The Journal of the Association for History and Computing,
Vol. I, No. 1., June 1998

The Editorial Board:

Jeffrey Barlow is the Matsushita Chair of East Asian Studies and Professor of History, Pacific University, Forest Grove, Oregon. His interests are East Asian History, the ethnohistory of the Sino-Vietnamese frontier, and history and computing. (Professor Barlow's Home page)

Ken Dvorak, the Secretary-Treasurer of the American Association for History and Computing, is currently a doctoral associate in the American Culture Studies Program at Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, Ohio; working under the direction of Dr. William E. Grant. His dissertation topic is: "Murder, Nativism and Americanism: The Black Legion as an Urban Hybrid of Ethnocultural Conflict."

Jason Gaskill is a graduate student in history and hopes to be conducting further studies in New Zealand at Victoria University of Wellington during 1998-99. His particular area of interest is the relationship between history and philosophy.

Steve received a Masters in Heritage Preservation (MHP) from Georgia State and a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. He teaches at Southeast Missouri State University, primarily in the Historic Preservation program, but also teaches the American History survey. He is an American Urban and African American historian, late 19th/early 20th century America.

Ryan Johnson is an Information Services Librarian at Georgia Southern University and has written and conducted workshops on the use of electronic information in research and the integration of these resources into libraries.

Daniel is an Academic Computing Specialist at Wake Forest University working in the History Department. His interests include Southern history, computer programming, and web page design. (Daniel's Web Page: http://www.wfu.edu/~pfeifedj

Jere Jackson is Professor of History at Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas. His interests are 19th-20th Century European History, particularly World War I French and German propaganda. His poster research can be found at http://www.history.sfasu.edu/baylorExhibit.html (Dr. Jackson's Home Page)

Scott A. Merriman is a Ph.D. student in American Legal History at the University of Kentucky. He has published on the Espionage and Sedition Acts and is co-author of The History Highway. (M.E. Sharpe, 1997)

Kelly Robinson is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis. His research and teaching interests are in American, Native American, and Colonial Latin American history. (Professor Robison's Web page)

Isak Sexson is a history major at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon. His major interest is Medieval European History.

G. Mick Smith, Ph.D., President of the American Association for History and Computing, holds a Distance Education Administrator Certificate from Texas A&M University. He has published twenty-two papers on distance education and created the first online History of World Medicine course.

David Staley is Assistant Professor of History at Heidelberg College in Tiffin, Ohio. His interests deal with the effects of digitized sound, image and text on historical narrative.

Dennis A. Trinkle, the Executive Director of the American Association for History and Computing, is an Assistant Professor of history and academic computing at DePauw University. His publications include The History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources (M.E. Sharpe, 1997) and the edited volume Writing, Teaching, and Researching History in the Electronic Age (M.E. Sharpe, 1998).

 

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