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'PROGRAM of the MEETING' oj the ',american ,association. December 28, 29, 30 THE NAMES OF THE SOCIETIES MEETING WITHIN OR JbINTLY WITH THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS ARE LISTED ON PAGE 82

,american ,~f!Ji~torital ,association. Annual... · 2020. 12. 15. · Chairman: AUBREY C. LAND, University of Maryland CHARLES J. BISHKO, University of Vir ginia ALFRED D. CHANDLER,

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  • 'PROGRAM

    of the

    MEETING'

    oj the

    ',american ,~f!Ji~torital ,association.

    December 28, 29, 30

    THE NAMES OF THE SOCIETIES MEETING WITHIN OR JbINTLY WITH THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL

    ASSOCIATIONS ARE LISTED ON PAGE 82

  • JULIAN P. BO YV Professor of History, Princeton University

    Editor, The Papers of Thomas Jefferson PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN HISTORTCALAsSOCIATION

  • The American Historical Association

    OFFICERS

    President: JULIAN P. BOYD, Princeton University Vice-President: FREDERIC C. LANE, Johns Hopkins University Treasurer: ELMER Lours KAYSER, George \i\!ashington University Executive Secretary: LOUIS B. WRIGHT Managing Editor: HENRY R. WINKLER Assistant Executive Secretary: \i\! ALTER RUNDELL, JR.

    COUNCIL

    Ex Officio, The President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Executive Secretary, and Managing Editor

    Former Presidents

    SAMUEL FLAGG BEMIS, Yale University CARL BRIDENBAUGH, Brown University CRANE BRINTON, Harvard University MERLE CURTI, University of Wisconsin SIDNEY BRADSHAW FAY, Harvard University LOUIS R. GOTTSCHALK, University of Chicago \VILLIAM L. LANGER, Harvard University KENNETH SCOTT LATOURETTE, Yale University CHARLES H. McILWAIN, Harvard University SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON, Harvard University ALLAN NEVINS, Huntington Library DEXTER PERKINS, Rochester, New York ARTHUR MEIER SCHLESINGER, Harvard University BERNADOTTE E. SCHMITT, Alexandria, Virginia ROBERT LIVINGSTON SCHUYLER, Columbia University LYNN THORNDIKE, Columbia University THOMAS JEFFERSON WERTENBAKER, Princeton University

    Elected Members

    ROBERT BYRNES, Indiana University JOHN CAUGHEY, University of California, Los Angeles \V ALLACE FERGUSON, Western Ontario University RICHARD HOFSTADTER, Columbia University \VALTER JOHNSON, University of Chicago CHARLES MULLETT, University of Missouri GORDON WRIGHT, Stanford University Lours \i\!RIGHT, Folger Library

    3

  • PACIFIC COAST BRANCH OFFICERS

    President: JOHN S. GALBRAITH, University of California, Los Angeles

    Vice-President: DOROTHY O. JOHANSEN, Reed College Secretary-Treasurer: JOHN A. SCHUTZ, \i\Thittier College

    Planning and Arrangements, 1964 Meeting

    COMMITTEE ON PROGRAM

    Chairman: AUBREY C. LAND, University of Maryland

    CHARLES J. BISHKO, University of Vir-ginia

    ALFRED D. CHANDLER, JIl.., Johns Hop-kins University

    KENT ROBERTS GREENFIELD, Baltimore, Maryland

    HARRY N. HOWARD, American University JOHN TATE LANNING, Duke University RAYFORD LOGAN, Howard University MORRIS L. RADOFF, Archivist of Mary-

    land, Hall of Records, Annapolis

    COMMITTEE ON LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS

    Chairman.; JEAN T. JOUGHIN, American University

    Honorary member and consultant: ELMER L. KAYSER, George 'Washington Uni-versity

    ROBERT ARTIGIANI, American University DAVID J. BRANDENBURG, American Uni-

    versity STANLEY L. F ALK, Industrial College of

    the Armed Forces KENNETH E. FOLSOM, University of

    Maryland WILLIAM Fox, Montgomery Junior Col-

    lege DONALD GIFFIN, University of Maryland DOROTHY D. GONDOS, American Univer-

    sity WILLIAM HASKETT, American University

    4

    THOMAS T. HELDE, Georgetown Univer-sity

    JACK W. HENRY, Montgomery Junior College

    CHARLES J. HERBER, George Washington University

    ROBERT \V. KENNY, George Washington University

    HAROLD D. LANGLEY, Catholic University of America

    VANCE L. SHIFLETT, D. C. Teachers' College

    RICHARD TITLOW, Internal Revenue Serv-ice

    ALLEN WEINSTEIN, University of Mary-land

    MICHAEL R. WINSTON, Howard Uni-versity

  • GENERAL INFORMATION HEADQUARTERS; Headquarters will be located in two hotels; the Sheraton-

    Park Hotel at 2606 Woodley Road, N.W., and the Shoreham Hotel at Calvert Street and Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Meetings, luncheons, and dinners will take place in both hotels, which are within a few minutes of each other.

    Sixteen hundred rooms have been set aside in these two hotels for AHA members at the following flat rates; singles $IO.oo, doubles $r5.00. Members should use the enclosed reservation cards, making their own choices of hotel. It is understood that if space is exhausted at one hotel, the reservation will be transferred to the other hotel. In addition to the regular hotel rooms, generous accommodations are available in the Shoreham Motor Inn and the Sheraton Motor Inn, new since the r9

  • The Professional Register will be located in the Caucus, Council, Board, and Cabinet Rooms in the Shoreham Hotel.

    GROUP MEETINGS AND REUNIONS: Some historical societies and groups have arranged special sessions which cannot be listed in the general program; .Mimeo-graphed announcements concerning them will be distributed at the Information Desk provided they are supplied to the Local Arrangements· Committee Chairman.· Informa-tion concerning group reunions such as smokers and breakfasts will be posted on the bulletin boards located in the Florentine Foyer in the Sheraton-Park Hotel and in the L~wer Lobby in the Shoreham Hote1. All groups desiring to hold gatherings of ally sort should make arrangements for them directly with the Convention Bureau of either the Sheraton-Park Hotel or the Shoreham Hotel, sending a copy of the correspondence to the Local Arrangements Committee Chairman.

    6

  • Inaugurating . .. A NEW SPECTRUM ta\\ SERIES THE MODERN NATIONS IN HISTORICAL

    PERSPECTIVE SERIES Under the general editorship of Robin W. Winks, Yale University, these original books incorporate historical background and recent data with fresh synthesis and interpreta-tion. Dealing with a nation or group of nations, each volume will summarize the chief historical trends and influences that have contributed to each nation's present-day character, problems, and behavior. Five world areas are covered-Europe, the Com-monwealth, Africa, the New World, and Asia. All titles available. Spectrum tr.!\\ paperbound $1.95, cloth $495 each.

    CHINA

    ARGENTINA

    MOROCCO, ALGERIA, TUNISIA

    VENEZUELA AND COLOMBIA

    CEYLON

    INDONESIA

    RUSSIA

    NEW ZEALAND

    Kenneth Scott Latourette, Professor Emeritus, Yale University. A concise chronicle of Mainland China with emphasis on the modem period, by the recognized dean of Chinese historians. S-607 (orig.)

    Arthur P. Whitaker, University of Pennsylvania. The continuity and change in Argentina's democratic tradition, showing how Argentina illustrates current problems of world-wide interest, such as economic, social, and cultural development, nationalism, and noncommitment in the cold war. S-601 (orig.)

    Richard M. Brace, Northwestern University. The story of North-west Africa's past as it relates to the future of three former French colonies, showing the influence of the Greeks, Romans, Normans, Ottoman Turks, and Arabs. S-604 (orig.)

    Harry Bernstein, Brooklyn College. The growth and change of two Andean-Caribbean countries interpreted through their his-tories, politics, and contemporary social movements and reflecting the varied influences of the Indian, the Negro, Spain and the United States. S-605 (orig.)

    Sinnappah Arasaratnam, University of Malaya. Balancing the impact of Western modernizing influences and the strong pre-modern tradition of the indigenous peoples-here is an original analysis of Ceylon from its earliest beginnings to the present day. S-603 (orig.)

    J. D. Legge, Monash University, Australia. An original analysis of the character and main themes in Indonesia's history, and their contribution to the making of the modem republic. S-606 (orig.)

    Robert V. Daniels, University of Vermont. A thorough introduc-tion to the forces that have molded Russia and their combined effect on international relations today. 8-602 (ong.)

    William J. Cameron, McMaster University. A native son charts the direction in which New Zealand is moving as a result of her traditional British background and influences provided by regional setting and local ways of life. S-608 (ong.)

    write for a free Spectrum catalog

    for approval copies, write: BOX 903

    PRENTICE-HALL, INC., Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 7

  • PAPERBACKS from

    New and forthcoming in the field of history

    THE RISE AND FALL OF WESTERN COLONIALISM

    A Historical Survey from the Early Nineteenth Century to the Present

    By STEWART C. EASTON

    A CONCISE HISTORY OF WORLD WAR I

    A CONCISE HISTORY OF WORLD WAR II

    $2.95

    Prepared for The Encyclopedia Ameri-cana under the Advisory Editorship of Brigadier General VINCENT J. ES-POSITO, USA (Ret.)

    December lEach volme: $2.95

    THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY

    A Concise History

    By ALFRED GROSSER

    WESTERN EUROPE SINCE THE WAR

    $1.75

    A SHORT HISTORY OF THE MIDDLE EAST From the Rise of Islam to Modern Times

    Seventh Revised Edition

    By GEORGE E. KIRK

    THE RISE OF THE SOVIET EMPIRE

    A Study of Soviet Foreign Policy

    By JAN L1BRACH

    A CONCISE HISTORY Of THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE SOVIET UNION

    Revised Edition

    By JOHN S. RESHETAR, JR.

    THE END OF EMPIRE

    By JOHN STRACHEY

    CONTEMPORARY HISTORY IN THE SOVIET MIRROR

    $2.50

    $2.50

    $2.50

    $2.50

    Edited by JOHN KEEP, with the assist-ance of Liliana Brisby A Short Political History

    By JACQUES FREYMOND $1.95 November/ $2.50

    See these and other Praeger Paperbacks and clothbound titles at our convention display.

    Frederick A. Praeger 111 Fourth Avenue, New York 10003

    8

  • )

    ,

    \

    I

    ( \

    f

    ~

    INSTITUTE BOOKS ABOUT EARLY AMERICAN HISTORY

    THE GLORIOUS REVOLUTION IN AMERICA Documents on the Colonial Crisis of 1689 Michael G. Hall, Lawrence H. Leder, and Michael G. Kammen, eds., xviii, 216 pp. (1964), Paper, $2.50.

    This sourcebook presents the student of American history with the raw matc;rials of one of the most exciting and crucial episodes in the first century of colonial settlement. At the time of England's Glorious Revolu-tion of 1688-89, simultaneous revolutions occurred in Massachusetts Bay, New York, and Maryland; out of this turmoil developed the framework of the eighteenth-century British Empire.

    LOYALISTS AND REDCOATS A Study in British Revolutionary Policy By Paul H. Smith, xi, 199 pp. (1964), $5.00.

    Now, for the first time, a competent scholar traces the role of the Loyalists in British military policy and discusses how this policy was affected by the shifting political scene in England. The imagined strength of the Loyalists led Britain to underestimate her task, and, finally, to divide her armies at the very moment when French assistance made the American threat most serious.

    BARONESS VON RIEDESEL AND THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Journal and Correspondence of a Tour of Duty, 1776-1783 Marvin L. Brown, Jr., ed., with the assistance of Marta Huth, xlvii, 230 pp., maps and illustrations (Jan. 1965), $6.00.

    The Journal and letters of the wife of the commanding general of the German troops in the Convention Army form one of the most engaging and readable eye-witness accounts of the American Revolution, an ex-cellent example, as Francis Parkman noted, "of good historical memoirs-the very life of historical literature." This new translation includes many previously unpublished letters. .

    Publications of the Institute of Early American History and Culture at Williamsburg, Virginia, Booth No. 24.

    Order from The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill

    9

  • , ; , ~ ,-

    from

    THE DORSEY PRESS

    MAIN PROBLEMS IN AMERICAN HISTORY Edited by HOWARD QUINT, University of Massachusetts, DEAN AL-BERTSON, Brooklyn College, and MILTON CANTOR, University of Massachusetts

    ThiS unique new volume grovides students with highly significant historical problems immediately. relevant to the contents of any basic text on AmericaiJ. history. Since these problems offer direct focus for classroom discussion, they are particularly well adapted to meet the week by week requirements of lecture-quiz sections. For greater teaching flexibility, Main Problems in American History is published in two paperbound volumes.

    • POSTURE OF EUROPE, 1815-1940; Readings in European Intellectual History Edited by EUGENE C. BLACK, Branikis University

    • A mSTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION By ROLAND N. STROMBERG, University of Maryland

    .. AMERICAN EXPANSION: A Book of Maps By RANDAIL D. SALE, University of Wisconsin, and EDWIN D. KARN, Air Defense Command, United States Air Force

    • THE AMERICAN CITY: A Docunlentary History Edited by CHARLES N. GLAAB, University of Wisc~ Milwaukee

    • THE CHARACTER OF AMERICANS: A Book of Readings Edited by MICHAEL McGIFFERT, University Of Denver

    Write for 90-Day Examination Copies

    UII]~~ THE DORSEY PRESS Homewood, Dlinois PRE • •

    10

  • 1'1 New History Poperbocks Lewis H. Blair A SOUTHERN PROPHECY. Edited and with an introduction

    by C. Vann Woodward. One of the strongest arguments for civil rights ever written.

    LB 19 paper $1.95

    Paul H. Buck THE ROAD TO REUNION 1865-1900. Winner of the Pulit-

    zer Prize for History. LB 36 $1.95

    Walter Johnson 1600 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE. Presidents and the People

    Since 1929. An important analysis of American presi-dents from Hoover to JFK.

    LB 16 $2.45

    Ralph McGill *THE SOUTH AND THE SOUTHERNER. A Southerner il-

    luminates the South as he knows it today and as he be-lieves it will be tomorrow.

    LB 43 $1.95

    Ulrich B. Phillips LIFE AND LABOR IN THE OLD SOUTH. A classic with a

    new introduction by C. Vann Woodward. LB 15 $2.45

    Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. THE AGE OF JACKSON. The unabridged edition, winner of

    Pulitzer Prize in 1945, now in paperback. LB 18 $2.95

    Glyndon G. Van Deusen THE LIFE OF HENRY CLAY. "Char~cterized by thorough-

    ness . . . and by an intelligent appreciation of Clay's position in American politics and economy."-Henry Steele Commager

    * Atlantic-Little, Brown publication LITTLE, BROWN and COMPANY 34 Beacon Street Boston, Massachusetts

    LB 25 $2.45

    25 Hollinger Road Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    II

  • Paperbacks from the Library of American Biography

    Edmund S. Morgan THE PURITAN DILEMMA. The Story of John Winthrop.

    "The clearest presentation of Puritan dogma this re-viewer has encountered."-American Historical Re-view.

    224 pages paper $1.65

    Verner W. Crane BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AND A RISING PEOPLE. "A

    reliable, informative, . . . interesting portrait of Benja-min FrankIin."-American Historical Review.

    219 pages paper $1.65

    Clement Eaton HENRY CLAY AND THE ART OF AMERICAN POLI-

    TICS. "A superlative job."-New York Times. 209 pages paper $1.65

    Richard N. Current DANIEL WEBSTER AND THE RISE OF NATIONAL

    CONSERVATISM. "Mr. Current explains here ... the philosophic development of conservatism as it was embodied in Daniel Webster."-Christian Science Moni-tor.

    215 pages paper $1.65

    John Morton Blum WOODROW WILSON AND THE POLITICS OF MO-

    RALITY. A fascinating and perceptive analysis of Wilson and the trials of a nation.

    225 pages paper $1.65

    LITTLE, BROWN and COMPANY

    12

  • Samuel R. Spencer, Jr.

    New titles coming in January

    BOOKER T. WASHINGTON AND THE NEGRO'S PLACE IN AMERICAN LIFE. The compelling story of a man and his people and their struggle for equality.

    212 pages $1.65

    Richard W. leopold ELIHU ROOT AND THE CONSERVATNE TRADI-

    TION. "The most clearly focused picture yet available of the American conservative mind."-New York Times

    222 pages $1.65

    Constance Mel. Green ELI WHITNEY AND THE BIRTH OF AMERICAN

    TECHNOLOGY. Skillful mingling of personal narra-tive and technological analysis tells the story of the be-ginnings of American technology.

    215 pages $1.65

    Oscar Handlin * AL SMITH AND HIS AMERICA. With this book, we come

    to understand what is meant by the "American Dream" and question its reality.

    207 pages $1.65

    Horace Samuel Merrill BOURBON LEADER. Grover Cleveland and the Democratic

    Party. The President whose political experience offers an illuminating view of the nature of American politics at the end of the nineteenth century.

    224 pages $1.65

    * Atlantic-Little, Brown publication 34 Beacon Street Boston, Massachusetts 25 Hollinger Road Toronto, Ontario, Canada

    13

  • THE FEDERAL UNION A History of the United States to 1877

    Fourth Edition

    John D. Hicks, George E. Mowry, and Robert E. Burke 872 pages 1964 $8.75

    Student's and Instructor's Manuals Available

    THE AMERICAN NATION A History of the United States from 1865 to the Present

    Fourth Edition

    John D. Hicks, George E. Mowry, and Robert E. Burke 954 pages 1963 $8.95

    Student's and Instructor's Manuals Available

    READINGS IN AMERICAN HISTORY Third Edition-Volumes I and II

    Edited by Robert C. Cotner, John S. Ezell, Gilbert C. Fite, and Joe B. Frantz

    Vol. I: 1492 to 1865 393 pages 1964 Paperbound $3.75 Vol. II: 1865 to the Present 393 pages 1964 Paperbound $3.75

    ~

    AMERICA'S ENTRY INTO WORLD WAR I Daniel Smith

    About 120 pages Paperbound A 1965 Publication

    HISTORIAN'S HANDBOOK A Key to the Study and Writing of History

    Second Edition

    Wood Gray and others 96 pages Paperbo~nd 1964 $1.25

    i~~ HOllff/ihrnMitl-Zln (ffrfl]Janv 1\I~a ~ JJI J ~ BOSTON' NEW YORK' ATLANTA' G~NEVA ILL' DALLAS' PALO ALTO

    14

  • , .. , ,.1 .~

    .1

    I t

    I

    ! I

    I ,I

    i

    t

    ) \

    EAST ASIA: THE MODERN TRANSFORMATION

    (Vol. II of A HISTORY OF EAST ASIAN CIVILIZATION) John K. Fairhank, Edwin O. Reischauer

    Albert M. Craig About 950 pages A January 1965 Publication

    A SURVEY OF EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION Second Edition-1962 Impression

    Wallace K. Ferguson and Geoffrey Bruun Complete Edition 1092 pages $10.50 Part One: Ancient Times to 1660 520 pages $ 7.75 Part Two: Since 1660 588 pages $ 7.75 Since 1500 770 pages $ 8.95 Student's'and Instructor's Manuals Available.

    SOURCES OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION Daniel D. McGarry and Clarence L. Hoh!, Jr.

    Vol. I 524 pages Paperbound $3.75 Vol. II 507 pages Paperbound $3.75

    The New Houghton Mifflin Problems Books in History Series

    PEACE OR APPEASEMENT? Hitler, Chamberlain, and the Munich Crisis

    Francis L. Loewenheim About 220 pages Paperbound December, 1964

    THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION R. P. Browder In Preparation

    BETWEEN THE WARS: AMERICA, 1919-1941 David A. Shannon

    In Preparation

    ,~Ii H-ougliwnMijfli:n Cfffflpany ~ BOSTON' NEW YORK' ATLANTA' GENEVA,ILL' DALLAS' PALO ALTO

    IS

  • Appleton - Century - Crofts takes pleasure in announcing the publication this year of two highly significant and attraaive works in new paperback editions . ..

    Six volumes in American History by Malone & Rauch: Now ready:

    AMERICAN ORIGINS, TO 1789 330 pp., illus., paper, $2.00

    THE REPUBLIC COMES OF AGE, 1789·1841 384 pp., illus., paper, $2.25

    CRISIS OF THE UNION, 1841-1877 456 pp., illus., paper, $2.25

    Due in December:

    THE NEW NATION, 1865-1917 432 pp., illus., paper, $2.25 (tent.)

    WAR AND TROUBLED PEACE, 1917-1939 408 pp., illus., paper, $2.25 (tent.)

    Due in April:

    AMERICA AND WORLD LEADERSHIP, 1940-1964 400 pp., illus., paper, $2.50 (tent.)

    Three volumes in European History (January):

    EUROPE, 1870-1914, by F. Lee Benns With expanded and updated bibliography by the author.

    400 pp., illus., paper, $3.95 (tent.)

    EUROPE, 1914-1939, by F. Lee Benns and Mary E. Selden Containing new bibliography and research.

    544 pp., illus., paper, $3.95 (tent.)

    EUROPE, 1939 TO THE PRESENT, by F. Lee Benns and Mary E. Selden Completely updated, substantially expanded, and reflecting newest research.

    536 pp., illus., paper, $3.95 (tent.)

    App/eton-Century-Crolts 440 Park Ave. South, N.Y., N.Y. 10016 Division of Meredith Publishing Compau:JI

    16

  • Hubert Howe Bancroft

    HISTORY OF CALIFORNIA Volume 1 1542-1800

    With an introduction by EDMUND G. BROWN,

    Governor of California

    Published in seven handsome volumes

    Available one volume at a time

    $12.50 per volume, at all bookstores' or postpaid from the publisher

    WALLACE HEBBERD, Publisher SANTA BARBARA, CALIFORNIA

    ANNOUNCING TWO NEW TITLES IN

    THE GREAT HISTORIES SERIES

    under the general editorship of HUGH R. TREVOR-ROPER Regius Professor of Modern History, Oxford University

    This series consists of ten great historians' most representative works selected and edited by an outstanding scholar or historian in the field and in the period. Each history is a single volume and contains an Introduction to provide the reader with the historian's biography and make clear his particular contribution to the changing philosophy of history. For information on the titles available and those proposed, please call at our convention exhibit or write us.

    Henry Adams, THE EDUCATION OF HENRY ADAMS and Other Selected Writings ' Edited by E. N. Saveth, The New School for Social Research $6.00

    Voltaire, THE AGE OF LOUIS XIV and Other Selected Writings Edited by J. H. Brumfitt, St. Andrews University $6.00

    TW AYNE PUBLISHERS, INC. 31 UNION SQUARE WEST NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10003

    17

  • . . ~

    Partial Table of Contents

    I. THROUGH THE MAGIC DOOR OF WORDS I The Fabric and Creation of a Dream • More Magic in Words· Friends for the Road, No Books on the Ferry from Hong Kong,· Tell Me'aStory II. THE WONDER-WORLD OF SYMBOLS I Symbols aili! Mlldicifle.OnAnArmeniall. "Flying Carpef' c lIf. THE MARCH OF MEDICAL HISTORY I The Great HIstorical C/!iJilellgesill Medicine. "That Ski{llrhtJl.Dea~7t Loves Not"· and others ' IV. THE EPIC OFMEDICINE V. JOURNEYS, PORTS, PEOPLES I The Family of Man • Vast anti Wide 'S the Worlli. • The Restless Emerald" The Chase of the Bulte'r{ly , Those Glittering Towers· and others VI. LOVE, LUST. AND LETTERS lArs Amandi ,Casanova, Then and Now • A Letter /rom Madame VII. THE MARVELS OF MAN I The Mttsk and the MI"or' The MiraCle Tool • The Eye and the Glance VIII. THE PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE I DoctorsMust Tell· Mall, as Nature and.a3 History lX. RELIGIO MEDICr To Be aDoctor. The Young Princes· The Legacy of St. Luke INDEX

    a new reading adventure in medicine and the arts

    ESSAYS ON THE ARTS AND THE HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE

    by FELIX MARTI-IBANEZ, M. D. Editor-in-Chief of the Medical Newsmagazine, MD; Former Professor and Chairman, Department of the

    HiStory of MediCine, New York Medical College

    This new collection of articles and essays traverses the vast expanse of human experience to present a fresh and exciting view of the world of medicine and the arts. ARIEL: ESSAYS ON THE ARTS AND THE mSTORY AND PIDLOSOPHY OF MEDICINE combines new concepts, original observations, and imaginative thinking in a book that will give many hour~ of reading pleasure. One of the .outstanding features of this collection of 42 essays and articles is the inclusion of the author's 13 original expanded versions of his introductions to the instalhnents of THE EPIC OF MEDICINE, which origi-nally appeared in the medical newsmagazine, MD. As a unit they provide a dramatic and cogent preface to the history of medicine. The other essays and articles in this volume cover a wide range of both historical and contemporary subjects. ARIEL is a book for those. who choose to explore the wondrous paths of the human mind. It is a book for physicians, philosophers, sociologists, educators, stu-dents-all who know the excitement of discovery and seek new ideas. . 292 PAGES/ CLOTH BOUND/ $6.50

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    i 30 East Sixtieth Street, New York 22, N. Y. t Please'send me •••••• copies of ARIEL: ESSAYS ON THE t ARTS AND THE HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE t ~~ .~~l~~ ~~~~;~~b.~~e~: ~:~: • • • • ••• • ••• 0 Ch~/oc:6d·50 I NAME enc Jt

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    18

  • THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

    Founded in 1884 Chartered by Congress in 1889 Office: 400 A STREET, S.E., WASHINGTON, D. C. 20003

    MEMBERSHIP: Persons interested in historical studies, whether profes-sionally or otherwise, are invited to membership. Present membership ca. 11,700. Members elect the officers by ballot.

    MEETINGS: An annual meeting with a three-day program is held during the last days of each year. Many professional historical groups meet within or jointly with the Association at this time. The Pacific Coast Branch holds separate meetings on the Pacific Coast and publishes the Pacific Historical Review.

    PUBLICATIONS AND SERVICES: The official organ, the American Historical Review, is published quarterly and sent to all members. It is available by subscription to others. In addition, the Association pub-lishes its Annual Report, prize monographs, pamphlets designed to aid teachers of history, bibliographical as well as other volumes, and a news-letter. To promote history and assist historians, the Association offers many other services. It also maintains close relations with international, specialized, state, and local historical societies through conferences and correspondence.

    PRIZES: The Herbert B. Adams Prize of $300 awarded in the even-num-bered years for a work in the field of European history. The George Louis Beer Prize of $300 awarded annually for a work on any phase of European international history since 1895. The Albert J. Beveridge Award, given annually for the best manuscript in the history of the Western Hemisphere, with a cash value of $1,500 and assurance of publication. The John H. Dunning Prize of $300 awarded in the even-numbered years for a monograph on any subject relating to American history. The Littleton-Griswold Pri::re in Legal History of $500 to be awarded biennially for the best published work in the legal history of the American colonies and the United States to J900. The Robert Liv-ingston Schuyler Prize of $roo awarded every five years for the best work in modern British and Commonwealth history (next award, 1966). The Watumull Prize of $500 awarded biennially for a work on the history of India originally published in the United States (next award, 1964).

    DUES: There is no initiation fee. Annual regular dues are $ro.oo, student $5.00 (faculty signature required), and life $200. All members receive the American Historical Review, the AHA Newsletter, and the pro-gram of the annual meeting.

    CORRESPONDENCE: Inquiries should be addressed to the Executive Secretary at 400 A Street, S.E., Washington, D. C. 20003.

    44

  • Schedule of Sessions

    SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27

    9:30 A.M. SUITE D 200, SHERATON PARK

    MEETING OF THE COUNCIL

    MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    MORNING SESSIONS

    I

    9:30 A.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    AMERICAN EXPANSION Chairman: Ernest R. May, Harvard University

    The Mexican War-An Unnecessary Conflict David M. Pletcher, H amline University

    U. S. Expansion in the Far East before the Open Door Thomas McCormick, University of Pittsburgh

    Comment

    Ramon Ruiz, Smith College Marilyn Young, Harvard University

    IT

    9:30 A.M. EMPIRE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Association for State and Local History

    LOCAL HISTORY: PERSPECTIVES AND HORIZONS Chairman: James H. Rodabaugh, Kent State University

    The Settlement of Michigan: A Case Study in Population Movement Willis F. Dunbar, Western Michigan University

    The National Relevance of Local Urban History Blake McKelvey, City Historian of Rochester, New York

    English Local History: Current Work Wallace T. MacCafJrey, Haverford College

    Threads and Fabrics: A Critique James C. Olson, University of Nebraska

    45

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    m 9:30 A.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with

    The American Catholic Historical Association

    CHRISTIAN CRUSADERS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN MODERN AMERICA

    Chairman: Aaron I. Abell, University of Notre Dame

    The Catholic Worker William D. Miller, Marquette University

    The Free Pulpit Sustained: Ernest Fremont Tittle's Methodist Pas-torate, I9I8-I949

    Robert M. Miller, University of North Carolina

    Comment

    William R. Hutchison, American University Donald P. Gavin, John Carroll University

    IV

    9:30 A.M. VIRGINIA SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    BOURBON FRANCE Chairman: Russell Major, Emory University

    Concini, Luynes, and Richelieu as Royal Favorites and First Ministers: t61O-42

    A. Lloyd M oote, University of Southern California

    Feudalism in French Law and Historiography of the Seventeenth Century

    R. Davis Bitton, University of California, Santa Barbara

    The Old Regime and the "Journal ofIdeas," I665-I789 Raymond F. Birn, University of Oregon

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    v .9-'30 A.M: COTILLION ROOM-SOUTH, SHeRATON PARK

    INDIA IN TRANSITION-I740-I860 Chairman: Holden Furber, University of Pennsylvania

    Intellectual and Cultural Responses in a Changing Era, I740-I800 George Bearce, Bowdoin College

    Social and Political Responses to "\¥estern Influence, I780-1860 Robert E. Frykenberg, University of Wisconsin

    Comment

    B. G. Gokhale, Wake Forest College

    VI

    9:30A.M. THE FORUM,SHOREHAM

    CENTRAL AMERICA: THE STORY OF FIVE RETARDED RE-PUBLICS

    Chairman: William f. Griffith, Tulane University

    Colonial Contribution to National Instability: The Myth of Inde-pendence

    Louis E. Bumgartner, University of Georgia

    National Flotsam in the Nineteenth Century: Obligations of Inde-pendence Refused?

    Wayne M. Clegern, Louisiana State University in New Orleans

    Twentieth-Century Dilemma : National Sovereignty or Unification S. Lorenzo Harrison, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

    Comment

    Gustave A. Anguizola, Purdue University

    47

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    vn 9:30A.M. BALTIMORE-ANNAPOLIS ROOM, SHERATON PARK

    RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY AND NATIONAL CONFORMITY IN SOUTH-EASTERN EUROPE

    Chairman: John C. Campbell, Council on Foreign Relations

    The Uniate Church-Catalyst of Romanian National Consciousness Radu R. Florescu, Boston College

    "J" for Jugoslavia-The Reforms of Vuk Karadzic James Clarke, University of Pittsburgh

    Greek Orthodoxy-National or Universal George Arnakis, University of Texas

    Comment

    Traian Stoianovich, Rutgers University

    vm 9:30 A.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    THREE CAPITALS AND THEIR DIPLOMACY, 1850-1870 Chairman: Bernadotte E. Schmitt, University of Chicago

    Paris: Thouvene1 Looks at a Shifting World, 185°-1862 Lynn M. Case, University of Pennsylvania

    Berlin: The Diplomacy of Bismarck Norman Rich, Michigan State University

    St. Petersburg: The Policy of Gorchakov Barbara J elavich, Indiana University

  • MONDA Y, DECEMBER 28

    IX

    9:30 A.M. PALLADIAN ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The History of Education Society

    Chairman: Richard Hofstadter, Columbia University

    . The Business Classes and Cambridge University, 1890-1914 Sheldon Rothblatt, University of California, Berkeley

    High School and College Reform in Late Nineteenth-Century Ger-many and America

    Dietrich Gerhard, Washington University

    Comment

    Robert K. Webb, Columbia University Eric C. Kollman, Cornell College

    X

    9:30 A.M. COTILLION ROOM-NORTH, SHERATON PARK

    BRITISH INTERESTS IN AFRICA, I880-1922 Chairman: John S. Galbraith, University of California, Los An-geles

    British Understanding of Social Change in Buganda, 1880-I900 John A. Rowe, University of Wisconsin

    Churchill's Contribution to the Movement for an Indian Colony in East Africa, I908-I922

    Robert G. Gregory, Wake Forest College

    British War Aims and German Colonies in Africa, I9I4-1918 Gaddis Smith, Yale University

    Comment

    Graham W. Irwin, Columbia University

    49

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    LUNCHEON CONFERENCES

    I

    I2:30P.M. TUDOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    CONFERENCE ON LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY Chairman: Howard Cline, Library of Congress

    Latin American Studies in the United States Melvin J. Fox, The Ford Foundation

    II

    I2:30 P.M. FREDERICK ROOM, SHERATON PARK

    PHI ALPHA THETA Chairman: Joe B. Frantz, University of Texas

    Presidents in Retirement Vincent P. Carosso, New York University

    AFTERNOON SESSIONS

    I

    2:30 P.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Agricultural History Society

    FARM POLITICS IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA Chairman: Gladys L. Baker, United States Department of Agri-culture

    Tama Jim Wilson and the Politics of Agriculture Willard L. Hoing, Baldwin-Wallace College

    The Triple-A and the Politics of Agriculture Van L. Perkins, University of California, Riverside

    Comment

    John T. Schlebecker, Iowa State University Dean Albertson, Brooklyn College

    50

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    II

    2:30 P.M. COTILLION ROOM-NORTH, SHERATON PARK

    HISTORY OF MUSEUMS IN THE UNITED STATES Chairman: Walter M. Whitehill, Boston Athenaeum

    The Western Museum, Cincinnati Louis L. Tucker, The Cincinnati Historical Society

    The American Antiquarian Society Clifford K. Shipton, American Antiquarian Society

    The Smithsonian Wilcomb E. Washburn, Smithsonian Institution

    III

    2:30 P.M. VIRGINIA SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    JACKSONIAN POLITICS: THE BANK WAR ON TWO FRONTS Chairman: Frit:; Redlich, Harvard University

    Louisiana Politics and the Bank Act of 1842 Irene D. Neu, Indiana University

    Sober Second Thoughts on Van Buren, the Regency, and the Wall Street Conspiracy

    Frank Otto Gatell, Universit~y of Maryland

    Comment

    Charles G. Sellers, University of California, Berkeley EdwinA. Miles, University of Houston

    51

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    IV

    2:30P.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    THE HORN OF AFRICA Chairman: Vernon McKay, fohns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies

    Historic Roots of Somali Nationalism Robert L. Hess, Northwestern University

    Territorial Expansion of Ethiopia during the Reign of Menelik II and Resulting Historical Problems

    Harold G.Marcus, Howard University

    Contemporary Historical Tensions in the Horn of Africa and Ethiopia Alphonse Castagno, Queens College

    V

    2:30 P.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    THE CRISIS OF EUROPEAN LIBERALISM IN THE 1860'S Chairman: Hans Rosenberg, University of California, Berkeley

    Bismarck: the Prussian Constitutional Conflict and the German Unity Movement

    Francis L. Loewenheim, Rice University

    Fulfillment and Disenchantment: Italian Liberalism After Cavour A. W. Salomone, University of Rochester

    The Politics of Democracy: The English Reform Act of 1867 GertrudeHimmelfarb,New York City

    52

  • MONDAY, DECEMBER 28

    VI

    2:30P.M. EMPIRE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY ART: THE PROBLEM OF PERIODI-ZATION

    Chairman: Frederick B. Artz, Oberlin College

    Taste, Style, and Ideology in Eighteenth-Century Music Edward E. Lowinsky, University of Chicago

    Change and Stability in the Hierarchy of Genres in Eighteenth-Cen-tury Painting

    Philipp Fehl, University of North Carolina

    VII

    2:30P.M. PALLADIAN ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Society of Church History

    CHURCH HISTORY AND HISTORIOGRAPHY IN THE EN-LIGHTENMENT

    Chairman: laroslav 1. Pelikan, Yale University

    Edward Gibbon and Byzantine Ecclesiastical History Deno Geanakoplos, University of Illinois

    Adolf Von Harnack G. Wayne Glick, Franklin and Marshall College

    Comment

    WilhelmPauck, Union Theological Seminary George H. Williams, Harvard University

    53

  • MONDA Y, DECEMBER 28

    vrn 2:30 P.M. THE FORUM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Society for Reformation Research

    SOCIAL FORCES IN REFORMATION HISTORY Chairman: Lewis W. Spitz, Stanford University

    Lazarus Spengler and the City Council of Nuremberg Harold 1. Grimm, Ohio State University

    Strikes and Salvation in Lyons Natalie Zemon Davis, University of Toronto

    Comment

    Hajo Holborn, Yale University Leonard 1. Trinterud, San Francisco Theological Seminary

    IX

    2:30 P.M. COTILLION ROOM-SOUTH, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Society of American Archivists

    PUBLICATION OF HISTORICAL SOURCE J\,IATERIALS Chairman: Roy F. Nichols, University of Pennsylvania

    A Rationale for Historical Editing-Past and Present Lester 1. Cappon, Institute of Early American History and CIII-ture

    The Program of the National Historical Publications Commission Oliver W endell Holmes, National Historical Publications C otn-mzsswn

    Comment

    Edmund S. Morgan, Yale University Frank Vandiver, Rice University

    S4

  • MONDAY, DECEi\·fBER 28

    X

    2:30 P.M. MARYLAND SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    STALINISM IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: A PANEL DIS-CUSSION

    Chairman: Alexander Dallin, Columbia University

    Panelists: Richard Lowenthal, Free University, Berlin Alec Nove, University of Glasgow Henry L. Roberts, Columbia University

    DINNERS

    I

    7:00 P.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    ANNUAL DINNER OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY HISTORI-CAL ASSOCIATION

    Chairman: George E. Mowry, University of California, Los An-geles

    The American Exploration of Dreams and Dreamers Merle Curti, University of W7isconsin

    II

    7:00 P.M. CONTINENTAL ROOM, SHERATON PARK

    ANNUAL DINNER OF THE MEDIEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA

    Chairman: Pearl Kibre, Hunter College

    Paradisius mundi Parisius: The Paris of Philip Augustus John W. Baldwin, Johns Hopkins University

    55

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    MORNING SESSIONS

    I

    9:30 A.M. VIRGINIA SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    THE PEACE OF PARIS, 1783

    Chairman: Howard Peckham, University of Michigan

    Myths of the Peacemaking of 1782-83 Richard B. Morris, Columbia University

    Comment

    Leonard Labaree, Yale University Alexander DeConde, University of California, Santa Barbara

    II

    9:30 A.M. MARYLAND SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Southern Historical Association

    Chairman: JosePh H. Parks, University of Georgia

    The Catholics Expand Through the Lower Mississippi Valley, 1800-1850

    Walter B. Posey, Agnes Scott College

    Comment

    The Right Reverend John Tracy Ellis, University of San Fran-cisco Thomas D. Clark, University of Kentucky

    56

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    m 9:30 A.M. AMBASSADOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    CIVIL RIGHTS FOR NEGROES

    Chairman: Dewey W. Grantham, Vanderbilt University

    The Enforcement of the Civil Rights Act of r875 lohn Hope Franklin, University of Chicago

    Civil Rights in Washington, D.C. Constance McLaughlin Green, Washington, D.C.

    Comment

    lames W. SilVer, University of Mississippi Elsie Lewis, Howard University

    IV

    9:30 A.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    NATION:ALISM-THEN AND NOW

    Chairman: Boyd C. Shafer, Macalester College

    Europe, 1848-1870 Otto Pjlanze, University of Minnesota

    Paris, 1918-1919 Arno I. Mayer, Princeton University

    Africa, 1946-1964 Philip D. Curtin, University of Wisconsin

    57

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    V

    9:30 A.M'. COTILLION ROOM~-NORTH, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Canadian Historical Association

    Sponsored by the Joint AHA-CHA Committee

    PROBLEMS OF THE CANADIAN ECONOMY Chairman: R. A. Preston, Royal Military College of Canada

    The Nineteenth Century W. T. Easterbrook, University of Toronto

    The Twentieth Century Hugh G. 1. Aitken, University of California, Riverside

    Comment

    Albert Faucher, Universite Laval

    VI

    9:30 A.M. COTILLION ROOM-SOUTH, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The History of Science Society

    SCIENCE AND REVOLUTIONARY POLITICS Chairman: Franklin L. Baumer, Yale Universit)1

    The French Revolution Charles C. Gillispie, Princeton University

    The German Revolutions of r848 Donald Fleming, Harvard University

    The Russian Revolution David loravsky, Brown University

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    VII

    9:30 A.M. THE FORUltf, SHOREHAM

    ENEMIES OF THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC Chairman: Andreas Dorpalen, Ohio State University

    The Left Wing Intellectuals and the Weimar Republic George L. M osse, University of Wisconsin

    Die Kampfzeit war die beste Zeit: The SA and SS Robert Koehl, University of Wisconsin

    Comment

    Raymond f. Sontag, University of California, Berkeley Andrew G. Whiteside, Queens CollefJe

    vm 9:30 A.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The Conference on Slavic and East European History. r _,

    RUSSIAN CONCEPTS OF THE STATE Chairman: Jesse D. Clarkson, Brooklyn College

    The Image of the State in Nineteenth-Century Russian Letters Sidney Monas, University of Rochester

    Bureaucracy and Freedom: The Theories of N. M. Korkunov George L. Yaney, University of Maryland

    Comment

    George V. Florovsky, Harvard Divinity School Robert F. Byrnes, Indiana University

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    IX

    9:30A.M. TUDOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Chapter of the International Commission for the History of Representative and Parliamentary Institutions

    Chairman: Caroline Robbins, Bryn Mawr College

    Military Origins of Medieval Representation Thomas N. Bisson, Brown University

    ,-

    The House of Lords Under the Early Stuarts Elizabeth R. Foster, Ursinus College

    Comment

    'Clllzfin I. Langmii;f.f, Stanford University Herbert Rowan, Rutgers University

    X

    9:30 A.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    ISLAM: YESTERDAY AND TODAY Chairman: Sidney N. Fisher, Ohio State University

    Islam: Religion, Power, and Civilization G. E. von Grunebaum, University of California, Los Angeles

    Arab Islam in the Modern Age

    0:ltrnest Dawn, University of Illinois

    Comment

    FranzRosenthal, Yale University Majid Khadduri, fohns Hopkins School of Advanced Interna-tional Studies

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    LUNCHEON CONFERENCES

    I

    I2:30 P.M. CONTINENTAL ROOM, SHERATON PARK

    SOCIETY OF AMERICAN ARCHIVISTS Chairman: W. Kaye Lamb, Public Archives of Canada

    Some Pros and Cons of the Access Problem C. P. Stacey, University of Toronto

    n I2:30 P.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY SECTION OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

    Chairman: John B. Wolf, University of Minnesota

    Comparative History: Pitfalls and Opportunities Cyril E. Black, Princeton University

    m I2: 30 P.M. BALTIMORE-ANNAPOLIS ROOM,

    SHERATON PARK

    CONFERENCE ON SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN HISTORY Chairman: Marc M. Szeftel, University of Washington

    Conflict and Change in Soviet Historical Scholarship S ergius O. Yakobson, Library of Congress

    IV

    I2:30 P.M. HERITAGE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    CONFERENCE ON ASIAN HISTORY Chairman: Stephen N. Hay, East Asian Research Center, Har-vard University

    Southeast Asian Studies and United States Foreign Policy .Kenneth P. Landon, Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State

    6r

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    V

    I2:30 P.M. TUDOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CHURCH HISTORY Chairman: J arosimJ J. Pelikan, Yale U niver sity

    Presidential Address: Theodosius' House: Reflections on the Pre-dicam~rit of the Church Historian

    Albert C. Outler, Southern Methodist University

    AFTERNOON SESSIONS

    I

    2:30 P.M. VIRGINIA SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    AMERICAN POLITICAL HISTORY Chairman: C. Vann Woodward, Yale University

    New Possibilities for American Political History Samuel P. Hays, University of Pittsburgh

    Comment

    Robert Dahl, Yale University William E. Leuch'tenburg, Columbia University Lee Benson, University of Pennsylvania

    II

    2:30 P.M. COTILLfoN ROOM-SOUTH, SHERATON PARK

    SOCIAL MOBILITY AND STATUS IN THE UNITED STATES: THREE CASE STUDIES

    Chairman: George W. Pierson, Yale University

    The Rural East: Patterns of American Community Development Philip L. White, University of Te.'ras

    The Industrial City: The Model of Paterson, N. J. Herbert G. Gutman, State University of New York at Buffalo

    The Mississippi Valley: Cairo-from River Town to Community Herman R. Lantz, S01ahern Illinois University

  • TUESDA Y, DECEMBER 29

    ill

    2:30 P.M. COTILLION ROOM-NORTH, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Economic History Association

    THE FIRST BANK OF THE UNITED STATES Chairman: Ralph W. Hidy, Harvard University

    The First Bank of the United States Revisited Stuart W. Bruchey, Michigan State University

    Hamilton, the Bank, and the National Economy ThomasP. Govan,New York University

    Comment

    Clarence Ver Steeg, Northwestern University E. James Ferguson, Queens College

    IV

    2:30 P.M. MARYLAND SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    THE NEW DEAL: ROOSEVELT AND CONGRESS Chairman: Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., Washington, D. C.

    Roosevelt and the Congressional Liberals Robert E. Burke, University of Washington

    The Conservative Coalition in Congress James Patterson, Indiana University

    Comment

    John M. Blum, Yale University

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    V

    2:30P.M. THE FORUM, SHOREHAM

    ROMANIZATION OF THE PROVINCES IN THE EARLY EM-PIRE

    Chairman: C. Bradford Welles, Yale University

    Introduction The Chairman

    The Evidence of Greece Elias Kapetanopoulos, University of Nebraska

    The Evidence of Egypt lohn F. Oates, Yale University

    The Role of the Army l. Frank Gilliam, Columbia University

    Conclusion The Chairman

    VI

    2:30 P.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The Latin American Conference

    THE JESUITS AFTER 1767 Chairman: lohn Francis Bannon, S. l.J Saint Louis University

    New Light on the Jesuit Expulsion Magmts Monter, University of California, Los Angeles

    Ecuador's Jesuit Legacy Adam SzaszdiJ University of Puerto Rico

    The Jesuits in New Granada, 1844-1850 l. Leon H elguera, V anderbilt University

    Comment Mathias C. Kiemen, Academy of American Franciscan History

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    vn 2:30 P.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    MEDIEVAL POPULATION TRENDS BEFORE THE BLACK DEATH

    Chairman: Sylvia L. Thrupp, University of Michigan

    The Case of Rural Tuscany David Herlihy, University of Wisconsin

    The Case of England Iosiah C. Russell, U niver sity of N ew Mexico

    Comment Iohn T. Krause, Rutgers University Robert S. Smith, Duke University

    vm 2:30 P.M. EMPIRE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    THE RISE OF THE WEST: AN APPRAISAL Chairman: Frederic C. Lane, Iohns Hopkins University

    Panel: Arthur F. Wright, Yale University Richard N. Frye, Harvard University Theodore.H. Von Laue, Washington University Stringfellow Barr, Rutgers University

    Comment William H. M cN eill, U niver sity of Chicago

    IX 2:30 P.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SEERATON PARK

    THE OCCUPATION OF JAPAN Chairman: Donald D. Iohnson, University of Hawaii

    Preparation for the Occupation Hugh Borton, Haverford College.

    Making the Japanese Constitution: A Harder Look Iustin Williams, University of Maryland .

    Comment Leonard Gordon, University of Wisconsin Robert A. Fearey, United States Department of State

    6S

  • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29

    X

    2:30 P.M. AMBASSADOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The Conference Group for Central European History

    FIFTY YEARS AFTER: THE WORLD WAR I ALLIANCE OF THE CENTRAL POWERS IN RETROSPECT

    Chairman: Robert A. Kann, Rutgers University

    The Political Cohesion of the Alliance Hajo Hotborn, Yale University

    The Military Cohesion of the Alliance Gordon A. Craig, Stanford University

    Comment Klaus Epstein, Brown University Gerhard L. Weinberg, University of Michigan

    Association Meetings

    4:30 P.M. SHERATON HALL, SHERATON PARK

    BUSINESS MEETING OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL AS-SOCIATION

    Presiding: Julian P. Boyd, Princeton University

    Report of the Executive Secretary Louis B. Wright. American Historical Association

    Report of the Managing Editor Henry R. Winkler, American Historical Review

    Report of the Treasurer Elmer Louis Kayser, George Washington University

    Decisions of the Council Other Business

    8:30 P.M. SHERATON HALL, SHERATON PARK

    GENERAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN HISTORICAL AS-SOCIATION

    Presiding: Louis B. Wright, American Historical Association

    Presidential Address : "A Modest Proposal to Meet an Urgent Need" JulianP. Boyd, Princeton University

    66

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    MORNING SESSIONS

    I

    9:30 A.M. PALLADIAN ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The Labor Historians

    SLAVERY AS A SYSTEM OF LABOR: SOME RECONSIDERA-TIONS

    Chairman: Benjamin Quarles, Morgan State College

    Was Slavery Dying Before the Cotton Gin? Melvin Drimmer, Spelman College, Atlanta University Center

    Slavery and the Founding Fathers Staughton C. L'Jmd, Yale University

    Shifting Responses Among White Americans to Negro Slave Rebel-lions

    Winthrop D. Jordan, University of California .. Berkeley

    Comment Stanley Elkins, Smith College Milton Cantor, University of Massachusetts

    n 9:30 A.Ai. THE FORUM, SHOREHAjt;f

    Joint Session with The Mississippi Valley Historical Association

    ISOLATIONISM, COLLECTIVE SECURITY, AND THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS

    Chairman: Thomas A. Bailey, Stanford University

    The Irreconcilables and the League: Alternatives to Collective Se-curity

    Ralph A. Stone, Afiami University

    Versions of the League of Nations in 19 I 9 Roland N. Stromberg, Uni~lersity of Maryland

    Comment Seth P. Tillman, United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Lawrence E. Gelfand, State University of Iowa

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    m 9:30 A.M. TUDOR ROOM, SHOREHAM

    THE SPANISH COLONIAL ECONOMY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

    Chairman: Arthur P. Whitaker, University of Pennsylvania

    Merchants and Monarchs: Interest Groups in Policy-Making In Eighteenth-Century Spain and New Spain

    Stanley I. Stein, Princeton University

    The United States and the Caribbean: Early Commercial Interests, 1776-1785

    Otto Pikaza, Indiana University

    Comment Earl Glauert, University of California, Los Angeles

    IV

    9:30 A.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Studies Association

    WORDS VERSUS THINGS IN· AMERICAN STUDIES Chairman: Brooke Hindle, New York University

    Words or Things in the History of American Science A. Hunter Dupree, University of California, Berkele)1

    Words or Things in American Religious History Robert T. Handy) Union Theological Seminary

    Comment Marshall W. Fishwick, University of Delaware Anthony N. B. Garvan) University of Pennsylvania

    68

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    V

    9:30 A.M. MARYLAND SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The National Council for the Social Studies

    Chairman: Isidore Starr, Queens College

    The Impossible Takes a Little Longer: The Role of History in the High School Curriculum

    Joseph R. Strayer, Princeton University

    Comment Angus J. Johnston, New Trier Township High School, Winnetka, Illinois Phyllis Sparks, DuVal Senior High School, Prince George's County, Maryland

    VI

    9:30 A.M. COTILLION ROOM-NORTH, SHERATON PARK

    THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAK-ING WORLD

    Chairman: Sir Denis Brogan, Peterhouse, Cambridge University

    The Genesis of the American Parochial School System Robert D. Cross, Columbia University

    The Reorganization of the Roman Catholic Church in Victorian Eng-land

    Josef L. Altholz, University of Minnesota

    Capital Investment, Economic Growth, and the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland

    Emmet Larkin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Comment J. B. Conacher, University of Toronto

    69

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    VII

    9:30 A.M. COTILLION ROOM-SOUTH> SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The Society for Italian History Studies

    THE ROOTS OF ITALIAN FASCISM Chairman: John M. Cammett, Rutgers University

    The Economic Grounds of Italian Expansion in the Twentieth Cen-tury

    Richard A. Webster, University of California> Berkeley

    Components of Fascist Ideology Max Salvadori> Smith College

    Sorel and Sorelismo Jack J. Roth, Roose'velt University

    Comment H. Stuart Hughes> Harvard University

    vm 9:30 A.M. VIRGINIA SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    J oint Session with The Conference on British Studies

    NINETEENTH-CENTURY IMPERIAL POLICY Chairman: Helen Taft Manning, Bryn Mawr College

    The Fear of American Intervention as a Factor in British Expansion K. A. MacKirdy> University of Waterloo

    Local Executives and Local Oligarchies in the British Empire, 1783-1820

    S. R. Mealing, Carleton University

    Comment C. S. Blackton, Colgate University W. B. Hamilton, Duke University

    70

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    IX

    9:30 A.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    REFORM IN THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE Chairman: John Badeau, Columbia University

    Under Selim III and Mahmud II :Stanford J. Shaw, Harvard University

    Under Muhammad Ali Helen A. R1'vlin, Unive1'sity of Maryland

    Under the Young Turks Dankwart A. Rustow, Columbia University

    Comment George Rentz, Stanford University

    X

    9:30 A.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    OVERSEAS EXPANSION OF ENGLAND Chairman: Wesley Frank Craven, Princeton University

    The Organization of Overseas Enterprise, 1575-r630 Theodore K. Raab, Harvard University

    The Newfoundland Company; A Study of Subscribers to a Colonizing Venture

    Gillian T. Cell, Durham, N. C.

    Comment Jacob Price, University of Michigan

    71

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    AFTERNOON SESSIONS

    I

    2:30 P.M. TUDOR, ROOM, SHOREHAM

    CLIO AND CONSERVATION Chairman: Paul W. Gates, Cornell University

    Historiography of Conservation Thomas LeDuc, Oberlin College

    The Tasks Ahead Elmo R. Richardson, University of Washington

    Comment Henry P. Caulfield, Jr., United States Department of Interior Lawrence Rakestraw, Michigan Technological University

    II

    2:30 P.M. DELAWARE SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    PEACE RESEARCH AND THE HISTORIAN Chairman: Bradford Perkins, University of Michigan

    The United States and the Movement for a Third Hague Peace Con-ference

    Calvin D. Davis, Duke University

    The Redefinition of National Mission in the Context of a Peaceful World

    William Neumann, Goucher College, and S. P. Oakley, Old Col-lege, Edinburgh

    England and the Hundred Years War: A Medieval Cold War Joel Rosenthal, State University of New York at Stony Brook

    Comment Arthur I. Waskow, Institttte for Policy Studies

    72

  • WEDNESDA YJ DECEMBER 30

    ill

    2:30 P.M. VIRGINIA SUITE} SHERATON PARK

    Joint Session with The American Military Institute

    TECHNOLOGY AND STRATEGY IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR Chairman: James D. Atkinson} Georgetown University

    The Impact of Undersea Warfare on Strategy Philip K. Lundeberg} Smithsonian Institution

    Technology and Tactics on the Eve of World War I Stephen E. Ambrose} Johns Hopkins University

    Comment Tibor Kerekes} Boston College John Miller} Jr.} Office of the Chief of Military History} H ead-quarters} Department of the Army

    IV

    2:30 P.M. COTILLION ROOM-NORTH} SHERATON PARK

    CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS IN MODERN SPAIN Chairman: Thomas F. McGann} University of Texas

    Isabel II and the Failure of Constitutional Monarchy in Spain, 1833-1868

    JohnE.Fagg}New York University

    Maura and the Crisis of Parliamentary Government, 1907-1923 Raymond Carr} New College} Oxford University

    The Failure of Constitutional Government in the Second Spanish Re-public

    Gabriel Jackson} Knox College

    Comment Stanley G. Payne} University of California} Los Angeles

    73

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    V

    2:30 P.M. DIPLOMAT ROOM, SHOREHAM

    THE CHURCH AND MEDIEVAL MEDITERRANEAN EXPAN-SION

    Chairman: Giles Constable, Harvard U niver sity

    "To set an edge on courage" : Crusader Status and Privileges fames A. Brundage, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

    Ecclesiae 'mercatorum and the Rise of Merchant Colonies Vsevolod Slessarev, University of Cincinnati

    The Church's Economic Role as a Frontier Institution: The Kingdom of Valencia

    R. Ignatius Burns, S. f., University of San Francisco

    VI

    2:30 P.M. THE FORUM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The Conference on Asian History

    PERSPECTIVES ON MEDIEVAL EURASIA Chairman: Denis Sinor, Indiana University

    Asia in the 7th to 9th Centuries: Unifying and Divisive Factors Woodbridge Bingham, University of California, Berkeley

    The Place of Islam in Eurasian History Marshall G. S. Hodgson, University of Chicago

    Comment S. D. Goitein, University of Pennsylvania

    74

  • WEDNESDA Y, DECEMBER 30

    VII

    2:30 P.M. COTIl-LION ROOM-SOUTH, SHERATON PARK

    1905 IN THE PERSPECTIVE OF 1917: THE ROLE OF THE RUSSIAN SOCIAL DEMOCRATS

    Chairman: Leopold H. H aimson, University of Chicago

    The Mensheviks Solomon Schwarz, Interuniversity Project on the History of the M enshevik Movement

    The Bolsheviks f. H. L. Keep, University of London

    Comment Robert M. Slusser, fohns Hopkins University fohn M. Thompson, Indiana University

    VIII

    2:30 P.M. MARYLAND SUITE, SHERATON PARK

    THE REVIEW REVIEWED

    Chairman: fohn W. Caughey, University of California, Los An-geles

    No formal paper will be presented. A panel composed of former Managing Editors, two experienced members of the Board of Editors, and the present Managing Editor will explain policies, answer ques-tions, and entertain suggestions and criticisms.

    Panel:

    Leo Gershoy, New York University W. Stull Holt, University of Washingtol1 Charles F. Mullett, University of lvlissouri Boyd C. Shafer, Macalester College Henry R. Winkler, American Historical Review

    75

  • WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30

    IX

    2:30P.M. PALLADIAN ROOM, SHOREHAM

    Joint Session with The American Jewish Historical Society and The American Committee for Irish Studies

    BEYOND THE MELTING POT: IRISH AND JEWISH SEPA-RATENESS IN AMERICAN SOCIETY

    Chairman: Moses Rischin, San Francisco State College

    The Irish William V. Shannon, Washington,D. C.

    The Jews Irving Greenberg, Yeshiva University

    Comments

    Daniel Patrick Moynihan, United States Department of Labor Marshall Sklare, Division of Scientific Research, American Jewish Committee .

    X

    2:30P.M. BLUE ROOM, SHOREHAM

    APPROACHES TO AMERICAN SOCIAL HISTORY Chairman: Sigmund Diamond, Columbia University

    The Behavioral Sciences and American Social History John Lankford, Wisconsin State College, River Falls

    New Approaches to Twentieth-Century Immigration History Timothy Smith, University of Minnesota

    Comment

    Rowland Berthoff, Washington University Lewis Coser, Brandeis University

  • SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS Monday, December 28

    Rooms 9:30A.M. 12:30 P.M. 2:30P.M. 7:00 P.M. Luncheons Dinners

    Diplomat Room Al)1erican Horn of Miss. Valley Shoreham Imperialism Africa Hist. Assn.

    Empire Room Local History 18th Century Shoreham Art

    Blue Room Social Justice, European Shoreham Modern Amer- Liberalism,

    ica 1860's

    Virginia Suite Bourbon Jacksonian Sheraton-Park France Politics

    Cotillion Room- India, 1740- Historical South 1860 Source Sheraton-Park Materials

    The Forum Central Amer- Reformation Shoreham ica History

    Baltimore- South-Eastern Annapolis Room Europe Sheraton-Park

    Delaware Suite Diplomacy, Farm Politics Sheraton-Park 3 Capitals, Since 1900

    1850-70

    Palladian Room History of Church Shoreham Education Historiography

    Cotillion Room- British History of North Interests in U. S. Musel.lms Sheraton-Park Africa

    Tudor Room Latin Ameri-Shoreham can Conference

    Frederick Room Phi Alpha Sheraton-Park Theta

    Maryland Suite Stalinism in Sheraton-Park Perspective

    Continental Medieval Room Academy Sheraton-Park

    Exhibit Hall #1 REGISTRATION Sheraton-Park

    Exhibit Hall til BOOK EXHIBITS Sheraton-Park

    77

  • SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS

    Tuesday, December 29

    Rooms 9:30A.M. 12:30 P.M. 2:30 P.M. General Luncheons Sessions

    Diplomat Room Russian State Modern Euro- Jesuits Shoreham pean Section After 1767

    ~---~.----

    Empire Room Rise of the Shoreham West

    ------.---Blue Room Islam Medieval Pop-Shoreham ulation Trends

    -Virginia Suite Peace of American PoUt Sheraton-Park Paris, 1783 ical History I Coti11ion Room- Science and U. S. Social I South Politics Mobility Sheraton-Park -_._------The Forum Weimar Roman Shoreham Republic Provinces

    Baltimore- Slavic and East Annapolis Room European Sheraton-Park I Conference

    i -.-----_ .. -

    Delaware Suite Nationalism Occupation Sheraton-Park ---I of Japan -- .-~-~.------ ---~~~-Cotillion Room- Canadian I First Bank I North Economy I of U. S. Sheraton-Park I

    ---~-- -~----~.--"--~

    Tudor Room Parliamentary Society of Shoreham Institutions Church History

    -------Maryland Suite Southern New Deal Sheraton-Park Hist. Assn.

    ~-------

    Continental Society of Room Sheraton- Am. Archivists Park

    Ambassador Civil Rights Central Room Shoreham Powers

    Heritage Room Conference on Shoreham Asian History

    --~.----

    Sheraton Hall Business Meet-Sheraton-Park ing 4:30 P.M.

    Sheraton Hall Presidential Sheraton-Park Address 8 :30

    P.M.

    Exhibit Hall #1 REG ISTRA TION Sheraton-Park

    Exhibit Hall {II BOOK EXHIBITS Sheraton Park -

  • SCHEDULE OF SESSIONS

    Wednesday, December 30

    Rooms 9:30 A.M. I 2:30 P.M. Diplomat Room American Medieval Shoreham Studies Mediterranean

    Expansion --

    Blue Room Ottoman American Social Shoreham Empire HistOl"y

    Virginia Suite 19th Century W. W. I Technology Sheraton-Park Imperialism and Strategy

    Cotillion Room-South Italian Russian Social Sheraton Park Fascism Democrats

    The Forum League of Medieval Shoreham Nations Eurasia

    Delaware Suite English Overseas Peace Research Sheraton-Park Expansion

    Palladian Room Slavery Melting Pot Shoreham

    --~-

    CotilIion Room-North R. C. Church in Modern Sheraton-Park English-Speaking Spain

    World

    Tudor Room Spanish Colonial Conservation Shoreham Economy

    Maryland Suite High School Review Sheraton-Park History Reviewed

    --------~-,~

    Exhibit Hall #! REGISTRATION Sheraton-Park

    Exhibition Hall #r BOOK EXHIBITS Sheraton-Park

    79

  • Abell, Aaron I., 46 Aitken, Hugh G. J., 58 Albertson, Dean, 50 Altholz, Josef L., 69 Ambrose, Stephen E., 73 Anguizola, Gustave A., 47 Arnakis, George, 48 Artz, Frederick B., 53 Atkinson, James D., 73

    Badeau, John, 71 Bailey, Thomas A., 67 Baker, Gladys L., 50 Baldwin, John W., 55 Bannon, John Francis, 64 Barr, Stringfellow, 65 Baumer, Franklin L., 58 Bearce, George, 47 Benson, Lee, 62 Berthoff, Rowland, 76 Bingham, Woodbridge, 74 Birn, Raymond F., 46 Bisson, Thomas N., 60 Bitton, R. Davis, 46 Black, Cyril E., 61 Blackton, C. 5., 70 Blum, John M., 63 Borton, Hugh, 65 Boyd, Julian P., 66 Brogan, Sir Denis, 69 Bruchey, Stuart W., 63 Brundage, James A .. 74 Bumgartuer, Louis E., 47 Burke, Robert E., 63 Burns, R. Ignatius, 74 Byrnes, Robert F., 59

    Cammett, John M., 70 Campbell, John C., 48 Cantor, Milton, 67 Cappon, Lester J., 54 Carosso, Vincent P., 50 Carr, Raymond, 73 Case, Lynn M., 48 Castagno, Alphonse, 52 Caughey, John W., 75 Caulfield, Henry P., Jr., 72 Cell, Gillian T., 71 Clark, Thomas D., 56 Clarke, James, 48 Clarkson, Jesse D., 59 Clegern, \Vayne M., 47 Cline, Howard, 50 Conacher, J. B., 69 Constable, Giles, 74 Coser, Lewis, 76 Craig, Gordon A., 66 Craven. Wesley Frank, 71 Cross, Robert D., 69 Curti, Merle, 55 Curtin, Philip D., 57

    Dalrl, Robert, 62 Dallin, Alexander, 55 Davis, Calvin D., 72 Davis, Natalie Zemon, 54 Dawn, C. Ernest, 60 DeConde, Alexander, 56 Diamond, Sigmund, 76 Dorpalen, Andreas, 59

    Index of Participants

    Drimmer, Melvin, 67 Dunbar, Willis F., 45 Dupree, A. Hunter, 68

    Easterbrook, W. T., 58 Elkins, Stanley, 67 Ellis, John Tracy, 56 Epstein, Klaus, 66

    Fagg, John E., 73 Faucher, Albert, 58 Fearey, Robert A., 65 Fehl, Philipp, 53 Fergnson, E. James, 63 Fisher, Sidney N., 60 Fishwick, Marshall W., 68 Fleming, Donald, 58 Florescu, Radu R., 48 Florovsky, George V., 59 Foster, Elizabeth R., 60 Fox, Melvin J., 50 Franklin, John Hope, 57 Frantz, Joe B., 50 Frye, Richard N., 65 Frykenberg, Robert E., 47 Furber, Holden, 47

    Galbraith, John 5., 49 Garvan, Anthony N. B., 68 Gatell, Frank Otto, 51 Gates, Paul W., 72 Gavin, Donald P., 46 Geanakoplos, Deno, 53 Gelfand, Lawrence E., 67 Gerhard, Dietrich, 49 Gershoy, Leo, 75 Gilliam, J. Frank, 64 Gillispie, Charles C., 58 Glauert, Earl, 68 Glick, G. Wayne, 53 Goitein, S. D., 74 Gokhale, B. G., 47 Gordon, Leonard, 65 Govan, Thomas P., 63 Grantham, Dewey W., 57 Green, Constance McLaughlin, 57 Greenberg, Irving, 76 Gregory, Robert G., 49 Griffith, William J., 47 Grimm, Harold J., 54 Gutman, Herbert G., 62

    80

    Haimson, Leopold H., 75 Hamilton, W. B., 70 Handy, Robert T., 68 Harrison, S. Lorenzo, 47 Hay, Stephen N., 61 Hays, Samuel P., 62 Helguera, J., Leon, 64 Herlihv, David, 65 Hess, Robert L., 52 Hidy, Ralph W., 63 Himmelfarb, Gertrude, 52 Hindle, Brooke, 68 Hodgson, Marshall G. 5., 74 Hofstadter, Richard, 49 Hoing, Willard L., 50 Holborn, Haio, 54, 66 Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 54 Holt, W. Stull, 75

  • Hughes, H. Stuart, 70 Hutchison, William R., 46

    Irwin, Graham W., 49

    Jackson, Gabriel, 73 J elavich, Barbara, 48 Johnson, Donald D., 65 Johnston, Angus J., 69 Joravsky, David, 58 Jordan, Winthrop D., 67

    Kann, Robert A., 66 Kapetanopoulos, Elias, 64 Kayser, Elmer Louis, 66 Keep, J. H. L., 75 Kerekes, Tibor, 73 Khadduri, Majid, 60 Kibre, Pearl, 55 Kiemen, Mathias C., 64 Koehl, Robert, 59 Kollman, Eric C., 49 Krause, John T., 65

    Labaree, Leonard, 56 Lamb, W. Kaye, 61 Landon, Kenneth P., 61 Lane, Frederic C., 65 Langford, John, 76 Langmuir, Gavin 1., 60 Lantz, Herman R., 62 Larkin, Emmet, 69 LeDuc, Thomas, 72 Leuchtenburg, William E., 62 Lewis, Elsie, 57 Loewenheim, Francis L., 52 Lowenthal, Richard, 55 Lowinsky, Edward E., 53 Lundeberg, Philip K., 73 Lynd, Staughton C., 67

    MacCaffrey, Wallace T., 45 Maekirdy, K. A., 70 Major, Russell, 46 Manning, Helen Taft, 70 Marcus, Harold G., 52 May, Ernest R., 45 Mayer, Arno J., 57 McCormick, Thomas, 45 McGann, Thomas F., 73 McKay, Vernon, 52 McKelvey, Blake, 45 McNeill, WiIIiam H., 65 Mealing, S. R., 70 Miles, Edwin A., 51 Miller, John, Jr., 73 Miller, Robert M., 46 Miller, William D., 46 Miirner, Maguus, 64 Monas, Sidney, 59 Moote, A. Lloyd, 46 Morgan, Edmund S., 54 Morris, Richard B., 56 Mosse, George L., 59 Mowry, George E., 55 Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 76 Mullett, Charles F., 75

    Neu, Irene D., 51 Neumann, William, 72 Nichols, Roy F., 54 Nove, Alec, 55

    81

    Oakley, S. P., 72 Oates, John F., 64 Olson, James C., 45 Outler, Albert C., 62

    Parks, Joseph H., 56 Patterson, James, 63 Pauek, Wilhelm, 53 Payne, Stanley G., 73 Peckham, Howard, 56 Pelikan, Jaroslav J., 53, 62 Perkins, Bradford, 72 Perkins, Van L., 50 Pflanze, Otto, 57 Pierson, George W., 62 Pikaza, Otto, 68 Pletcher, David M., 45 Posey, Walter Boo 56 Preston, R. A., 58 Price, Jacob, 7 I

    Quarles, Benjamin, 67

    Raab, Theodore K., 71 Rakestraw, Lawrence, 72 Redlich, Fritz, 51 Rentz, George, 71 Rich, Norman, 48 Richardson, Elmo R., 72 Rischin, Moses, 76 Rivlin, Helen A., 71 Robbins, Caroline, 60 Roberts, Henry L., 55 Rodabaugh, James H., 45 Rosenberg, Hans, 52 Rosenthal, Franz, 60 Rosenthal, Joel, 72 Roth, Jack .T., 70 Rothblatt, Sheldon, 49 Rowan, Herbert, 60 Rowe, John A., 49 Russell, Josiah c., 65 Ruiz, Ramon, 45 Rustow, Dankwart A., 71

    Salomone, A. W., 52 Salvadori, Max, 70 Schlebecker, John T., 50 Schlesinger, Arthur M., Jr., 63 Schmitt, Bernadotte, E., 48 Schwarz, Solomon, 75 Sellers, Charles G., 51 Shafer, Boyd C., 57, 75 Shannon, William V., 76 Shaw, Stanford J .. 71 Shipton, Gifford K., 5 I Silver, James W., 57 Sinor, Denis, 74 Sklare, Marshall, 76 Slessarev, Vsevolod, 74 Slusser, Robert M., 75 Smith, Gaddis, 49 Smith, Robert S., 65 Smith, Timothy, 76 Sontag, Raymond J., 59 Sparks, Phyllis, 69 Spitz, Lewis W., 54 Stacey, C. P., 61 Starr, Isidore, 69 Stein, Stanley J., 68 Stoianovich, Traian, 48 Strayer, Joseph R., 69 Stone, Ralph A., 67

  • Stromberg, Roland N., 67 Szaszdi, Adam, 64 Szeftel, Marc M., 61

    Thompson, John M., 75' Thrupp, Sylvia L., 65 Tillman, Seth P., 67 Trinterud, Leonard J., 54 Tucker, Louis L., 51

    Vandiver, Frank, 54 Ver Steeg, Oarence, 63 von Grunebaum, G. E., 60 Von Laue, Theodore H., 65

    Washburn, Wilcomh E., 51 Waskow, Arthur 1., 72 Webb, Robert K., 49

    82

    \Vebster, Richard A., 70 Weinberg, Gerhard L., 66 Welles, C. Bradford, 64 Whitaker, Arthur P., 68 White, Philip L., 62 \Vhitehill, Walter M., 51 Whiteside, Andrew G., 59 Williams, George H., 53 Williams, Justin, 65 Winkler, Henry R., 66, 75 Wolf, John B., 61 Woodward, C. Vann, 62 Wright, Arthur F., 65 Wright, Louis B., 66

    Yakobson, Sergius 0., 61 Yaney, George L., 59 Young, Marilyn, 45

  • Groups Meeting within, or Jointly with, The American Historical Association

    Agricultural History Society

    American Associatioll for State and Local History

    American Catholic Historical Association

    American Chapter of the International Commission for the History of Rep-resentative and Parliamentary Institutions

    American Jewish Historical Society

    American Military Institute

    American Society for Reformation Research

    American Society of Church History

    American Studies Association

    Canadian Historical Association

    Conference Group for Central European History

    Conference on Asian History

    Conference on British Studies

    Conference on Latin American History

    Conference on Slavic and East European History

    Economic History Association

    History of Education Society

    History of Science Society

    The Labor Historians

    Medieval Academy of America

    Mississippi Valley Historical Association

    Modern European History Section

    National Council for the Social Studies

    Phi Alpha Theta

    Society for Italian History Studies

    Society of American Archivists

    Southern Historical Association

  • Exhibitors Exhibitor

    American Association for State and Local History

    American University Press Services, Inc.

    Americana Corporation Appleton-Century-Crofts

    Atheneum Publishers

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    Barnes and Noble, Inc. Blaisdell Publishing Co.

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    Cambridge University Press

    Columbia University Press

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    Cornell University Press

    Council on Foreign Relations Thomas Y. Crowell Company

    Current History Denoyer-Geppert Co.

    The Dorsey Press

    Doubleday & Company, Inc.

    Encyclopaedia Britannica Folkways Records

    Free Press of Glencoe, A Division of the Macmillan Company

    Follett Publishing Company Grosset & Dunlap, Inc. G. K. Hall & Co. C. S. Hammond and Company Harcourt, Brace & \Vorld, Inc.

    Representatives

    William T. Alderson, Jr.

    Helen B. Parker Thomas L. McFarland

    Walter J. Green Ellis H. Rosenberg Marc Friedlaender Robert Zenowich Margaret Ann Roth Alexander M. Butman John D. Wieboldt Charles H. Christensen Charles May William H. Y. Hackett, Jr. Grace Shaw Cecilia Smith Robert J. Quinn John F. Schweiker Sally Dougan Miriam Firestone Joel Novak Bernard Gronert George W. Butler C. C. Cameron Mark Sexton Andrew E. Svenson, J r. Grace Darling John T. Hawes Philip Winsor Neysa S. Hebbard O. E. Geppert L. H. Rogers Frank G. Griffin William E. O. Barnes Dennis McDonald James Backas George H. Callesis Moses Asch John Vrotsos George D. McCune Chris Kentera Herbert Cohen Robert Browning Martin Levin James S. McGreevy Robert W. Patton Tom Williamson James Burke

    Location If

    55

    57 60

    34

    13

    23

    39

    31

    19

    7

    14

    40

    20

    68 28

    66 16

    47

    22

    61 64 15 25

  • Exhibitors Exhibitor

    Harper & Row, Publishers

    Harvard University Press

    D. C. Heath and Company

    Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.

    The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace

    Houghton Mifflin Company

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    The Library of Congress J. B. Lippincott Company

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    Microcard Editions, Inc. National Archives New American Library of World Literature

    W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

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    85

    Representatives

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    Location {f

    10

    9

    27

    18

    43

    53

    24

    65 26

    21

    35

    32

    69 70

    62

    8

    2

    59

    63

  • Exhibitors

    Exhibitor

    Princeton University Press Quadrangle Books, Inc.

    Rand McNally & Co. Random House-Alfred A. Knopf Henry Regnery Company

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    86

    Representatives

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    Joel E. Saltzman Walton H. Rawls Felix Morrow Roger W. Shugg William A. Wood Helen L. MacDonald John P. Thurin Victor Reynolds Gwynne K. Stallings David G. Sparks Jay F. Wilson Malcolm Magruder W. L. Gum David Horne Horace Coward

    Location if

    33 3

    45 17 38

    42 30 12

    54

    41

    50 29

    51 49 II

    37

    68 5 I

  • Service Center for Teachers of History

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  • RUSSIA IN REVOLUTION: SELECTED READINGS IN RUSSIAN DOMESTIC HISTORY SINCE 1855

    Edited by STANLEY W. PAGE, The City College of New York

    Through this compilation of exciting readings, Professor Page provides a living picture of what the people of Russia experienced and suffered in the process of participating in their country's relatively abrupt changeover from medieval torpor to modern ways. There are well-written introductions pre-ceding each of the five sections in the book, many eye-witness accounts, as well as interpretive passages by contemporaries, by latter-day historians, or by other writers.

    November,1964 Paper 350 pages

    AN INTRODUCTION TO RUSSIAN HISTORY AND CULTURE, Fourth Edition

    By IV AR SPECTOR, The University of Washington

    In this revised and expanded edition of his standard textbook, Professor Spector brings the history of the Soviet period up to date.

    NEW ••• section in Chapter 14 comments upon recent Soviet literature insights into the crucial Kronstadt Revolt of 1921 material in the final chapter, retitled "The Khrushchev Era, 1956-1964" completely reset, and up-dated introductory section on the geography and ethnic composition of the Soviet Union.

    January) 1965 Illustrated 520 pages

    THE DYNAMICS OF NATIONALISM: Readings in Its Meaning and Development edited by LOUIS L SNYDER Published, Paper, 400 pages, $4.95

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    88

  • Western Civilization to 1660 ]. Kelley Sowards, Wichita State University

    For the introductory course in western civilization. Professor Sowards provides the student with a cultural orientation in the 'histOry of that civilization. Written in a clear and straightforward style and organized in a coherent, easily followed chronology.

    Student's Workbook Instructor's Manual

    753 pages $8.00

    ~odern ~urope, 1660-1945 Roger L. Williams, Antioch College

    Profess~r Williams' book emphasizes cultural and in-tellectual history within a political framework. "Modern Europe, 1660-1945 is written with verve and eloquence, sharply focused, and intelligently illustrated."-

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    646 pages $8.00

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  • NEW TITLES IN HISTORY

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    FLOWERS FOR THE KING: THE EXPEDI-TION OF RUIZ AND PAVON AND THE FLORA OF PERU by Arthur Robert Steele. A fas-cinating account of the perils and rewards of hunting for rare plants in eighteenth-century South America. Illustrated.

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    THE DIARY AND JOURNAL OF RICHARD CLOUGH ANDERSON, JR. edited by Alfred Tischendorf and E. Taylor Parks. The first U. S. minister to an independ-ent Latin American nation, An-derson of Colombia played a significant roll in building the foundation of U. S.-Latin Amer-ican relations. $7.50

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