Press 107 University of Michigan Press 181 University of Missouri Press 130, 131 University of Nebraska Press 173 University of New Mexico Press 175.

Advertiser Index

Houghton Mifflin

Compa

Norton & Company

University Press of

Beacon Press

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University of Mas-

Oxford University

Cambridge Univer-

University of

Prentice Hall

University of Penn-

University of Mis-

University of Vir-

University of Press

University of Illinois

University

Random

Knopf

Harvard University

Blackwell

Duke University

Louisiana State

Temple Uni-

Rowman & Lit- tlefield Publishers

Pearson

Perseus Books

The New

Northern Illinois

NYU Press

MIT Press

Cornell Uni-

Krieger PUblish-

White House His-

Southern Illinois

American Association

Approximately thirty rooms at the Hilton San Francisco will be held for graduate students at a 40% discount off the regular hotel rate offered to OAH participants. Graduate student hotel rates are available to all graduate students who have pre-registered for the 2005 OAH Annual Meeting, although preference will be given to those applicants who are current OAH members and willing to share a room. Rooms will be allocated on a first-come, first-served basis until they are all booked.

Proof can be a letter from a university advisor, a photocopy of a valid student ID, a photocopy of a cashier's statement, or a photocopy of a grade. Employers wishing to reserve interview space at the San Francisco Hilton Hotel should complete this form and return it with payment to the OAH Executive Office by March 10, 2005. Interview space is limited at the Annual Meeting and will be assigned on a date-by-date basis. postmark.

Rooms are available in four- and eight-hour blocks: $100 per four-hour period. Vacancies listed with the Organization of American Historians are posted on our website. However, as a courtesy to interviewing employers and candidates, OAH will not provide a list of employers interviewing at the meeting.

If an interviewer feels it is necessary to use a setting outside a predetermined interview room, OAH strongly advises that a living room rather than a bedroom be used and that a third person is always present in the room with the candidate.

Schedule at a glance 2005 Annual Meeting

Saturday, April 2

Sunday, April 3

2006 Annual Meeting Washington, D.C

Hilton Washington

2006 Great Plains Regional Meeting Lincoln, Nebraska

2008 Annual Meeting New York, New York

Hilton New York

2008 Western Regional Meeting Vancouver, British Columbia

2009 Annual Meeting Seattle, Washington

Hilton Washington

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6.3 Membership of the Standing Committee Chairman from the State Board of Education to be nominated by the Chairman of the Board Executive Director Schools Director of Equal