NASSH 2015 Program - College of Arts and Sciences

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CONVENTIONPROGRAM
Friday,May22
9:00‐4:00
Senate Room
Executive Council meeting
9:00‐4:00
Executive Conference Room Publication Board meeting
9:00‐2:00
Iron Arrow Room
Book Awards Committee meeting
9:00‐4:00
3 Floor Foyer
Registration
3:00‐5:30
Ballroom West
Book Display
6:30‐9:00
Lakeview Area
Wine and Cheese Welcome
rd
Saturday,May23
8:00 Ballroom East Opening and Welcome
Dan Nathan, NASSH President
Don Spivey, Conference Manager
8:30‐10:05 PaperSessionsA/1‐5
8:30‐10:05
Senate Room
Session A / 1
WOMEN’S CHALLENGES: WOMEN WHO CHALLENGE THROUGH SPORT
Moderator: Aaron Baker, Arizona State University
Debra A. Shattuck, University of Iowa, Myth‐Making and Memory: Nine‐
teenth‐Century Female Baseball Players in Popular Culture
Jean Williams, De Monfort University, Miss Ludy and The Paris Women’s Olympic Games in 1922 Robert Pruter, Lewis University, Chicago’s American Tournament: Women’s Basketball on Semi‐Par with Men in the 1930s
Amanda K. Curtis, Lake Erie College Isn’t it Ironic?: The Threat of Female Physicality in Physical and Military Training at West Point, 1976‐1980 1
Saturday, May 23, 8:30‐10:05
8:30‐10:05
Iron Arrow Room
Session A / 2
THE PRESS, RADIO, AND TELEVISION: THE MAKING OF SPORT Moderator: Jordan Goldstein, Western University
Tom Webb, University of Portsmouth, A Career in Football Refereeing: W. P. Harper and the Beginnings of Mass Media Attention
John Petrella, Western University, A Man of Many Hats: Dick Beddoes at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics John Valentine, MacEwan University, The 1962 Grey Cup Fiasco: Cultural Citizenship, television, and Canadian Football 8:30‐10:05
Activities Room North
Session A / 3
MEMORY AND RESISTANCE: LOCATING ABORIGINAL IDENTITIES IN SPORT
Moderator: Victoria Paraschak, University of Windsor
Robert S. Kossuth, University of Lethbridge, Intersections and Contact Zones: ‘Sport’ as a site for Aboriginal and settler relations in turn‐of‐the‐
twentieth century Lethbridge, Alberta
Brandon M. Long and Jimmy Smith, Niagara University, The Spirit Soars On: Past, Present, and Future for the Athletic Members of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium
Mary G. McDonald, Georgia Institute of Technology, Across Time and Space: Billy Mills, Public Memory, and Native American Resistance
Christine M. O’Bonsawin, University of Victoria, Authentic Indigenous Identi‐
ties: The 2010 Indigenous Youth Gathering and the Politics of Representation 8:30‐10:05
Activities Room South
Session A / 4
SCIENCE, MEDICINE, SPORT
Moderator: Ian Ritchie, Brock University
Michael Krüger, Universität Münster, History of Sports Medicine in Germany Cassandra Wells, University of British Columbia, A ‘Good Enough’ Method: The Barr Body Test and the IOC Camille M. Croteau, California State University, Fullerton, From Harmful to Healthy: The Modernization of Pathologies for Elite Female Athletes within the IOC's Medical Commission, 1969‐2002
2
Saturday, May 23, 10:05‐10:20
8:30‐10:05
Ballroom East
Session A / 5
The Making of Men Across the Ages
Moderator: Richard Kimball, Brigham Young University
Tosh Warwick, University of Huddersfield, “For the benefit of the men who had done so much for them”: Middlesbrough’s steel magnates and the patronage of company‐led sporting provision at Dorman Long, 1880‐1934
Andy Doyle, Winthrop University, The 1899 Sewanee Iron Men and the Incongruous Diversity of the New South Elite
Jared Walters, Western University, The south, television, and death at 200mph. An examination into the influence of southern masculinity, hon‐
our, and technological changes on violence and safety in 1980s NASCAR
Commentator: Richard Kimball, Brigham Young University 10:05‐10:20 Lakeview Area
Refreshment Break
10:20‐11:55PaperSessionsB/6‐10
10:20‐11:55 Senate Room
Session B / 6
CRIME AND CRIMINALIZATION IN SPORT
Moderator: Camille Croteau, California State University, Fullerton Steven Riess, Northeastern Illinois University, Al Capone, the Chicago Mob and Dog Racing in Chicago, 1926‐1933
Tolga Ozyurtcu, University of Texas at Austin, The Short Goodbye: Scandal, Politics, and The End of Muscle Beach Macintosh Ross, Western University, Professional Boxers and Domestic Abuse: An Exploratory Essay Victoria Felkar, University of British Columbia, Physical Culture in Prisons: The Resilience of Correlating Crime with the Muscular Body 10:20‐11:55 Iron Arrow Room
Session B / 7
TRANSFORMING AND BRANDING FITNESS AND HEALTH
Moderator: Alison Wrynn, California State University, Longbeach
3
Saturday, May 23, 10:20‐11:55
Adam Copeland, Pennsylvania State University, Pornography and Physical Culture: How Bernarr Macfadden Connected Health with Sex and Why the Story Stuck
Ben Pollack, University of Texas at Austin, Vic Tanny and the Beginning of the Commercial Gym Business, 1912‐1985 Dominic Morais, University of Texas at Austin, Bulking Up Brand Commu‐
nity: Strength & Health Magazine; 1932 ‐1941 Rudolf Müllner, University of Vienna, From “Sport‐for‐all” to Quantified‐
Self – The Transformation of the Physical Fitness Movement in Central Europe since 1970
10:20‐11:55 Activities Room North
Session B / 8
GETTING THE TEXT MESSAGE: UNDERSTANDING SPORT THROUGH LITERATURE AND FILM
Moderator: Theresa Walton‐Fisette, Kent State University
Malcolm MacLean, University of Gloucestershire, Reading rebellion and racist rugby: literature, prop theory and the Springboks in Aotearoa/New Zealand
Douglas A. Brown, University of Manitoba, Sport Documentary and Mid‐cen‐
tury Modernism: The National Film Board of Canada in the 1950s and 1950s
Ari de Wilde, Eastern Connecticut State University, “Six Day Racing In The Films: Visualizing Class and Gender Through A Forgotten Pastime”
Commentator: Theresa Walton‐Fisette, Kent State University 10:20‐11:55 Activities Room South
Session B / 9
REASSESSING RACE IN THE HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN SPORT
Moderator: Ornella Nzindukiyimana, Western University
Damion Thomas, Smithsonian National Museum, ‘Making’ a Way Out of No Way’: What’s the role of sports in the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture?
Derrick E. White, Dartmouth College, Sporting Congregations: Rethinking the History of Black College Football!
Cat Ariail, University of Miami, “Olympian Quintessence:” Wilma Rudolph and Female Athletic Iconicity 4
Saturday, May 23, 10:20‐11:55
Susan J. Rayl, SUNY‐Courtland, Robert L. “Bob” Douglas: “Aristocracy on the Court, an Architect of Men” 10:20‐11:55 Ballroom East
Session B / 10
SPORTING CULTURE IN CUBA
Moderator: Wanda Wakefield, SUNY College at Brockport
Michael T. Wood, Texas Christian University, ¡Cánibal Cánibal, Sis Bum Bah! ¡Atlético! ¡Atlético! ¡Atlético! ¡Rah! ¡Rah! ¡Rah!: Club Atlético de Cuba, American Football, and Identity Lauren Osmer, University of Texas at Austin, A Run For Their Money: Baseball and Cuban Nationalism During the Second American Occupation 1906‐1909 Anju Reejhsinghani, University of Wisconsin‐Stevens Point, Boxing as Physi‐
cal Culture in 1940s Cuba
Commentator: Wanda Wakefield, SUNY College at Brockport
12:00‐12:55 Grand Ballroom Center
Lunch
1:00‐2:00 Keynote Address Ballroom East
JOHN R. BETTS ADDRESS Susan Cahn, State University of New York at Buffalo, The Paradox of Progress: Thoughts on Gender and Sport in a 'Postfeminist Era’ 2:05‐3:45
2:05‐3:45
PaperSessionsC/11‐14
Senate Room
Session C / 11
SPORT: THE DEFINING MOMENT
Moderator: Mark Dyreson, Pennsylvania State University
Richard Kimball, Brigham Young University, Extreme Sports and Celebrity in the Nineteenth Century: The Case of Steve Brodie, Bridge Jumper
Colleen English, Marshall University, Women in Roller Derby: Athletes or Entertainers? 5
Saturday, May 23, 2:05‐3:45
Kim Beckwith, University of Texas at Austin, Mabel Rader: Never a Compet‐
itor, but Always a Champion
Kieren McEwan, University of Portsmouth, The Anti‐Competitor as Ath‐
lete? An Evolutionary Historical Analysis of Mountain Biking and its Adher‐
ence to Guttmann’s Classification of Modern Sport 2:05‐3:45
Iron Arrow Room
Session C / 12
MONEY MATTERS IN SPORT
Moderator: Brad J. Congelio, Keystone College
Brett L. Abrams, Independent Scholar, From Hogettes to Cash Cows: Wash‐
ington Redskins Fans over the Last Thirty Years
Scott R. Jedlicka, Washington State University, The Olympic Games as Inter‐
national Political Signal: A Study of Japan’s Olympic Experiences
Stephen R. Wenn, Wilfrid Laurier University, A Long and Winding Road: IOC/USOC Relations in the Post‐Amateur Sports Act Era 2:05‐3:45
Activities Room North
Session C / 13
SPORT FOR DEVELOPMENT, SPORT FOR HOPE: THEORY AND ANALYSIS
Moderator: Maureen M. Smith, Sacramento State University
Simon Darnell, University of Toronto, The Power of History and a History of Power: Theorizing the History of Sport‐for‐Development
Russell Field, University of Manitoba, A history of sport‐for‐good: Recasting the origins of sport/historicizing sport‐ for‐development
Victoria Paraschak, University of Windsor, Fostering Hope through Sport His‐
tory: A Strengths and Hope Perspective on Elite Aboriginal Athletes and Builders Commentator: Maureen M. Smith, Sacramento State 2:05‐3:45
Activities Room South
Session C / 14
POLITICS, IDENTITY, AND THE ROLE OF SPORT IN THE INTERWAR PERIOD
Moderator: Linda Borish, Western Michigan University
Paul Baxa, Ave Maria University, Death at the Autodrome: Italian Fascism and the Tragedies of the 1928 Italian Grand Prix Auto Race
6
Sunday, May 24, 3:45‐4:00
David Dee, De Montford University, Leicester, “A Game Was More Than A Game” – Sport, Integration and Interwar British Jewry
Ofer Idels, Tel Aviv University, Zionism and Olympism: the Jewish commu‐
nity in mandatory Palestine and the XI Olympiad, 1931‐1936
Florian Hemme, University of Texas at Austin, To go or not to go: A historio‐
ethical exploration of the 1936 Olympic boycott debate
3:45‐4:00
Lakeview Area
Break
4:00‐5:30
Ballroom East
NASSH Business Meeting 7:00
Learning Center
NASSH Film
Happy Valley: The Story Behind the Penn State Scandal
Directed by Amir Bar‐Lev
Sunday,May24
8:30‐10:05 PaperSessionsD/15‐19
8:30‐10:05 Senate Room
Session D / 15
IDEOLOGY AND THE OLYMPIC GAMES
Moderator: Robert K. Barney, Western University
Tom Rorke, Pennsylvania State University, Demonstrating American Prow‐
ess: sporting pastimes, Olympic football, and the Los Angeles Games of 1932
Matthew P. Llewellyn and John Gleaves, California State University, Fuller‐
ton, An ‘Inconsistent’ Apostle of Amateurism: Avery Brundage, a Revision‐
ist Interpretation
Adam Berg, Pennsylvania State University, Suburban Environmentalists: Protect Our Mountain Environment and the 1976 Denver Olympics 7
Sunday, May 24, 8:30‐10:05
8:30‐10:05
Iron Arrow Room
Session D / 16
THE POLITICS OF EARLY CANADIAN HOCKEY
Moderator: Craig Greenham, University of Windsor
Jordan Goldstein, Western University, Canada 1867‐1892: Political Theory, Nationalized Sport, and the Stanley Cup Stacey L. Lorenz, University of Alberta, Augustana Campus, “Wild Woolly Westerners Win”: Regional Rivalry, Community Identity, and the 1896 Stanley Cup Hockey Challenges
Commentator: Craig Greenham, University of Windsor
8:30‐10:05
Activities Room North
Session D / 17
SPORT AND EXERCISE IN WORLD WAR I ERA INSTITUTIONS
Moderator: Macintosh Ross, Western University
Rich Loosbrock, Adams State University, The Americanism Program: Base‐
ball, the American Legion, and Building Patriotism in America’s Youth Mickey Phillips, University of Texas at Austin, Walter Camp, Physical Cul‐
ture and America’s Preparation for World War I Ryan Swanson, University of New Mexico, The Gettysburg Address of American Sport Culture Courtney van Waas, Western University, “Sheepskin or Pigskin?”: The Chris‐
tian Reformed Church in North America and the issue of Sabbath Sports 8:30‐10:05
Activities Room South
Session D / 18
COMMUNITY FORMATION AND RACIAL AUTHENTICITY IN 1970S AMERI‐
CAN SPORTING CULTURE
Moderator: Sarah K. Fields, University of Colorado Denver
Aaron L. Haberman, University of Northern Colorado, American Individual‐
ism and Communitarianism during the 1970s Running Boom
Adam J. Criblez, Southeast Missouri State University, “The Dark Days”: On‐
Court Violence and Black Masculinity in the Late‐ 1970s National Basketball Association
Thomas Oates, University of Iowa, Heaven is a Playground? Basketball, Urban Space, and Racial Politics in the 1970s
Commentator: Sarah K. Fields, University of Colorado Denver
8
Sunday, May 24, 8:30‐10:05
8:30‐10:05
Ballroom East
Session D / 19
INTO THE STADIUM
Moderator: Robert Trumpbour, Pennsylvania State University
Connie F. Sexauer, University of Wisconsin, From a Park, to a Stadium, to a Little Piece of Heaven Christopher Brown, Emory University, Colossus of the North: A Soccer Sta‐
dium for the Nation in the Brazilian Amazon, 1958‐1970
Josh Adams and Phil Hatlem, Saint Leo University, Olympic Stadium Legacy–
To Preserve or Move Forward? Commentator: Robert Trumpbour, Pennsylvania State University
10:05‐10:20 Lakeview Area
Refreshment Break
10:20‐11:55PaperSessionsE/20‐23
10:20‐11:55 Senate Room
Session E / 20
MUSCLES, MOUNTAINS AND MOVIES: AN EXAMINATION OF STRENGTH, WEAKNESS AND GENDER IN 20TH CENTURY CINEMA Moderator: John Gleaves, California State University, Fullerton
David Chapman, Seattle Washington, The Good Giant: Physical Strength and Fascist Politics in the Films of Maciste John Fair, University of Texas, Athena: Bodybuilding Breakthrough or Box Office Bomb?
Ingrid Runggaldier, Bolzano, Italy, “Second on The Rope” or “A Comrade To Protect?” Women In Early Mountain Films
Commentator: John Gleaves, California State University, Fullerton
10:20‐11:55 Iron Arrow Room
Session E / 21
BREAKING IN, NOT BROKEN: ATHLETES CONFRONT THE COLOR BARRIER
Moderator: David K. Wiggins, George Mason University
Nathan Cardon, University of Toronto, Scarborough, ‘Clear Out If You Value Your Life’: African American Cyclists and Black Working Class International‐
ism in an Age of Empire, 1895‐1905 9
Sunday, May 24, 10:20‐11:55
Louis Moore, Grand Valley State University, Race Man or Race Menace?: George Dixon and the Meaning of Black Athlete Success
Ornella Nzindukiyimana, Western University, “If you Keep Winning, Larry, They’ll Have to Give you a Chance”: Larry Gains’ pursuit of the World Heavyweight Title, 1927‐1932
Michael E. Lomax, Independent Scholar, Changing the Way They Do Busi‐
ness: Jackie Robinson, Integration and the Origins of Organizational Culture in Organized Baseball
10:20‐11:55 Activities Room North
Session E / 22
RECONSIDERING THE DEMISE OF THE FEMALE TRADITION IN PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Moderator: Bieke Gils, University of British Columbia
Patricia Vertinsky, University of British Columbia, Dancing in New Directions Alison M. Wrynn, California State University, Fullerton, Women First: The Female Tradition in English Physical Education, 1880‐1980: Therapeutic Exercise at Bedford College
Catriona M. Parratt, University of Iowa, On the Playing Fields of Scun‐
thorpe, and Other Points North: Perspectives on PE, Sport, and School, 1960‐1980.
Commentator: Bieke Gils, University of British Columbia
10:20‐11:55 Activities Room South
Session E / 23
DISPUTES IN HOCKEY: LABOUR, MONEY, CULTURE
Moderator: Stacey Lorenz, University of Alberta, Augustana Campus
J. Andrew Ross, University of Guelph, “Tied up for life”: Labour‐Capital Relations in Professional Ice Hockey,1910‐46
John Wong, Washington State University, Of Tigers and Man(agement): The 1925 Labor Strike of the NHL Hamilton Club Dan Covell, Western New England University and Claude Catapano, Horace Mann School, “Whatever this intangible spirit is”: Hockey and institutional culture at Bowdoin College, 1956‐1973
Craig Greenham, University of Windsor, Rethinking Lindros: Sorting through the Legacy of the NHL’s “Next One” 10
Sunday, May 24, 12:00‐12:55
12:00‐12:55 Grand Ballroom Center
1:05‐2:45
1:05‐2:45
Lunch
PaperSessionsF/24‐27
Senate Room
Session F/ 24
THE HISTORY OF ANTI‐DOPING
Moderator: Cassandra Wells, University of British Columbia
Jan Todd, University of Texas at Austin, “A Scandal and a Warning”: North American Responses to the 1983 Pan American Games Doping Control
Ian Ritchie, Brock University, Kitchen Table Policy: The ‘Caracas Fiasco’ and the Beginning of Anti‐Doping in Canada
Thomas M. Hunt, University of Texas at Austin, “Kangaroo Court” and Con‐
stitutional Threat: The Recent History of Anti‐Doping Regulation in the U.S.
Daniel Rosenke, University of Texas at Austin, Autonomy and Biopower in the Anti‐Doping Establishment: A ‘Rogue Agent of Governmentality’
1:05‐2:45
Iron Arrow Room
Session F / 25
ENGAGING WITH THE SILVER SCREEN: SPORT HISTORIANS REFLECT ON FILMMAKING AS DISSEMINATION
Moderator: Russell Field, University of Manitoba
Carly Adams, University of Lethbridge, On being consumed: Documentary film and the academic experience Chuck Korr, University of Missouri – St. Louis, From Research Project to Feature Film
Tara Magdalinski, University College Dublin, Won’t someone please think of the University? Animating the Sanctity of Sport Commentator: Malcolm MacLean, University of Gloucestershire
1:05‐2:45
Activities Room North
Session F / 26
THE REVOLT OF THE BLACK ATHLETE: POLITICS, POPULAR CULTURE, AND RELIGION
Moderator: Damion Thomas
Gregory Kaliss, Dickinson College, Was The Revolution Televised? Popular Culture and the Black Athlete Revolt 11
Sunday, May 24, 1:05‐2:45
John Matthew Smith, Georgia Tech, The King of the World: Muhammad Ali, Africa, and the Making of a Global Icon
Aram Goudsouzian, University of Memphis, “A Man Who Knows His God”: Kareem Abdul‐Jabbar and the Cultural Politics of Race and Religion
Commentator: Damion Thomas
1:05‐2:45
Activities Room South
Session F / 27
SPORT AND COMMUNITY IDENTITY
Moderator: Robert S. Kossuth, University of Lethbridge
Laura Troiano, Rutgers University, Newark, Crafting the Language of Iden‐
tity, Community, and Nostalgia
Matthew R. Yeazel, Anne Arundel Community College, and Christopher J. Yeazel, George Washington University, Maybe Everyone is Wrong: Revisit‐
ing Who is to Blame for the Dodgers Leaving Brooklyn
Samuel O. Regalado, California State University, Stanislaus, In the Cheap Seats: Fandom, Culture, and Community Baseball, 1930‐1960 Commentator: Robert S. Kossuth, University of Lethbridge
2:45‐3:00
Lakeview Area
3:05‐4:30
3:05‐4:30
Break
PaperSessionsG/28‐31
Senate Room
Session G / 28
ACADEMIC IDENTITIES, HISTORIOGRAPHY, AND METHODOLOGIES: RESPONSES TO THE 2014 JOURNAL OF AMERICAN HISTORY’S “STATE OF THE FIELD: SPORTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY”
Moderator: Lindsay Parks Pieper, Lynchburg College Maureen M. Smith, Sacramento State, Will the Real Sport Historians Please Stand Up? Academic Musings on Territories and Truths
Andrew D. Linden, Pennsylvania State University, Tempering the Dichoto‐
mous Flame: Social History, Cultural History, and Postmodernism(s) in the Journal of Sport History, 1974‐2014
Sarah K. Fields, University of Colorado Denver, Sport Studies: The Model for the 21st Century University Commentator: Catriona M. Parratt, University of Iowa
12
Sunday, May 24, 3:05‐4:30
3:05‐4:30
Iron Arrow Room
Session G / 29
RACE AND UNEVEN PLAYING FIELDS: AFRICAN AMERICAN ATHLETES AND THE QUEST TO REALIZE EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES IN SPORT
Moderator: Charles H. Martin, University of Texas at El Paso Jeffrey T. Sammons, New York University, Golf’s Ultimate Crossover Artist: James R. “Jimmie” Devoe and the Bridging of the Game’s Racial Divide
David K. Wiggins, George Mason University, Kenny Washington, Woody Strode, and the Re‐integration of the National Football League
Mark Dyreson, Pennsylvania State University, Miami, 1969: No Black Gloves, No Racial Protests—A Major Surprise Commentator: Don Spivey, University of Miami
3:05‐4:30
Activities Room North
Session G / 30
BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS: COURTSIDE FOR US MINOR LEAGUE AND COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Moderator: Robert Pruter, Lewis University
Arthur Banton, Purdue University, The 1949‐50 CCNY Beavers: The street game arrives at the top of the mountain
Chris Elzey, George Mason University, The Game That Remade the Big Five: Penn vs. Villanova, January 1969 Margaret C. Keiper, Central Michigan University, The NBA’s D‐League: The End of a Jagged Path for Minor League Basketball Chad Carlson, Hope College, Before the Madness: The Inauspicious Start of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship Tournament
3:05‐4:30
Activities Room North
Session G / 31
DEFENDING THE AMERICAN WAY OF LIFE: AMERICAN SPORT DIPLOMACY DURING THE COLD WAR
Moderator: Heather Dichter, Ithaca College
Toby C. Rider, California State University, FullertonPresenting the American Way of Life: Sport and U.S. Cold War Propaganda Kevin B. Witherspoon, Lander University, Race and Diplomacy in the Cold War: Mal Whitfield, ‘an Outstanding Representative of America’
13
Monday, May 25, 8:30‐10:05
Brad J. Congelio, Keystone College, A Group of Nobodies in Los Angeles: The Political and Propaganda Activities of the Ban The Soviets Coalition
Commentator: Heather Dichter, Ithaca College
5:00‐6:30
Senate Room
Graduate Student Panel 9:00
Graduate Student Social Monday,May25
8:30‐10:05 PaperSessionsH/32‐35
8:30‐10:05
Senate Room
Session H / 32
FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY
Moderator: Iain Adams, University of Central Lancashire
Heather L. Dichter, Ithaca College, “Gracious Hosts in the Land of the Tulips”: Dutch Football and NATO during the Cold War
George N. Kioussis, University of Texas at Austin, A Chance Gone Begging? U.S. Soccer Diplomacy and the Cultural Cold War Erik Nielsen, Macquarie University, Soccer and Australia’s Vietnam War: The Case of the 1967 Friendly Nations Tournament
Commentator: Iain Adams, University of Central Lancashire
8:30‐10:05
Iron Arrow Room
Session H / 33
COLD WAR SPORT AND CULTURAL POLITICS
Moderator: Toby Rider, California State University, Fullerton
Dennis Gildea, Springfield College, Quitting Football: Calming Commie Hys‐
teria, 1951‐52 Emese Ivan, St. John’s University, Rewriting (Sport) History? Hungarian Par‐
ticipation in the 1956 Melbourne Olympics
14
Monday, May 25, 8:30‐10:05
Jean Lévesque, Université du Québec à Montréal, Downfall without Decline?: The End of the Cold War in Soviet International Hockey, 1987‐1992 Katelyn Aguilar, University of Connecticut, To Win One for the Gipper: Football and the Shaping of Ronald Reagan 8:30‐10:05
Activities Room North
Session H / 34
SPORT AND SCANDAL IN AMERICAN HISTORY
Moderator: Dan Nathan, Skidmore College
Murry Nelson, Pennsylvania State University, The Big Ten Basketball Sea‐
son of 1966‐67: A Year to Forget Al Figone, Humboldt State University, Hypocrisy: An Integral Part of The Professional Franchises’s and NCAA’s Strategy To Prevent Sports Gambling in New Jersey
Ronald A. Smith, Pennsylvania State University, Lesbians, the Culture of Athletic Silence, and the PSU Sandusky Scandal Commentator: Dan Nathan, Skidmore College
8:30‐10:05
Activities Room South
Session H / 35
ORGANIZATIONS AND AMERICAN SPORT HISTORY: DIVERSE APPROACHES AND PERSPECTIVES
Moderator: Chris Elzey, George Mason University Annette R. Hofmann, Ludwigsburg University of Education, A New York Sport Festival under the Swastika: The “Deutsche Turn‐ und Sporttag” on Randall Island
Linda Borish, Western Michigan University, The National Jewish Welfare Board and Sport History at the Young Men’s–Young Women’s Hebrew Associations
Wanda Ellen Wakefield, SUNY College, Brockport, Baseball and the Cuban Revolution: What the Rochester Red Wings Experienced
Commentator: Chris Elzey, George Mason University 10:05‐10:20 Lakeview Area
Refreshment Break
15
Monday, May 25, 10:20‐11:55
10:20‐11:55PaperSessionsI/36‐39
10:20‐11:55 Senate Room
Session I / 36
DIGITAL SPORT, HISTORY, AND HUMANITIES
Moderator: Douglas Booth, University of Otago
Gary Osmond, The University of Queensland, Digitally Reading ‘Snippets and Shadows’: Locating Male Homosexuality in the Australian Sporting Press Stephen Townsend, University of Queensland, Muhammad Ali (aka Cassius Clay) and American Newspapers: (Re)writing the Evolution of a Sporting Icon Murray G. Phillips, University of Queensland, Mapping Sport History: Inves‐
tigating the relationship between Geospatial Information Systems (GIS) and History‐Making
Jennifer Sterling, Georgia Institute of Technology, Making Sport History: Creating Collage and Crafting Digital Interpretations 10:20‐11:55 Iron Arrow Room
Session I / 37
WHY BLACK BASEBALL HISTORY MATTERS
Moderator: Don Spivey, University of Miami Robert Leroy Paige (son of Satchel Paige)
Larry Lester, Chair, Negro Leagues Committee
10:20‐11:55 Activities Room North
Session I / 38
WOMEN’S SPORT IN THE 1970s
Moderator: Steve Gietschier, Lindenwood University
Kristi Tredway, University of Maryland, Women’s Lob: The Original 9 as a Feminist Social Movement in Women’s Professional Tennis, 1968‐1973
Rita Liberti, California State University, East Bay, “All Frocked Up in Purple”: Rosie Casals and the Politics of Fashion at Wimbledon, 1972
Lindsay Parks Pieper, Lynchburg College, Virginia, Pig‐Tailed Pixies: The 1970s Popularization and Feminization of Women’s Gymnastics
Jaime Schultz, Pennsylvania State University, “American Women on the Move”: The Torch Relay of the 1977 National Women’s Conference
16
Monday, May 25, 10:20‐11:55
10:20‐11:55 Activities Room South
Session I / 39
CHALLENGES AND TRIUMPHS OF THE MODERN STADIUM
Moderator: Sam Regalado, California State University, Stanislaus
Bob Trumpbour, Penn State Altoona, Roy Hofheinz’s Astrodome: The Grand Huckster and His Vision for Houston Ken Womack, Penn State Altoona, Zimmerman and the Grand Plan: Engi‐
neering the Astrodome Ben Downs and Adam G. Pfleegor, Mississippi State University, The Curious Case of New Comiskey Park: Chicago’s New, Obsolete Stadium Commentator: Sam Regalado, California State University, Stanislaus
12:00‐12:55 Grand Ballroom Center
Lunch
1:00‐2:00 Graduate Student Essay Address
Ballroom East
Ashely Brown, George Washington University
Swinging for the State Department: American Women Tennis Players and the Politics of Gender in Goodwill Tours, 1941‐1959
2:05‐3:45
2:05‐3:45
PaperSessionsJ/40‐43
Senate Room
Session J / 40
THE SYMBOLIC VALUE OF ‘FIRSTS’ IN SPORT
Moderator: Stephen R. Wenn, Wilfrid Laurier University Mike Rayner, University of Portsmouth, Daniel Carroll – A Olympic Pioneer Terry Todd, University of Texas at Austin, The Wheels of God: Gregg Ernst, the 2015 Guinness World Records Book, and “The Greatest Weight Ever Raised by a Human Being”
Robert K. Barney, Western University, What’s In a Flag? The Union Jack, the Maple Leaf, and the Olympics in the Contested Terrain of Canadian National Identity
Douglas Booth, University of Otago, Bondi’s First Swimmer in History and Historiography
17
Monday, May 25, 2:05‐3:45
2:05‐3:45
Iron Arrow Room
Session J / 41
FROM GIRLS TO LADIES: GENDERED RELATIONS IN SPORT
Moderator: Carly Adams, University of Lethbridge
Christine Neejer, Michigan State University, “The servant girls have taken to wheeling:” Towards a Working‐Class History of Women’s Bicycling, 1889‐1910
Ava Purkiss, University of Texas at Austin, “We shall not be the laughing stock … of the world”: Gender, Racial Uplift, and Recreation in the Age of Physical Culture, 1900‐1930
Catherine D’Ignazio, Rutgers University‐Camden, Is There a National Story for Schoolgirl Sport? Lars Dzikus and Robin Hardin, University of Tennessee, Lady Vols: A history of a nickname from Title IX to the twenty‐first century arms race
2:05‐3:45
Activities Room South
Session J / 42
SPORTING DIASPORA
Moderator: Tom Webb, University of Portsmouth
Jan Luitzen, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, NOORTHEY RULES! The Role of Noorthey in the Introduction and Diffusion of Cricket in The Netherlands
Guy Ginciene, Bioscience Institute, Rio Claro, Teaching Athletics History in Physical Education Classes: First Approaches Iain Adams and Ciro Prisco, University of Central Lancashire, Samurai base‐
ball: The Illustrations of Kyojin no Hoshi (The Star of the Giants) and the development of Japanese social identity
6:30‐9:00
Grand Ballroom Center
Banquet and Awards
Presiding: President Dan Nathan
18
Honor Addresses
HonorAddresses
The tradition of the North American Society for Sport History to have Honor
Addresses was begun in 1973 when the first convention was held at Ohio
State University. It was decided to have special lectures to honor individuals
who have been significant in the development of sport history. The three
chosen in 1973 to be so honored and have addresses named after them
were John R. Betts, Maxwell L. Howell, and Seward C. Staley. In 1994, the
Maxwell L. Howell Address was expanded to, Maxwell and Reet Howell
International Address. John R. Betts (1917‐1971) was a professor of history at Boston College with
an emphasis upon cultural and intellectual history when he died in the
summer of 1971. He was the leading historian of the cultural and social
impact of sport in the United States at that time. Among other published
articles in sport history are his “The Technological Revolution and the Rise
of Sport” (1953), “Agricultural Fairs and the Rise of Harness Racing” (1953),
and “Mind and Body in Early American Thought” (1968). His manuscript on
the cultural history of sport in America was nearing completion when he
died. It was published posthumously as America’s Sporting Heritage, 1850‐
1950. John Betts devoted attention to sport history because the subject
stimulated an intellectual curiosity in him. and the study of sport history
has benefited greatly by his reputable research in the area.
Maxwell L. Howell and Reet Howell International Address honors Max
Howell, who was born in Australia, and Reet Howell, who was born in Esto‐
nia. Max Howell has participated and coached in international sport, and has
done graduate study in education psychology, exercise physiology, and sport
history. He retired in 1992 from the University of Queensland, where he held
the first chair in Human Movement Studies in Australia. Prior to his return to
Australia, he was Director of Human Kinetics at the University of Ottawa.
Previously he was Dean of the College of Professional Studies at San Diego
State University following positions at the University of British Columbia and
later at the University of Alberta. At Alberta, he began the graduate program
in sport history from which a number of scholars in sport history have gradu‐
ated. His ability to stimulate graduate students to do continuing research in
the area of sport history has influenced programs in Canada, Australia, the
19
Honor Addresses
United States, and elsewhere. He has published many articles and books
including Sports and Games in Canadian Life, 1700 to the Present, History of
Sport in Canada, and Aussie Gold: The Story of Australia at the Olympics.
Max and Reet Howell collaborated on numerous books and articles since the
1970s. Both were prominent in the international scene until Reet suc‐
cumbed to cancer in 1993. Max was chosen NASSH president‐elect in 1975
and served as president and past‐president. An international travel fund was
established in their names in 1994. Seward C. Staley (1893‐1991) had a lifetime involvement in sport and for two
generations promoted the study of sport and sport history. Spending most of
his professional career at the University of Illinois, as early as 1935 he advo‐
cated a curriculum of sport as the basis of physical education programs. He
authored numerous articles from the 1920s. It was through his efforts that in
1960 the History of Sport Section of the College Physical Education Associa‐
tion was developed. This is of signal importance for it was out of this History
of Sport Section that the stimulus for the development of the North Ameri‐
can Society for Sport History was started. Until his death in 1991, he worked
diligently on an immense bibliographical project in classifying sport literature.
Seward Staley truly invigorated the study of sport and sport history. The following individuals have given honor addresses since 1973:
John R. Betts Address 1973
David Q. Voigt, Albright College
1974
John A. Lucas, Penn State University
1975
Richard D. Mandell, University of South Carolina
1977
Betty Spears, University of Massachusetts
1978
Eliot Asinof, New York City
1981
Richard C. Crepeau, University of Central Florida
1982
Don Mrozek, Kansas State University
1983
Hal Ray, Western Michigan University
1985
Paula Welch, University of Florida
1986
William Baker, University of Maine, Orono
1987
Stephen A. Riess, Northeastern Illinois University
1989
Benjamin G. Rader, University of Nebraska
20
Honor Addresses
1991
1993
1995
1998
1999
2002
2003
2004
2005
2008
2010
2011
2013
Stephen H. Hardy, University of New Hampshire
Richard Holt, University of Stirling
Michael Oriard, Oregon State University
Charles P. Korr, University of Missouri‐St. Louis
Jules Tygiel, University of San Francisco
Dave Zang, Towson University
Catriona Parratt, University of Iowa
Jeffrey Hill, De Montfort University
Martha Verbrugge, Bucknell University
Samuel O. Regalado, California State U., Stanislaus
Mark Dyreson, Penn State University
Sarah Fields, Ohio State University
Robert Lipsyte, New York Times
Maxwell L. Howell and Reet Howell International Address 1973
Alan Metcalfe, University of Windsor
1974
S. W. Wise, Carleton University
1975
Gerald Redmond, University of Alberta
1976
Earle F. Ziegler, University of Western Ontario
1977
Frank Cosentino, University of Western Ontario
1978
Robert K. Barney, University of Western Ontario
1979
Michael A. Salter, University of Windsor
1980
R. Gerald Glassford, University of Alberta
1981
Barbara Schrodt, University of British Columbia
1984
Alexander J. Young, Dalhousie University
1986
Peter McIntosh, London, England
1988
Randy Roberts, University of Houston
1989
Maxwell L. Howell, University of Queensland
1990
Arnd Krüger, Georg‐August University‐Göttingen
1992
Donald G. Kyle, University of Texas‐Arlington
1994
James A. Mangan, University of Strathclyde‐Jordanhill
1996
Dennis Brailsford, University of Birmingham
1998
Richard W. Pound, Montreal, Quebec
1999
Grant Jarvie, University of Stirling
21
Honor Addresses
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2009
2011
2012
2014
John Bale, University of Keele
Roland Renson, University of Leuven
Gertrud Pfister, University of Copenhagen
Doug Booth, University of Otago
Thierry Terret, University of Lyon
Christiane Eisenberg, Humbolt‐Universitat zu Berlin
Jennifer Hargreaves, University of Brighton Jinxia Dong, Beijing University
Wray Vamplew, University of Stirling
Bruce Kidd, University of Toronto
Murray Phillips, University of Queensland
M. Ann Hall, University of Alberta
Seward Staley Address 1973
Marvin H. Eyler, University of Maryland
1974
Bruce L. Bennett, Ohio State University
1975
Maxwell L. Howell, San Diego State University
1976
Ronald A. Smith, Penn State University
1977
Margaret Woodhouse, Radford College
1979
Roberta J. Park, University of California, Berkeley
1980
Allen Guttmann, Amherst College
1981
Horst Ueberhorst, Ruhr‐Universität
1982
Marvin Eyler, University of Maryland
Nancy Struna, University of Minnesota
1983
Alyce Cheska, University of Illinois
1984
Mary Lou Remley, Indiana University
1985
Lawrence W. Fielding, University of Louisville
1987
Melvin L. Adelman, Ohio State University
1988
Mark Harris, Arizona State University
1991
Tony Mason, Warwick University
1992
Patricia Vertinsky, University of British Columbia
1995
Joan Chandler, University of Texas‐Dallas
2000
Peter Donnelly, University of Toronto
2001
Colin Howell, St. Mary’s University
22
NASSH Book Award Winners
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2013
2014
Susan Birrell, University of Iowa
Steven Riess, Northeastern Illinois University
Jan Todd, University of Texas at Austin
Nancy B. Bouchier, McMaster University
David Wiggins, George Mason University
Susan E. Cayleff, San Diego State University
Gerald Early, Washington University in St. Louis
NASSHBookAwardWinners
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Wray Vamplew, Pay Up and Play the Game: Professional Sport in Britain, 1875‐1914 (Cambridge University Press)
Warren Goldstein, Playing for Keeps: A History of Early Baseball (Cornell University Press)
Harold Seymour, The People’s Game (Oxford University Press)
Allen Guttmann, Women’s Sports: A History (Columbia University Press)
Peter Levine, Ellis Island to Ebbets Field: Sport and the American Jewish Experience (Oxford University Press)
Robert Edelman, Serious Fun: A History of Spectator Sports in the U.S.S.R. (Oxford University Press)
Susan F. Cahn, Coming on Strong: Gender and Sexuality in Twen‐
tieth Century Women’s Sport (Free Press)
Robin Lester, Stagg’s University: The Rise, Decline, and Fall of Big‐Time Football at Chicago (University of Illinois Press)
Bruce Kidd, The Struggle for Canadian Sport (University of Toronto Press)
(No Award Given)
Douglas Booth, The Race Game: Sport and Politics in South Africa (Frank Cass)
John M. Carroll, Red Grange and the Rise of Modern Football (University of Illinois Press)
Mike Huggins, Flat Racing and British Society, 1790‐1914 (Frank Cass)
Pamela Grundy, Learning to Win: Sports, Education, and Social Change in Twentieth‐Century North Carolina (University of North 23
NASSH Book Award Winners—Anthology
2003
2004
2005 2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014 Carolina Press)
Robert K. Barney, Stephen R. Wenn, and ScottG. Martyn, Selling the Five Rings: The International Olympic Committee and the Rise of Olympic Commercialism (University of Utah Press)
Daniel A. Nathan, Saying It’s So: A Cultural History of the Black Sox Scandal (University of Illinois Press)
Allen Guttmann, Sports: The First Five Millennia (University of Massachusetts Press)
David Block, Baseball Before We Knew It: A Search for the Roots of the Game (University of Nebraska Press) — and —
Douglas Booth, The Field: Truth and Fiction in Sport History (Routledge)
Barbara Keys, Globalizing Sport: National Rivalry and Interna‐
tional Community in the 1930s (Harvard University Press)
Donald G. Kyle, Sport and Spectacle in the Ancient World (Black‐
well)
Kevin B. Witherspoon, Before the Eyes of the World: Mexico and the 1968 Olympic Games (Northern Illinois University Press)
Robert Edleman, Spartak Moscow: A History of The People’s Team in the Workers’ State (Cornell University Press)
Kay Schiller and Christopher Young, The 1972 Munich Olympics and the Making of Modern Germany (University of California Press)
Mary Louise Adams, Artistic Impressions: Figure Skating, Mascu‐
linity, and the Limits of Sport (University of Toronto Press)
Brian M. Ingrassia, The Rise of Gridiron University: Higher Educa‐
tion’s Uneasy Alliance with Big‐Time Football (University Press of Kansas)
Gwyneth A. Thayer, Going to the Dogs: Greyhound Racing, Ani‐
mal Activism, and American Popular Culture (University Press of Kansas)
NASSHBookAwardWinners—Anthology
2006
2007
(No Award Given)
Murray Phillips (ed.), Deconstructing Sport History (State Univer‐
sity of New York Press)
24
NASSH Honor Awards
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
Jorge Iber and Samuel O. Regalado (eds.), Mexican American and Sports: A Reader on Athletics and Barrio Life (Texas A&M University Press)
Susan Brownell (ed.), The 1904 Anthropology Days and the Olym‐
pic Games: Sport, Race, and American Imperialism (University of Nebraska Press)
Mike Cronin, William Murphy, and Paul Rouse (eds.), The Gaelic Athletic Association, 1884‐2009: A People’s History (Irish Aca‐
demic Press)
(No Award Given)
Leonard Cassuto and Stephen Partridge (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Baseball (Cambridge University Press)
Murray Phillips (ed.), Representing the Sporting Past in Museums and Halls of Fame (London: Routledge)
Janice Forsyth and Audrey R. Giles (eds.), Aboriginal Peoples and Sport in Canada: Historical Foundations and Contemporary Issues (Vancouver, BC: University of British Columbia Press)
— and —
Daniel A. Nathan (ed.), Rooting for the Home Team, Sport, Com‐
munity, and Identity (Urbana: University of Illinois Press).
NASSHHonorAwards
Honorary Presidents 1973
Edwin B. Henderson
1973
Seward C. Staley
1987
Clarence A. Forbes
Honor Awards 1975
John A. Krout
1975
Robert W. Henderson
1976
Elmer D. Mitchell
1976
Mabel Lee
1976
Marvin H. Eyler
1978
Clarence A. Forbes
1981
Bruce L. Bennett
25
NASSH Honor Awards
NASSH Recognition Award — Service to Sport History 1991
Larry Malley
1991
University of Illinois Press
1992
Canadian Journal of History of Sport
1993
J. A. “Tony” Mangan 1995
Maynard Brichford 1996
Richard Wentworth 2001
Wayne Wilson 2001
John Gaustad and Sports Pages Bookstore 2003
Robert K. Barney 2003
John A. Lucas 2007
Jules Tygiel
2008
Roberta Park 2008
Earle Zeigler
2009
Joe Arbena
2009
Ronald A. Smith
2010
Allen Guttmann
2011
Larry Gerlach
2012
Melvin Adelman
2013
Jan and Terry Todd
2014
Bob Barnett
NASSH Service Award — Service within NASSH 1991
Susan F. Smith
1992
Ronald A. Smith
1993
Harold L. “Hal” Ray 1995
Mary Lou LeCompte 1996
Jack Berryman 1997
Betty Spears 1998
Alan Metcalfe 1998
Roberta Park 2001
David Voigt
2003
Joanna “Jody” Davenport
2004
Richard Crepeau 26
Graduate Student Essay Prize Winners
2005
2006
2008
2008
2011
2012
2013
Bruce Kidd Richard McGehee Barbara “Bim” Schrodt J. Thomas Jable
Patricia Vertinsky James Odenkirk
Gerald Gems
GraduateStudentEssayPrizeWinners
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
Catriona Beaton Parratt, University of Windsor
“Sport and Hegemony: Windsor, Ontario, Canada, 1885‐1929”
Jan Todd, University of Texas at Austin
“Benarr Macfadden: Reformer of Feminine Form”
James Coates, University of Maryland
“The Racial Segregation of Baltimore Public Parks System, 1890‐
1917”
Stephen Wenn, University of Western Ontario
“A Tale of Two Diplomats: George S. Messersmith and Charles H. Sherrill on Proposed American Participation”
Mark Dyreson, University of Arizona
“The Emergence of Consumer Culture and the Transformation of Physical Culture: American Sport in the 1920’s”
Barbara S. Pinto, University of Western Ontario
“Ain’t Misbehaving: The Montreal Shamrock Lacrosse Club Fans, 1868‐1884”
Jack Davis, Brandeis University
“Baseball’s Reluctant Challenge: Desegregating Major League Spring Training”
Dennis Gildea, Penn State University
“Counterpunch: The Morrissey‐Heenan Fight of 1858 and Frank Queen’s Attack on the ‘Respectable Press”
Robert Rinehart, University of Illinois, Urbana
“Fists Flew and Blood Flowed: Cultural Resistance, Hungarian Water Polo, and International Responses, 1945‐1956”
Patrick Trimble, Penn State University
“Babe Ruth: The Media Construction of a 1920’s Personality”
27
Graduate Student Essay Prize Winners
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
R. Gregg Bennett, Auburn University
“Top of the 1st: Baseball from Reconstruction at Four Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conferences”
Stacy Lorenz, University of Alberta
“‘A Lively Interest on the Prairies’: Western Canada, The Mass Media, and a ‘World of Sport, 1870‐1939”
Dan Mason, University of Alberta
“The International Hockey League and the Professionalization of Ice‐Hockey, 1904‐1907”
Susan L. Forbes, University of Western Ontario
“Defining Practices: Female Employees’ Leisure at Eaton’s” Brad Austin, Ohio State University
“The Politicalization of Intercollegiate Athletics During the Great Depression” Greg Gillespie, University of Western Ontario
“Wickets in the West: Cricket, Culture and Constructed Images of Nineteenth Century Canada” — and —
Annmarie Jutel, University of Otago
“Morality and Medicine: Sylvester Graham’s Doctrine of Healthy Living Revisited”
Matthew Andrews, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
“Equal Suffrage as Far as Prizefighters Go: Gender, Pugilism, and Public Space in Turn‐of‐the‐Century San Francisco”
Jennifer Guiliano, Miami University of Ohio
“Sports Mascots as Illegitimate Identities: A Case Study of Miami University’s Redskins”
Kenneth Cohen, University of Delaware
“The Case for Space: Billards and American Sub‐Cultures”
Jaime Schultz, University of Iowa
“‘A Wager Concerning a Diplomatic Pig’”: Remembering and For‐
getting in the Iowa‐Minnesota Football Contests, 1934‐1935”
David Mizener, York University
“The State, the Agrarian Press, and the Ontario Plowman’s Asso‐
ciation: Competitive Plowing and Agriculture in Twentieth‐Cen‐
tury Ontario”
Carly Adams, University of Western Ontario
“From Montreal to London, 1926‐1952: The Journey of Pauline 28
NASSH Presidents
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
Perron, Outsider, Pro Ball Player”
Matthew P. Llewellyn, Penn State University
“A Nation Divided: Great Britain and the Pursuit of Olympic Excel‐
lence, 1912‐1914”
David Lunt, Penn State University
“The Heroic Athlete in Ancient Greece”
Travis Vogan, Indiana University
“Exceptional Excess: Prize Fighting Films, Jack Johnson, and Docu‐
mentary Affect”
John Gleaves, Penn State University
“Doping Professionals and Clean Amateurs: Amateurism’s Influ‐
ences on the Modern Philosophy of Anti‐Doping”
Terry Gitersos, University of Western Ontario “‘Une grande victorie pour le Quebéc François’: The Elimination of English at Le Collisée”
Dominic G. Morais, The University of Texas, Austin
“Branding Iron: Eugen Sandow’s Utilization of ‘Modern’ Market‐
ing”
Bieke Gils, University of British Columbia
“Flying, Flirting, and Flexing: Charmion's Trapeze Act, Sexuality and Physical Culture at the Turn of the Twentieth Century”
Nathan Titman, University of Iowa, “Artist def. Machine: Bill Til‐
den's Unruly Masculinity in 1920s Tennis.”
NASSHPresidents
1972‐1975 Marvin H. Eyler, University of Maryland
1975‐1977 Guy M. Lewis, University of Massachusetts
1977‐1979 Maxwell L. Howell, San Diego State University
1979‐1981 Mary Lou Remley, Indiana University
1981‐1983 Betty Spears, University of Massachusetts
1983‐1985 Alan Metcalfe, University of Windsor
1985‐1987 J. Thomas Jable. William Paterson College
1987‐1989 Richard C. Crepeau, University of Central Florida 1989‐1991 Jack W. Berryman, University of Washington
1991‐1993 Robert K. Barney, University of Western Ontario
1993‐1995 Joan Paul, University of Tennessee
29
Convention Sites
1995‐1997 Nancy Struna, University of Maryland
1997‐1999 Patricia Vertinsky, University of British Columbia
1999‐2001 Don Morrow, University of Western Ontario
2001‐2003 Allen Guttmann, Amherst College
2003‐2005 Gerald R. Gems, North Central College
2005‐2007 Mark Dyreson, Penn State University
2007‐2009 Stephen Wenn, Wilfrid Laurier University
2009‐2011 Maureen Smith, Cal. St. U., Sacramento
2011‐2013 Tina Parratt, University of Iowa
2013‐2015 Daniel Nathan, Skidmore College
ConventionSites
1973 Ohio State University
1990 Banff, Alberta
1974 U. of Western Ontario
1991 Loyola U., Chicago
1975 Boston, Massachusetts
1992 Dalhousie University
1976 University of Oregon
1993 Albuquerque Academy
1977 University of Windsor
1994 U. of Saskatchewan
1978 University of Maryland
1995 Queen Mary & CSU L.B.
1979 U. of Texas at Austin
1996 Auburn University
1980 Banff, Alberta
1997 Springfield College
1981 McMaster University
1998 University of Windsor
1982 Kansas State University
1999 Penn State University
1983 Penn State U ‐ Mont Alto
2000 Banff, Alberta
1984 University of Louisville
2001 U. of Western Ontario
1985 U. of Wisconsin, LaCrosse
2002 French Lick Resort
1986 U. of British Columbia
2003 Ohio State University
1987 Capital University
2004 Asilomar, California
1988 Arizona State University
2005 Green Bay, Wisconsin
1989 Clemson University
2006 Glenwood Springs, CO
30
Convention Sites
2007 Texas Tech University
2011 U. of Texas at Austin
2008 Lake Placid, New York
2012 Berkeley, California
2009 Asheville, NC 2013 St. Mary’s U., Halifax, NS
2010 Orlando, Florida 2014 Glenwood Springs, CO
31
A
Abrams, Brett L. 6
Adams, Carly 11, 18
Adams, Iain 14, 18
Adams, Josh 9
Ariail, Cat 4
Dee, David 7
Dichter, Heather 13, 14
Downs, Ben 17
Doyle, Andy 3
Dyreson, Mark 5, 13
Dzikus, Lars 18
B
E
Baker, Aaron 1
Banton, Arthur 13
Bar‐Lev, Amir 7
Barney, Robert K. 7, 17
Baxa, Paul 6
Beckwith, Kim 6
Berg, Adam 7
Booth, Douglas 16, 17
Borish, Linda 6, 15
Brown, Christopher 9
Brown, Douglas A. 4
C
Cahn, Susan 5
Cardon, Nathan 9
Carlson, Chad 13
Catapano, Claude 10
Catherine D’Ignazio 18
Chapman, David 9
Congelio, Brad J. 6, 14
Copeland, Adam 4
Covell, Dan 10
Criblez, Adam J. 8
Croteau, Camille 2, 3
Curtis, Amanda K. 1
Elzey, Chris 13, 15
English, Colleen 5
F
Fair, John 9
Felkar, Victoria 3
Field, Russell 6, 11
Fields, Sarah K. 8, 12
Figone, Al 15
G
Gietschier, Steve 16
Gils, Bieke 10
Ginciene, Guy 18
Gleaves, John 7, 9
Goldstein, Jordan 2, 8
Goudsouzian, Aram 12
Greenham, Craig 8, 10
H
Haberman, Aaron L. 8
Hardin, Robin 18
Hatlem, Phil 9
Hemme, Florian 7
Hofmann, Annette R. 15
Hunt, Thomas M. 11
D
I
Darnell, Simon 6
de Wilde, Ari 4
Idels, Ofer 7
32
J
Nzindukiyimana, Ornella 4, 10
Jedlicka, Scott R. 6
O
K
Kaliss, Gregory 11
Keiper, Margaret C. 13
Kimball, Richard 3, 5
Kioussis, George N. 14
Korr, Chuck 11
Kossuth, Robert S. 2, 12
Krüger, Michael 2
O’Bonsawin, Christine M. 2
Oates, Thomas 8
Osmer, Lauren 5
Osmond, Gary 16
Ozyurtcu, Tolga 3
P
Lester, Larry 16
Liberti, Rita 16
Linden, Andrew D. 12
Llewellyn, Matthew P. 7
Lomax, Michael E. 10
Long, Brandon M. 2
Loosbrock, Rich 8
Lorenz, Stacey 8, 10
Luitzen, Jan 18
Paige, Robert Leroy 16
Paraschak, Victoria 2, 6
Parratt, Catriona M. 10, 12
Petrella, John 2
Pfleegor, Adam G. 17
Phillips, Mickey 8
Phillips, Murray G. 16
Pieper, Lindsay Parks 12, 16
Pollack, Ben 4
Prisco, Ciro 18
Pruter, Robert 1, 13
Purkiss, Ava 18
M
R
L
MacLean, Malcolm 4, 11
Magdalinski, Tara 11
Martin, Charles H. 13
McDonald, Mary G. 2
McEwan, Kieren 6
Moore, Louis 10
Morais, Dominic 4
Müllner, Rudolf 4
N
Nathan, Dan 1, 15
Neejer, Christine 18
Nelson, Murry 15
Nielsen, Erik 14
Rayl, Susan J. 5
Rayner, Mike 17
Reejhsinghani, Anju 5
Regalado, Samuel O. 12, 17
Rider, Toby C. 13
Riess, Steven 3
Ritchie, Ian 2, 11
Rorke, Tom 7
Rosenke, Daniel 11
Ross, J. Andrew 10
Ross, Macintosh 3, 8
Runggaldier, Ingrid 9
33
S
Sammons, Jeffrey T. 13
Schultz, Jaime 16
Sexauer, Connie F. 9
Shattuck, Debra A. 1
Smith, Jimmy 2
Smith, John Matthew 12
Smith, Maureen M. 6, 12
Smith, Ronald A. 15
Spivey, Don 1, 13, 16
Sterling, Jennifer 16
Swanson, Ryan 8
Williams, Jean 1
Witherspoon, Kevin B. 13
Womack, Ken 17
Wong, John 10
Wood, Michael T. 5
Wrynn, Alison 3, 10
Y
Yeazel, Christopher J. 12
Yeazel, Matthew R. 12
T
Thomas, Damion 4, 11
Todd, Jan 11
Todd, Terry 17
Townsend, Stephen 16
Tredway, Kristi 16
Troiano, Laura 12
Trumpbour, Robert 9, 17
V
Valentine, John 2
van Waas, Courtney 8
Vertinsky, Patricia 10
W
Wakefield, Wanda Ellen 5, 15
Walters, Jared 3
Walton‐Fisette, Theresa 4
Warwick, Tosh 3
Webb, Tom 2, 18
Wells, Cassandra 2, 11
Wenn, Stephen R. 6, 17
White, Derrick E. 4
Wiggins, David K. 9, 13
34
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