PROGRAM - American Sociological Association |

164
AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION EIGHTY-FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING PROGRAM MACRO AUGUST 9 - 1 3 , 1989 S A N F R A N C I S C O H I L T O N

Transcript of PROGRAM - American Sociological Association |

A M E R I C A N SOCIOLOGICAL A S S O C I A T I O N E I G H T Y - F O U R T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G

PROGRAM

M A C R O

A U G U S T 9 - 1 3 , 1 9 8 9 S A N F R A N C I S C O H I L T O N

Former Presidents of the Association Lester F. Ward Willliam G. Sumner Franklln H. Giddings Albion W. Small Edward A. Ross George E. Vincent George E. Howard Charles H. Cooley Frank W. Blackrnar James Q. Dealey Edward C. Hayes James P. Lichtenberg Ulysses G. Weatherly Charles A. Ellwood Robert E. Park ' John L. Gillin William I. Thomas John M. Gillette William F. Ogburn Howard W. Odum Emory S. Bogardus Luther L. Bernard Edward B. Reuter Ernest W. Burgess F. Stuart Chapin Henry P. Fairchild Ellsworth Faris

Frank H. Hankins Edwin H. Sutherland Robert M. Maclver Stuart A. Queen Dwight Sanderson George A. Lundberg Rupert 6. Vance Kimball Young Carl C. Taylor Louis Wirth E. Franldin Frazier Talcott Parsons Leonard S. Cottrell, Jr. Robert C. Angel1 Dorothy Swalne Thomas Samuel A. Stouffer Florlan Znaniecki Donald Young Herbert Blumer Robert K. Merton Robln M. Williams, Jr. Kingsley Davis Howard Becker Robert E.L. Faris Paul F. Lazarsfeld Everett C. Hughes

American Sociological Association 1722 N Street, N.W.

Washington, DC 20036 (202) 833-341 0

George C. Homans Pitirim A. Sorokln Wilbert E. Moore Charles P. Lwmis PhHlp M. Hauser Arnold M. Rose Ralph H. Turner Reinhard Bendix William H. Sewell, Sr. William 3. Goode Mlrra Komarovsky Peter M. Blau Lewls A. Coser Alfred McClung Lee J. Mllton Ylnger Amos H, Hawley Hubert M. Blalock, Jr. Peter H. Rossi William Fwte Whyte Erving Goffman Alice S. Rossi James F. Short, Jr. Kai T. Eriksan Matilda White Riley Melvin L. Kohn Herbert J. Gans

(Printed in the USA)

Program AIDS

Macro and Micro Interrelationships Two themes are featured in the program forthe 1989 Annual Meeting . One theme is unlraditional . It will appear in a plenary session and a

number of program slots dedicated to a somber topic: the problem of AIDS and what sociologists are doing about it . There are many compelling reasons for featuring this topic so prominently but the main reason is the staggering estimate of the world-wide effects of the disease . Sociologists are increasingly working in this area .

Another theme. more traditional. will appear in a plenary and a number of thematic sessions . It focuses on the interrelationships of macro-and microlevel theories. variables. and concepts . The macrolmicro relationship is a problem that in one way or another most of us confront daily in teaching and research . Yet there is little consensus as to its implications . Worse. although scholars agree on the definition of macrosociology. microsociology is so variously defined as to make the debate on the macrotmicro relation less productive than one would like .

Two definitions of microsociology seem to predominate . In one view microsociotogy includes only those studies based on first-hand observation of interaction . Accordingly. micro research methods are restricted to those of symbolic interaction. ethnomethodology. and phenomenology . Studies based on survey data collected from individuals are implicitly left in limbo. neither macro- nor microsociology . Other scholars define microlevel research as including all studies in which the individual is the unit of analysis. whatever the research method . This definition suggests questions as to how individual behaviors and attitudes relate to aggregate trends .

The two definitions of microsociology obviously give rise to quite different explanations of the macrolmicro relationship . Both definitions will be evidenced in the thematic sessions planned by the 1989 Program Committee .

1989 Program Committee Joan Huber. Chair. The Ohio State University Michael T . Aiken. University of Pennsylvania Jeffrey C . Alexander. University of California-Los Angeles Donna E W . Indiana University Glen H Elder. Jr., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill John Hagan. University of Toronto ElIrabeth Long. Rice University Victor Nee. Cornell University Samuel H . Preston. University of Pennsylvania Beth E . Schneider. University of California-Santa Barbara A . Wade Smith. Arizona State University

Roundtable Organizing Subcommittee Dana Vanmy. Chair. University of Cincinnati

COVER DESIGN by KALM Graphics

Joan Huber. President American Sociological Association

Table of Contents .................................... Activities of Other Groups 9

........................................... Business Meeting 9 .................................. CornmitteelBoard Meetings 13

Departmental Alumni Night (DAN) ............................. 9 ........................................... Didactic Seminars 4 .......................................... Exhibitor Directory 15

General Information ........................................ 10 Governance Information ..................................... 78

......................................... Honorary Reception 9 Member Orientation &Welcoming Party ........................ 9 Presidential Address and Awards Ceremony .................... 2 Professional Workshops ..................................... 5 Program

..................................... Wednesday. August 9 16 ...................................... Thursday. August 10 28

........................................ Friday. August 11 40 ...................................... Saturday. August 12 54 ....................................... Sunday. August 13 68

................................. Regular Session Organizers 85 Resources for Attendees with Special Needs ................... 12 Aoundtable Discussions ...................................... 7

............................................ Section Activities 8

............................................ Special Sessions 3 Student Hospitality Room ..................................... 9 Teaching Workshops ........................................ 5

.......................................... Thematic Sessions 2 Tours ...................................................... 7

........................................ Index of Organizers 145 ....................................... Index of Participants 147

............................................... Topic Index 143

Program Notes Plenaries Presentec Theodore C. Wagenaar for the Distinguished Contributions to Teaching

Award Selection Committee

Three plenary sessions in addition to the ASA Business Meeting have ~ , " ~ ~ ~ ~ B ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ $ ~ " , : F r e R C h lHmard Univwsw pmw, ,M61 been planned for meeting attendees in Sari hancisco. The first Plenarl Presenter: Gary Alan Fine for the Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award S e k - session will address the themeof the 1989 ASA Annual Meeting. while the Con Committee plenary on the third evening will focus on AlDS issues. These plenaries Career Of Distinguished Scholarship Award:

bracket h e Presidential Plenary on Thursday. August 10, at 4:30 p.m. All ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ " , J ~ ~ h ~ ~ , " R B r for the of a&inguishd bholarship Awad three convention-wide sessions are a must for your meeting schedule! Selection Committee S a d o n 67, Wednetidmy, August 9,8:30 p.m. MicrMacro Looks at Stratiikation Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Presider: Doris Y. Wilkinson, Universq of Kentucky Historical Change and R~tual Production of Gender. Randall Collins, University of

California-Rwerside Women and the Wealth and Well-being of Nations: Macro-Micro Interrelationships.

Rae Lesser Blumberg, University of California-San Diego Discussion: Samuel H. Preston, University of Pennsylvania

Seaion 120, Thursday, August 10,430 p.m. Presidential Address and ASA Awards Ceremony Continental Ballroom 4-5, Ballroom Level (See next section for details.)

Session 188, Friday, August 11,8:30 p.m. AlDS and the Sodological Enterprise Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organ~zer: Beth E. Schneider, University 01 California-Santa Barbara Presider: Nancy Sfoller Shaw, University of California-Santa Cruz A Sociological Research Agenda for People Living with AIDS. Barry D. Adam,

University of Windsor Progress on a Research Agenda for the Social Consequences of AIDS. Richard A.

Berk, University of California-Los Angeles Sociology. Eptdemiology, andtheEpistemology of AIDS. William W. Darrow, Centers

for Disease Control AlDS and Class, Gender and Race Relations. Beth E. Schmider, University of

California-Santa Barbara

Presidential Address and ASA Awards Ceremony

The Presidential Plenary features the formal address of the ASA Presi- dent and all convention attendees are invited to this session. The Awards Ceremony, which will begin at the conclusion of the Presidential Address, will feature the 1989 ASA award recipients and an announcement about this year's Common Wealth award. All registrants are invited to a reception In Continental Ballroom 6 immediately following the ceremony to honor h e President and the award recipients.

Session 120, Thursday, August 10,4:30 p.m. Presidentla1 Address Contlnental Wlroom 4-5, Ballroom Level Presider: Glen H. Elder, Jr., ASA Vice President Introduction. Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hilt Presidential Address. Joan Huber, The Ohio State University Awards Ceremony Presider: WiNiam J. Chambliss. Chair, ASA Cornmiltee on Awards Policy Common Wealth Award: Recipient: Alice S. Rossi Presentec Joan Huberlor the Nominating Committee for the Common Wealth Award

in Sociology Jessie Bernard Award: Recipients: Samuel Cohn and Joan AcUer Presenter: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown for the Jessie Bemard Award Selection

Committee Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology: Recipient: David Sills Presenter: Katrina W. Johnson for the Distinguished Career Award forthe Practice of

Soc~ology Award Selection Committee Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award: Rec~pient: James A. Davis

Dissertation Award: ~'ipient to be announced Presenter: Alan Sica for the Dissertation Award SelecCon Committee Honorety Reception Co-sponsored by the American Sociological Association and the Deparlrnent of

Sociology, Michigan State Universily; Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University; Depattment of Sociology, University of Califwnia-Berkeley; Depart- ment of Sociology, University of California-Riverside; Department of Soc~al and Behavioral Sciences. University of California-San Francisco; and Basil Black- well, Inc.

Thematic Sessions The fiieen Thematic Sessions organized by President Huber and the

Program Committee are devoted to investigating the meeting theme, "Macro and Micro Interrelationships".

Swrlon 3, Wednesday, August 9,830 a.m. Effects of Class C o n ~ i o u ~ on Colbt lve Action Contin8ntal Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level Presider: Myra Marx Ferree, University of Connecticut Craia Calhwn. Universihr of North Carolina-Chapel Hill . . . . - .

~ l d & Morrrs, university bf ~ i c h i ~ a n Discussion: Reeve Vanneman. Uo~versity of Maryland

session 14, Wednesday, August 9,10:30 a.m. Consequences of Aging Societies for individuals Continental Ballroom 4. Ballroom Level Organ~zer and Presider: ~amuel H. res sf on, University of Pennsylvania Mountains or Molehills: Just What's So Bad About Aging Societies Anyway? Tinmthy

Smeeding. Vanderbih University The Poveriy of Impoverishment Theory: Rewards to Age in American History. Brien

Gralton, Arizona State University - The Influence of Demographic C h a w on Health Care Needs of the Elderly. Chris-

tine Himes, Pennsylvania State University Discussion: Thomas Espenshade, Princeton University

Session 39, Wednesday, August 9,230 p.m. From Interactbn to Structure Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Levd Presider: Morris Rosenberg, University of Maryland Crescive and Enacted Social Change. Carol Cone//, Stanford University Organizing Technologies in Collective Action. Pamela Oliver, University of W i m -

sin-Madison ~isc"ssioni Sheldon Sti'yker, Indiana University

Sewlon 53, Wednesday, August 9,430 p.m. Cmating lnequallty within the Schools Contlnental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Presider: Celeslino Fernander University of Arizona Creating Inequality in the Schools: A Structural Perspective. Alan Kerckhofl, Duke

University Creating Inequality: An lnteractionist Perspective. Hugh Mehan, University of

California-San Diego Diussbn: Barbara Heyns, New York University

W o n 68, Thursday, August 10,8:30 a.m. MkrdMacro Dllemmaa in Organizational Analysis Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Presider: Mary Fennell, Pennsylvania State University Myth~ng Link. Lynne Zucker, University of California-Loo Angeles Linking Micro and Macro: Organizations as Problems. Organizations as Solutions,

Paul DiMaggio. Yale University O~scussbn: James N. &on, Stanford University

Session 82, Thursday, August 10,10:30 a.m. From Exchange to Structure Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organizer: Victor Nee, Cornell University Presider: James E. Blackwell, University of Massachusetls-Boston The Micro Foundations of Social Structure: An Erchange Perspective. Karen S.

Cook, University of Washington Rational Organization. James S. Coleman, University of Chicago Discussion: Peter Blau, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Michael Hechter,

Russell Sage Foundation

Sessbn 106, Thursday, August 10,230 p.m. Losing a Generation of Chlldren Contlnental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: A. Wade Smith, Arizona Stale University Social Isolation and the Inner-City: Implications for Children. William Julius Wifson,

University of Chicago Discussion: Morris Zeklitch, Jr,, Stanford University

Ssaebn 121, Fdday, August 11, &30 am. Micro-Macro T heaetleel Linkages In Social h o g n p h y Contlnental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organizer: William M. Mason, University of Michigan Presider and Discussbn: Barbara Entwisle, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Markets, States, and Bedrooms in Western Europe: 1870-1960. Susan C. Watkins,

University of Pennsylvania Poor People and Poor Places: Deciphering Neighborhood Effects on Behavioral

Outcomes. Marta Tienda, University of Chicago Mullilevel Analysis in the Study of Women's Status and Demographic Change. Karen

Oppenheim Mason, University of Michigan Social Structure and Status Attainment Micro-Macro Links. Donald J. Treiman,

University of California-Los Angeles Some Notes on the Presence and Absence of Macro Effects. Ross M. Stolzenberg,

Graduate Management Admission Council Problems in Quantitative Comparative Analysis. William M. Mason, University of

Michigan

Sesdon 134, Mday, August 11,10:30 a.m. Structural E m s on C a m Mobility Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Levsl Presider: Thomas DiPrete, Duke University Understanding Job Shifts within Firms. Robert Althauser, Indiana University Structural Pathways and Switching Mechanisms for Individual Careers. Shelby

Stewman and Kuang-Shih Yeh, Carnegie-Mellon University Discussion: Charles Halaby, University of Wisconsin; Rachel A. Rosenfeld. Univer-

sity of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Smsion 161, Friday, Auguet 11,2:30 p.m. Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Structural Etfects on Women's Work Presider: Paula England, University of Texas-Dallas and University of Arizona Job Queues, Gender Gueues. Barbara Res~n, University of Illinois-Urbana. Structural Approachesto Women's Careers, JenyA. Jacobs, Universityof Pennsyl-

vania Discussion: Heidi Hmmann, Institute for Women's Policy Research

W b n 174, Fdday, August 11,4:30 p.m. Contlnental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Age, Crime and the Llfe Course Organizer John Hagan, University of Toronto Presder: Austin, Turk, University of California-Riverside Age Structure and Crime: Is There a Conneclon? Kenneth Lad, Duke University;

Patricia McCall, North Carolina State University;Lawrence E. Cohen, University of California-Davis

Compxitional and Contextual Effects of Age in Aggregate Crime Rates. Alfred Blurnstein and Jacqueline Cohen, Carnegie-Mellon Universw, Richard Rosen- feld, University of M~ssouri-St Louis

Punishment and Propensity in the Study of Crime in the Lk Course. John Hagan, University of Toronto; Alberto PaMoni, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Discussion: Charles R. Tittle, Washington State University

S d o n 189, Saturday, August t2,8:30 a.m. Contlnental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Lewrl Action and Structure in Social Theory Organizer: Jeffrey C. Alexander, University of California-Los Angeles Action. Interaction. and the interaction Order. Ann Rawls. Wayne State University Power and Agency: A Critique of Giddens' Structuration Theory. Richard Muench,

University of Dusseldorf Structure and Agency in Mamist Theory. Pbtr Sztompka, Uniwersytat Jagiellonski,

Poland Discussion: Jeffrey C. Alexander, University of California-Los Angeles

Session 201, Saturday, August 12,10:30 a.m. Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level Family Fbsponses to Macro Economic Change Organizer: Glen H. Elder, Jr.. University of No& Carolina-Chapel Hill Presider: Rand D. Conger, Iowa State University Unemployment and Mental Health in a Blue Collar Community. Ronald Kessler.

University of Michigan

The Two Faces of Divorce: Women and Children's Interests. Sara McLanahan, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Russell Sage Foundation

Discussion: Rand D. Conger, Iowa State University; Jeylan Mortimer, University of Minnesota

Session 231, Saturday, August 12,2:30 p.m. Theoretical Pers$ecth on the Sociology of Culture Contlnental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Long, Rice University The Making of Inequality: Cultural and Moral Exclusion in the French and American

Middle Classes. Michele Lamont, Princeton University Listening to Learn and Learning to Listen. George Lipsitz, University of Minnesota Social Systems. Cultural Practices. John Fiske, University of Wisconsin Discussion: Michael Schudson, Universrty of California-San Diego

Sedan 246, SaturUay, August 12,430 p.m. From Interpretation to Structure Contlnental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: Donna Eder, Indiana University From Internretation to Structure: The Constructivist Perpsective. Karin Knorr-Cetina,

~niveisrty of Bielefeld Sirateoies into Structures: When Culture Becomes Structure and When It Doesn't. -. - - ~-

A&-~~idler, University of California-Berkeley Discussion: Aaron Cicourel, University of California-San Diego

Special Sessions Topics not directly related to the meeting theme, yet of particular interest

to the Program Committee, are highlighted by the Special Sessions listed below. Semion 15, Wedmsday, August 9,10:30 a.m. East As& and Theories of Soclal and Economic Organizations Contlnental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: William L. Parish, University of Chicago Patlerns of Asian Capitalism. Gary G. Hamilton, University of California-Davis Development Strategies and Economic Organizations in Latin America and East

Asia. Gary Gereni, Duke University Work and Class in the New East Asian Caplalism. Hagen Koo, University of Hawaii

Session 40, Wednesday, August 9.230 p.m. Comparative Stratification Fiesearch In Canada Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: John Myles, Carleton University Comparative Class Analysis: Locating Canada in Ule Context of the United States

and Scandinavia. Wallace Clement, Carleton University Class and Power in Canadian Sociology. Robert Brym, University of Toronb Canada's Crisis of Permeable Fordism: Implications for Politics. Jane Jenson, Har-

vard Universty

Seasion 69, Thursday, August 10.8:30 a.m. Crisis in the Farmbelt Contlnental Perlor 7-8, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: David L Brown, Cornell University The Financial Well-being of F a n Operator Households in Farm~ng-Dependent

Counties. Susan Bentley, USDA-ERS The Socioeconomic Position of Elderly Residents in Farming-Dependent Counties.

Nina Glasgow and David L Brown, Cornell University Social and Political Adaptation of Farm Women to the Farm Crisis. Katherine Meyer

and Linda M. Lobao, Ohio State University Gender and Class Dimensions of Off-Farm Employment: Response to Farm Crisis in

the CombeH and Mississippi Delta. Max J. Pfeffer, Rutgers University; Jess C. Gilbert, University of Wisconsin

Discussion: Jan Flora, Kansas State University

Smslon 135, Friday, August 11,10:30 a.m. AIDS in San Frencisto Contlnental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level Organizer: Beth E. Schneider, University of California-Santa Barbara

Representatives from seven San Francisco Bay area organizations working on AIDS education, service provision, and public policy, will discuss the unique features of their current activities, ongoing dilemmas, and expectations for Ule future.

Session 162, Friday, August 11,230 p.m. Relations Between English and French in Canada Contlnental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level Organizers: Raymond Breton. University of Toronto; Maurice Pinard, McGill

University Recent Evolution of Language Composition in Canada Rejean Lachapelle, Statis-

tics Canada Fight. Flight. or Accommodate? Quebec's Non-francophones* Response to Lan-

guage Conflict Patricia Fitzsimmons-LeCavafier, Carleton University; Guy LeCavalier, Concordia University

Ethnic Movements and the Cwnpetiion Model: Some M i i n g Links. Sarah Beknger, McGill Survey Research Laboratory; Mwrice Pinard, McQill University

Language Policies in Canada: The Management of Intergroup Relations in Diirent Socio-Political Arenas. Raymond Breton, University of Toronto

Discussion: Stanley Lieberson, Harvard University

Sm6fon 180, Saturday, August 12,0:30 a.m. T h New immigration Continental Ballmom 6, Ballroom Level Organizer: Victor Nee, Cornell University Presider: John WaIton. University of California-Davis Asian Immigration: Recent Patterns. Trends and Impact. Charles Hirschman, Uni-

versity of Washington; Mm'son Wong, Texas Christian University Ethnic and Family Bases of Immigrant Incorporation. Victor Nee. Cornell University;

Jimy Sanders, University of Swth Carolina Social Structure, Household Strategies and the Cumulative Causation of Migration.

Doug M8S$ey, NORClUnivenity of Chicago Discussion: Lme Cheng, Universrty of CaMomia-Los Angeles

Swdon 232, SaturUay, (iugust 12,230 p.m. !3ocial Change In Me- Conttnental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Lsval Organizer: Marla Tienda, University of Chicago Presider: Celestino Fernandez, University of Arizona Urban involution and Social Stratification in Mexico. Bryan Roberts, University of

Texas-Austin; Agustin Escobar, Cenbo de Invesligaciones y Estvdicd Super- iores en Antropologia Social del Occidente

Gender and International Migration: A Comparison of Women's Employment in Garment and Electronics Industries in Swlhern California and the US.-Mexico Border. Maria Patricia Fernandm Kelly, Johns w i n s University

Adaptations to LRCA in Mexico: Preliminary Impressions. Sergio Diaz-Briquets, Commission for the Study of International Migration and Cooperative Economic Development

Discussbn: Robert L. Bach, State University of New York-Binghamlon

Didactic Seminars Didactic Seminars ere designed to keep sociologists abreast of recent

scholarly trends and developments. Experts considered to be at the fore- front of a given field are invited by the Program Committee to conduct these sessions. Seminar speakers will present materials to explain spe- cialized developments within their topic areas.

Seminars are scheduled for two, three or four hours. Please see the listing below for session details and brief seminar descriptions provided by the speakers.

Attendance at each Didactic Seminar is limited to 50. and pre-paid registration is required. Seminar fees are $15 each, and all persons iegistering for seminars must also be paid registrants for the Annual Meeting. Those already enrolled should have received their tickets with their name badges. Those who did not reserve in advance butwho wish to attend should check at the Tickets Desk for possible openings.

No one will be admitted without a paid reservation; tickets will be collected at the door. Seasion 41, Wednmday, August 9,230 p.m.-4:ZO p.m. Analyzing Social lntsraeth Pmcwaea Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Sam Vuchinich, Oregon Stale University

Th~s seminar focuses on the .logic and implementation of quantitative models for the analysis of face-to-face social interaction. It begins by describing Unks between some theoretical views of social process (Mead. Blumer, Goffman, Collins, Sacks and Scheglofl) and quantitative models. An emphasis is placed on selecting approp riate models, given the constraints of theory and data. The seminar demonstrates three different quantitative approaches: logit models (a loglinear approach), survi- vallhazards models (an event history approach), and covariance structure models(a LISREL approach). Analysis examples with longitudinal data include parent-child interaction in the adjustment to remarriage, parental discipline and child antisocial behavior. and models for the duration of sbikes, wars, riots and family conflict Some knowledge of multiple regression is the only recommended prerequisite.

s8ssfon 70. Thursday, August 10,8:30-3 1:30 a.m. Sludylng Kinthlp Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Alice S. Rossi and Peter H. Rossi, Univers-ky of Massachusetts-Amherst

This seminar will emphasize issues of design and measurement in the study of kinship structures and intergenerational relations. Special attention will be given to the use of biographic data in cross-sectional surveys, and the fadorial survey methods for the study of normative Wigations to kin. Empirical examples of a selected range of topics will be drawn from our forthcoming book, Of Human Bond-

ing, a study of parent-chid relations across the l i i course (Mine de Gruytsr, in press). No specific prerequisites are recommended, but familiarity wih survey design and analysis will be assumed.

!bmion 107, Thursday, Augumt 10,230-4:20 p.m. lntrocluctlon b MuItlstste PopUletiOn lllodsk Continental Parlor 9, Ballmom Level Robert Schoen, University of Illinois-Urbana

The seminar will examine muMstate (or incrernent-dscrement) life tables to give those attending a basic understanding of (1) the structure of those models. (2) the methods for calculating them, (3) the summary measure they provide, and (4) how they can be applied to available data. There are no prerequ~sites other than a knowledge of elementary algebra.

Safalon 108, Thursday, August 10,230420 p.m. Measuring Religious Valuee Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level Andrew Greeley, National Opinion Research Center

Discussion will fccuson thevari~uswaysthatreligiousimagery can bemeasuretl, pariicularly in surveys, and the need for a theoretical orientation befare one even begins to try to measure the images.

session 122, FrtcPay, August 11, &30-10:20 a.m. hku%auring Reskbnllal Segregation Tlburon, 4th Floor Dougias Massey, NORClUniversity of Chicago Over the years, researchers have put forth many indices as potential measures of

residential segregation. A review of the methodological literature reveals no fewer than 20 separate candidates. In his didactic seminar, I cdnsider these indices, their properties, and the underlying structural relationships between them. 1 attempt to reduce the measurement problem down to achoice among indices grouped into five diierent conceptual categories that correspond toseparate axesof spatial variation. Using empirical examples, I show how diifference indices lead to diierent conclu- sions about the nature of residential segregation, and argue forthe conceptualization of segregation as a multidimensional phenomenon.

!%6sbn 136, Frlcby, Augwt 11,10:30 a.m.-1220 p.m. Computer Analysls of Qualltatiw Data Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Kathleen Carley, Carnegie-Mellon University

A computer assisted approach for comparing knowledge (perceptions, attitudes. beliefs, meanings) across individuals and groups, for determining what knowledge is "mial", and for looking at changes in such knowledge and implications for this change for the society or group will be presented. Using h e computer, verbal protocols (such as interviews or excerptsfrom journals or books) can be coded soas to extract not only what "concepts" are present but also the relationships between these concepls. This procedure generates a "map" of the knowledge expressed in the verbal protocol. Maps from two or more verbal protocols can be examined visually to locate qualitative dillerences. Alternatively, computer procedures (which will be described) can be used to quantitatively measure the degree of similarity and difference in two or more verbal protocols. Examples will bedrawn from the following areas: (1 )comparison of expert and non-expert knowledge, and (2) comparison of the evolution overtime of dflerences and similarities in the perceptionsof asocial role by members of a group. Finally, it will be demonstratedthat qualitatively based datasuch as this on the differences and similarities in shared knowledge, perceptions, culture, etc., can be used in conjunction with otherdataon the group (demographic changes, social structure. or presence of an "innovative idea") to explore the potential for change in the group or society in question via simulation.

Session 183, Ffiday, August 11,2:30-6:20 p.m. Methods of Social Network Andydt Contlnentat Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University

This seminar will give an introductory overview d methods for studying social structures conceived as social networks, emphasizing quantitative approaches. It begins with coverage of Wdy designs. sources of data, instruments for data collec- tion, and research on the quality of network measurement. It will also introduce major methods used to analyze network data including centrality analysis location of cohesive subgroups. spatial analysis, and block modelling and positional analysis. The seminar will include worked examples and discussion of computer soltware for nelwork analysis.

Session 191, Setudy, August 12, R30-1030 a.m. Cultural Interpretation Continental Parlor 9, 6allroom Level Bennette Jules-Rasette, University of California-San Diego

The seminar will cover a cross-section of methods and rnadels of analysis in the sociology of art, culture, and knowledge. Background on major issues in the sociol- ogy of culture will be helpful to participants. Theseminarshould be of special interest to scholars engaged in the analysis of cultural and expressive forma Interpretations of cultural and technological objects and recent debates on postmodernity will be discussed. Attention will be devoted to the relevance of anthropological. semiotic, and literary theories to sociological analysis. Insights from the works of Roland Barthes. Michel de Certeau. Mary Douglas, Michel Foucault, and AJ. Greimas will be examined in the context of recent developments in sociological approaches to cultural analysis. Case studies of popular art and the impact of new technologies will be presented as methodological applications.

-ion 202, Saturday. August 12,10:30 a.m.-1 220 p.m. New Claw mfy Tlburon, 4th Floor Ivan Szelenyi, University of California-Los Angeles

The term "New Class" became widely used in American sociology following Milovan Djilas' book on Ihe emergence of a bureaucratic class under communism. but the idea of New Class can be traced back for over acentury. Since the 1870's the idea that the bourgeoisie may be "unseated" by a new dominant class, which will be composed either by scientists (Bakunin), engineers (Veblen), managers [Burnham), intellectuals [Gouldner), left critical intelligentsia (Schelsky), etc.. haunted social sciences. This didactic seminar will give a history of the idea of Ihe "New Class", will identify the different waves of New Class theorizing, and will try to explain the diversities of New Class theories from a sociology of knowledge perspective.

Session 233, Saturday, August 12,230-6:20 p.m. Methods of Conversational Analysis Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom L e d Emanuel A. Schegloff, University of California-Los Angeles

This seminar will focus on some systematic melhods for analyzing ordinarytalk in interaction in the absence of "inspiration."The main practical researchconcern to be addressed is how to get initial technical access to what is going on in some stretch of talk. No specific prior knowledge will be presupposed, but participants should have some idea of what conversation analysis is and, in general, the sorts of procedures it employs, and wanlsome exposure to waysof working along those lines. The session will include first a quick review of some relevanl past work and then an exercise in collecbve data analysis on some specimen data.

Session 247, Saturday, August 12,4:30-6:20 p.m. The Revival ol German Sociological Theory Tlburon, 4th Floor Richard Mvench, University of Dusseldorf

Recent developments in German sociological theory have received particular attention well beyond the society's national boundaries. This seminar will provide an introduction into two major theories and will critically discuss their achievements: Niklas Luhmann's systems theory and Jurgen Habermas's theory of communicative action. After ~ntroducing thetwotheories, their application to explainingorder andthe development of modern societies will be discussed. The seminar is open to all who are interested in recent developments in German sociological theory. There are no special requirements but some familiarity with the basic problems of sociological theory will be helpful for participants.

Workshops Professional and Teaching Workshops have become a standard com-

ponent of the Annual Meeting. This year over 25 workshops provide opporlunities for atlendeesto update their skillsand knowledge in a variety of professional and disciplinary areas. Workshops are generally open lo all convention registrants; however, please note that there are two pre- convention workshops (Sessions 1 and 2) which required advance regis- tration and fee payment.

Professional Workshops Session 1, Monday, August 7,9:00 a.m.-1200 noon, 1 :30-530 p.m.;TuwUay, August 8,9:00 a.m.-1200 noon, 1:30-3:OO p.m. Job Cllnlc Contlnental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level Richard Irish. Transcentury Corporation Clinic fees: ASA Members $1 95. non-members $260.

Session 16, Wednesday, August 9,10:30 a.m. Vita vs. Resume: Soclologlsts Approaching Business Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Christine Wright-lsak. Batten. Barton. Durstine 8. Osborne; Stephen A. Buff, Ameri-

can Sociological Association

Session 42. Wedneeday, August 9,2:30 p.m. Utilizing Sociology in Policy Formation (Co-sponsored by the Coalition for Utitiz-

ing Sociology-composed of the Sociological Practice Association, the Society for Applied Sociology, the SSSP Task Force on Applied Sociology, the ASA Section on Sociological Practice. and Sociologists in Business)

Yosemlte B, Ballroom Level Marvin Olsen, Michigan State University; RobertAlthauser, National Science Foun-

dation and lndiana University; David O'Brien, University of Missouri-Columbia;

Robert Scott, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences; H m i o n Trice, Cornell University; Card Weiss, Harvard University

The workshop panelists, all of whom have given considerable atlention to this topic, will address such questions as: Why is relatively IWe sociological theory and research directed toward the formation of public policies? Why do policy makers tend to ignore sociology? How might more sociologists be encouraged to do palicy- relevant work? How must sociological theory and research be altered I it is to be used by policy makers? How can policy makers be encouraged to utilize our work?

Session 54, Wednesday, August 9,4:30 p.m. Strategizing Careers Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level Elizabeth Menaghan, The Ohio State Uniwsity

"Teaching, research and sewice-but the greatest of these is.. . ?" We will explore (but almost certainly not resolve) some basic istues involved in setting one's own course in the field, and articulate m e of the dilemmas inherent in mainstream definitions of professional and disciplinary "success."

Session 71, Thutuaay, August 10,8:30 a.m. Wrlting for Sociology Journals Yosemite A, Ballroom Level Willam Form, Ohio State University; Willam Parish. University of Chicago; SheIdon

Stryker, lndiana University; Richard L. Simpson, University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill

-ion 83, Thunday, August 10,10:30 a.m. Women's Studies m h Centers Yosemite A, Ballroom Level Myra Marx Ferree, Universty of Connecticut Participants: Cheris Krarnarae, Center for the Study of Women in Society, University

of Oregon; Heidi Harfmann, Institute for Women's Policy Research; Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley Center for Research on Women; Patricia MacCorquodale, Southwest Institute f a Research on Women. University of Arizona

A panel discussion of the issues involved in doing research on and for women in the contea of awomen's studies research center rather than atraditiinal deparhent. The specific tunding opportunities, instihnional arrangements, and research em- phases of several major centers will be discussed

Sadon 109, Thursday, August 10,2:30 p.m. Medla Coverage Tlburon, 4th Flow Pepper Schwat-tz, University of Washington; Janet Lever, RAND Corporation; Ron

Lorenpen, KPIX-TV, San Francisco Schwae will pesent an overview and some personal experiences on using

sociology in the daily news, in magazines, in Wade books, and as newscast Repre- sentatives from media outletswill presenttheinsiden'view.The workshopwill focus on both the organizational structure of varlous media and guidelines to help one conform to their professional requirements.

Session 123, Friday, August 11,8:30 a.m. Soclologlsts in Blomedlcal !Settings Cypress, 4th Floor Linda H. Aiken, University of Pennsyhania

Several brief oresentations bv sociokmists who have established research and educabonal In nursing and meiical schools will set the stage for a group discussion around the theme opportunities, challenges, and impediments to social science research in biomedical settings.

!Tmsion 137. Friday, Auaust 11.10:30 a.m. - . .

the ~ocrolog~cal practice ~sso~iation) Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level Elizabeth J. Clark, Montclair State College; Jan M. Fritz, National Cancer Institute

and Loma Linda University The workshop will begin with a brief overview of the variety of theoretical

approaches which are useful for clinical sociological intervention. Theory will be examined in relation to level of focus [micro and macro). The workshop locus will be on strategies in several areas of specialization such as health care, conflict interven- tion and community programs.

Man 164, Friday, August 1 1,230 p.m. Publishing Books Sausallto, 4th Floor Lewis Coser, State University of New York-Stony Brook and W o n College; Grant

Barnes, Stanford University Press; Joyce SeltIer. The Free Press

Session 175, Friday, August 11,4:30 p.m. Getting Research Funded Yosemlte A, 4th Floor William V. D'Antonio, American Sociological Association Panel: Phyllis Moen, National Science Foundation; Howard Silver. Consortium of

Social Science Associations; Wendy Baldwin, National Institutes of Health

Seasion 192, Saturday, August 12,8:30 a.m. Evaluation Research Yosemite A, Ballroom Lewel James Wright, Tulane University

Seasion 203, Saturday, Augwt 12,10:30 a.m. Oolng on the Academk Job Market Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: Judith Trees, University d Caliimia-lwine Job Seeking as Marketing Activity. Howard E. Freeman, University of California-Lo6

Angeles Job Seeking as Social Interaction. GeraldMamell, University of Wisconsin-Madison Job Seeking as Presentafion of SeH. CaWnne White Berheide, Skamore College Interrogators: Sandra Boyd, University of Southern California; Dula J. Espinosa,

University of California-Sanla Barbara; Jodi O'tWen, University of Washington; Jason Lee, Northern Illinois University

Secrets, strategies. dos and don'ts for getling a jobat a collegeor university. Haw to build avitae. target applications, polish recruitmenttalks, inte~iew,negotiatean offer. Presentations folbwed by questions hom a panel of job seekers and from the audience. Recommended foc graduate students, job seekers, graduate advisors.

m i o n 234, Saturday, Auguat 12,230 p.m. Going on the Buaiwss or Government Job M a b t Yosemlte A. Ballroom Level - , - - - - - - ~

L& Suter, National Center for Education Statistics; Ron Mandsrscheid, National Institute of Mental Hearth: Yolanda Wesely, New York C i i Partnership; Mary M. Kritz, Cornell University, David Prenslry, N.W. Ayer Advertising

This workshop will be a discussion of non-academic employment for sociobgists who are seeking information on what to expect fmm jobs OOtSide academia Its purpose is to introduce sociologistswho areseeking employment tothetypes of jobs available outside academia. A panel of five sociologists currently or prev8vi0usly employed in the non-academic sector will discuss opportunities and procedures for obtaining employment in government agencies [state and FederalJ, in the advertising and insurance industries, and in private research and agences. The format will be shorl ptesentations by four panel members followed by questions from the audience.

Session 248. Saturday, Augud 12.4:30 p.m. Soviet Sodology (co-sponsored by the ASA Cornmillee on World Sociology) Yoaamlte A, Bdlroom Levd Organ~zer: Randell J. Oben, The Ohio State University Presider: Mikk Titma, Institute of History, Tallin, Estonia Participants: Mikk Titma, lnstiite of History, Tallin, Estonia; A M i s Matulyonis,

Institute of Philosophy, Sociology and Law, Vilnius, Lithuania; William Bielby, University af California-Santa Barbara

Teaching Workshops Swakn 2, Tuesday, August 8,9:30 am.-490 p.m. Academk bademhip: Orientation tor N w Chairpetsons [co-sponsored by the . .

ASA Teaching %;vices Program) Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level Lee H. Bowker, Humboldt State University; Hans 0. Mauksch, University of Georgia;

Dennis McSeveney, University of New Orleans Fees: ASA Members $55; non-members $75

W o n 17, Wednesday, August 9,10:30 am. Strategb In Dealing with Mandated Assessment Belvedere, 4th Floor William S. Johnson, Ball State University; Mary Lou Wylie, James Madison

University Participants will examine how colleges and deparlments can address the issues

surrounding academic assessment Successful outcomes models will be presented and an outline of implementation discussed. The impact of program assessment on the curriculum and learning outcomes in the major will be presented.

Sawkn 43. W-, Augrwt 9,230 p.m. Teaching tntroductory Sociology Yoaemhe A, ~ a l l r m n i Level Brent Bnrton, lowa State University; Ann Sundgren, Tacoma Community College Seasion 55, Wednesday, August 9,630 p.m. Methods of Undergraduate Curricula: l?eslgnln@ Applkcl Curricula Bslvsdere, 4th floor John Seem, Vierbo College;-Paul Eberts, Cornell University

This workshop will present applied curricula design as a series d planning ques- tions which faculty may collectively answer to develop an applied curriculum and individual applied courses. Examples of applied curricula will be presented. Partici- pants will work in small groups to outline an applied curriculum andlor an applied cwrse.

Sercrion 72, Thumday, August 10,8:30 a.m. Peaceful A l t e m a t l ~ to the War System: Courwe md Cunicula Tlkrron, 4th floor John MacDougaN, University of Lowell ConRict Resolution. James Lam, George Masan University Third-World PerspeCtivesand Non-Violent Social Change. Sudwshan Kapoor, Caii-

fornia State University-Fresno Alternative Defense and Alternative Security. Camlyn Stephenson, University of

Hawaii

Peace Movements and the End of the Cdd War. Paul Joseph, Tufts University Refiections on the Pedagogy of Peace. Lester Kurlr, University of Texas-Austin

Suedon 84, Thursday, August 10,1430 a.m. Teaching Sociology in the Retlglously Afffllated Liberal ArW Colloge Tiburon, 4th F b r Raymond DeVries, St Olaf College; Mary Ann Groves, Manhattan College; Robert

A. Clark, Wh i i r th College This workshoo will focus on two issues: In what wavs does the nature of an

educational inst/tution-in this case a religious liberal <;ts college-influence the teaching of sociology? What are some practical techniquesformergingreligiousand sociological concerns in Ihe classroom?

Seasion 124, Friday, August 11,8:30 am. W n g Sense of the Sodology Major In the Liberal Arts Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level Theodore C. Wagenaar. Miami University; Zelda Gamson, New England Resource

Center for Higher Education; PaulEberts, Comell Universw, Robe17 Davis, Nwth Carolina A&T State University; Kathleen Cn'tteden, University of Illinois- Chicago; Caria B. Howery, ASA Teaching Services Program

Sesdon 165, Fllday, Augwt 11,230 p.m. The Content and Quality of Gmluate Education Tiburon, 4th Floor Maureen Kelleher, Northeastem University-Boston; Gereld Klonglan, lowa State

University This workshop will provide participants an oppoltunity to discuss and become

familiar with resources in the following areas: various curriculum models, current national data on graduate education, GRE scores, employment options,the impact of international students, the role of post-doctoral education, and Ihe "teaching of teaching."

Sedan 176, Frlday, August 14,4:30 p.m. AIDS Edutatfen Tlburon. 4th Flobr

P: Levine, loomf fie^ College and Memorial Sloan Ketiering Cancer Center Teaching an Undergraduate Courseabout HlV Infectionand AIDS. Donna E. Parme-

lee, &gate University Teaching a Graduate Course about HIV Infection and AIDS. Cathy S. GreenMat,

Rutgers Universjty Teaching about HlV Infection and AlDS from a Medical Sociology Perspective.

Carole Campbell, California State University-Long Beach Teaching about HLV lnfection and AlDS as a Social Problem. JoelBrodsky, Univer-

sity of Nebraska Teaching about HIV Infection and AlDS in a Hostile Environment Sarah C. Brabant,

~niv-mity of Southwestem Louisiana Teaching about HIV Infections and AlDS from a Community Organizing and Social

Change Perspective. Nancy SWer Shaw, University of California-Santa Cruz The Personal is Pedagogical: Coming Out as a Seropaslive and a Caregiver. Martin

P. Levine, Bloomfield Cdlege and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Fricby, August 11, C30 p.m. Teedrlng Medical Sociology: What Sbu id Studenta Fkad? The Used TexIa,

Anthologies, Flction and Narrative [co-sponsored by the ASA Teaching Services Program and the Section on Medical Sociology]

Y m l t e A, Ballroom Lewd Raymond DeVries, St. Olaf College; Phil Brown, Brown Univemity; Fred Wolinsky,

Texas A 8 M University; Catherine Riessman, Smith College; Rkhard Hessler, University of Missouri

What is the most effective way of inwoducing students to the field of medical sociology? A wide array of written material is available to the teacher of medical sociicology. This workshop explores the advantages and disadvantages of various textual materiak, including texts, anthologies, fiction, narrative descriptions of medi- cal settings, and personal narratives.

Session 235, Saturday, August 12,230 p.m. Teachtng Marriage end the Family Manon, 6th Floor Ginger Macheski, Valdosta State College; Kay Michael Trcost, North Carolina State

University Topics discussed will include the integration of race, class, gender, social history,

family analysis, atc., in family ccurses.

Saturday, August 12,630 p.m. The AlDS Quarterly Lotnbad, 6th Floor Bruce Ward, WGBH-TV, BostOn

"The AIDS Quarterly" is a series of news updates and documentary programs scheduled for broadcast four times annuallv. The wries is ~roduced bv WGBH-TV. Boston, and is anchored by Peter ~ e n n i G . The serles premiered on~ebnrary 28. 1989, with an exam~nation of Admiral James Watkins, the chairman of the Presiden- tial Commission on the HIV Epidemic.

"The AlDS Quarterly" is one component of alarger effolt, The AIDS Project, slated to include broadcast of co-produced documentary specials on AIDS. along with a national outreach effon designed to link public television statimns, their viewers and AIDS service providers.

This workshop plans to present segments of "The AlDS Qualterly" and to inspire

interactive discussion on elements and issues of these segments. In smaller discus- sion groups, participants will be asked to debate questions of legal, ethical, and medical issues.

Roundtable Discussions This popular program component is designed to bring together small

groups of people interested in discussing specific topics. The 1989 Pro- gram Committee authorized a Roundtable Organizing Committee chaired by Dana Vannoy (University of Cincinnati) to review proposals and select topics and presenters to guide discussions.

This yearthe informal discussion sessions have been organized around general topics. Nine sessions have been arranged: Session 18- International; Session 44-Law and Economy; Session 65-Organiza- tions; Session 149-Family; Session 177-Gender, Race and Ethnicity Issues; Session 193-Social Problems; Session 204-Organizations; Session 21 6-Theory and Methodology; and Session 249-Issues in the Discipline. For complete information, refer to the session listings in the body of the Program.

Since severaldiscussions are held simultaneously in one large meeting room, no audio-visual equipment or recording devices may be used and there are no formal paper presentations.

Tours Enhance your visit to San Francisco by organizing your convention

activity schedule around the special tour program planned by Troy Duster, University of California-Berkeley. You are only a registration away from viewing the city's highlights, increasing your knowledge of AlDS and Alcohol use and abuse research, or relaxing while picnicing on Angel Island. So don't leave the meetings before participating in at least one or perhaps several of these unique opportunities to explore our host city.

The schedule of tours is provided below. Reservations are mandatoty. Please check at the Tickets Desk in he ASA Registration Area for availa- bility and any late cancellations. Those already enrolled for tours should have received their tickets with their name badges.

All groups will deparl from the San Francisco Hilton following a brief orientation period. Please reter to the information as listed below for exact location of the orientation room and plan to arrive promptly so that depar- ture times are observed. Keep in mind that the arrival times back to the Hilton are estimates only and may vary somewhat due totraffic congestion. TOURS 1,2,3 & 4: San Francisco City Ovswlew Wednesday, August 9, 12:15-2:00 p.m. (tour 1) Wednesday, August 9. 2:15-4:OOp.m. (tour 2) Friday, August 7 1, 1:45-3:30 p.m. (tour 3) Friday. August 1 1,3:45-5:30 p.m. [tour 4) Fee: $ f 4.00 Orientation Area: Plaza A, Lobby L e d Tour Leader: Galavents, Inc. Twr Guide. San Francisco

Get acquainted or reacquainted with San Francisco! This one and one-hall hour tour isdesrgned to orient you from your hotel tothe city's highlights-the famousand the familiar, and today's realities. Your guide will regale you with tales of the Earth- quake and F~re of 1906 as you view fine examples of Victorian survivors hom the comfort of the site-seeing motor coach. Visit unique neighborhoods such as Nob Hill. once home to Silver K~ngs and Lumber Barons, and Chinatown with its crowded streets and interesting shops Your Galavents guide will remind you of any special events. showings and performances that are available during your visit and answer any questions you might have regarding ASAs host city by the Bay. (Bus Tour)

TOURS 5 1 6: San Francisco AlDS Foundation Thursday, August 10, 930 am.- 12:00 Noon [tour 5) Friday, August 1 f , 9:30 a.m.-12:00 Noon (twr 6) Fee: $1 5.00 Orientarion Area: Plaza A, Lobby Level Tour Leaders: Diane Beeson. California State University, Haywerd, and Kathy Fox. University of California, Berkeley (Thursday Tow); Steven Epstein, Universiy of California. Berkeley, and Nancy Stoller Shaw, University of California, Santa Cnrz (Friday Tow) (Co-Sponsored by Sociologists' AIDS Network)

The San Francisco AlDS Foundation is a worldwide leader in AlDS prevention. service and advocacy. It was founded in 1982 by a group of concerned physicians and gay community actiiSts. As the epidemic spread andthe need for services grew it enlisted the suppod of other segmentsofthe city's population. This tour will give you an opportunity to observe and learn about the functioning of many of its 90 staff members and over 600voluntears who have contributed greatly Lo h e humanity and effectiveness of this city's response to the AlDS epidemic. You will learn about the foundations contributions and strategies in education, client services and public @icy (BusMlalking Tour-Limited lo 20 participants)

TOUR 7: Prwenting and Studying Alcohol and Drug Abu6e Thursday, August 10, 12:45 p.m.-4:30 p.m. Fee: $15.00 Orientation Area: Plaza A, Lobby Level Tour Leadec Marvin Olsen, Michigan State Universily and Coalition for Utilizing Smidogy (Go-Sponsoc ~ I i t i o n for Utilizing Sociology, consisting of the Sociabgical Prac- tice Association, the Society for Applied Sociology, the ASA Sociological Practice Section, rhe Society for the Study of Social Problems Task Force on Applied Sociology, and Sociologists in Business)

The tour will visit two applied sociological research centers in Berkeley that conduct studies of alcohol and drug use and abuse. The Prevention Research Center focuses on environmental approaches to preventing alcohol-related prob- lems. Current projects inclode an evaluation of sewer-intervention programs in bars and restaurants, studies of drinking in blue-collar work places, and research on the factors that promote heavy drinking by Mexican Americans. The Akohol Research Group, which is a National Akohol Research Center, focuseson the epidemiology of alcohol problems. Theoverall objective of allthe studiesconducted by the Group is to gain greater understanding of the place of drinking panerns and problems in society. The emphasis is on naturalistic data about drinking patterns and problems as they occur in everyday life. At both agencies. professional staff members will conduct a tour of the facilities, explain the kind of research they are presently doing, and discuss problems encountered in doing applied research on alcohol and drug problems. Approximately an hour and a quarter will be spent in each agency. (BuslWalking Tour-Limited to 25 participants)

TOUR 6: Angd ldand Tour Friday, August 1 1, 9r15 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Fee: $15.00 Orientation Area: Plaza A, Lobby Level Tour Leader: hborah Woo, University ot California Santa CNZ

This is a walking tour of Angel Island.the port of entry for Asian immigrants. Today's 740-acre wildlife preserve, open to the public fos picnicking, camping, cycling, and hiking, was the iirst American experience for these immigrants much like Ellis Island for European immigrants in the Harbor of New York. Thistour will provide participants an oppoltunity to visa former detention facilities and a museum housing information, materials. photographs, etc., on the island as an immigration station. Atthe same time, visitors can enjoy the spectacular views of Alcatraz Island. the surrounding San Francisco and Marin areas, as well as the three bridges connecting the San Fran- cisco Peninsula to the East and North Bays. Wear warm (layered as it can be windy ' on the Island), comfortable clothing and walking shoes and take along a sack lunch. [Cable CarlFerrylWalking Tour-Limited to 20 participants)

TOUR 9: Tha Urban Geography of Political Development In Berkdby Friday, August 11, 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Fee: $15.00 Orientation Area: Plaza A, Lobby Level Tour Leader: Hardy Frye. UniwmYy of California, Santa CR~Z

Following the War in he early fifties, a new black community began to assert its social and political leadership through a community based movement led by E.B. Gibson (a former member of A. Philip Randolph's Sleeping Car Pci-ter's Union). This movement centered aroundthe leadership role of black churches and civicorganiza- tions. Berkeley's Bymn Rumford, elected to the State Assembly and authw of the state's first "Fair Hwsing Law". emerged from this community based organization. This group became active in civil rights struggles and in efforts tochangethe political direction of the City. The City, despite its large black population. had a history of relatively conservative white Mayors, reHecbing Berkeley's origins as a middle class bedroom community.

The transformation in Berkeley's polical development and the issues and politics of its political struggle can be located in its changing cultural geography. Between 1970 and 1980, the Black population declined by wer a third. And the years have seen the aging and greying of me older black political leadership and the migration of their children to other cities of the Bay Area. In their place have come more students and the new white middle class gentry who have settled in the neighborhoods to the north, the south, and the west of the university displacinglreplacing much of the earlier predominantly black settlement in swth and west Berkeley.

As the racial and social character of the population changed, the issues and locations of political struggles have also undergone a transformation. This tour will lead the group lhrwgh the histoly of the issues and contexts of Berkeley's political development by focusing on the geography of the struggles through Berkeley's last three decades. Tour sites and issues will include:(l)The Black Community of the 1950's and Its Change in the 19Ws; (2)The Emergence of the South Campus Bohemian CommunitylPeople's Park; (3)Changing West Berkeley. The Historic Waterfront. Old Industrial Berkeley, The De-Industrialization of the West Berkeley Industrial Area & The Emergence of the Ecologicallland Use Struggle Over the Berkeley Watedront; (4)The College Avenue Commercial Rent Control District (first in the nation). (BuslWalking Tour-Limited to 20 participants)

Sect ion Activities Section activities are interspersed throughout the live-day schedule of the Annual Meeting and are open to all meeting attendees. These specialized

sessions range in format from formal paper presentations to mini-conferences. The number of sessions allocated to each Section is based on thesize of the section; for the 27 active sections, there are a total of 120 separate program activities scheduled. This year Microcomputing joins the roster as the newest section. Section CouncilIBusiness Meetings, receptions, and the Section-sponsored Program Sessions are summarized below for quick reference: for more complete information, refer to the body of the Program.

Aging, Sociology of Asia & Asian America Collective Behavior & Social Mwemenis Community and Urban Sociology Comparative Historical Socioby Crime, Law and Deviance Culture, Sociology of Edwation. Soc~ology af Emotions, Soc~ology of Environment and Techndogy Family, Sociology of Marxist Sociology Medical Sociology Methodology Microcomputing Organizations & Occupations Peace and War. Sociology of Political Economy of the World-System Political Sociilogy Population, Sociology of Rac~al& Ethnic Minorities Science. Knowledge and Technology Sex & Gender. Sociology of Social Psychology Socioloaical Practice ~heoretilcal Sociology Undergraduate Education

Dlly

Sunday Thursday Friday Friday Saturday Thursday Sunday Friday Wednesday Saturday Friday Thursday Saturday Salurday Thursday Friday Wednesday Sunday Wednesday Wednesday Saturday Friday Wednesday Thursday Thursday Sunday Sunday

10:30 a.m. 1230 p.m. 10:30 am. 12:30 p.m.

1 030 am. Saturday. 230 p.m. 230 p.m.

Friday, 1230 p.m. 8:30 am. 8:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. $30 a.m.

12:30 p.m. Saturday. 12:30 p.m.

ASA Executive Office Staff Janet L. Asrner, Convention & Meetings Manager Barbara W. Bouquet. Bookkeeping Assistant Stephen A. But Assistant Executive Officer and Director, Professional

Develooment Proaram Cardine I. ' ~ u ~ n o , ~dministraiive Assistant/Section Coordinator Maru E. Corrada, Administrative Assistant William V. D'Antonio, Executive Officer Karen Gray Edwards, Publications Manager Frances M. Foster, Administrative Assistant, Minority Fellowship Program Susan M. Frensilli, Publications Assistant Sharon K. Gray, Office Manager Angela F. Grigsby, Subscriptions Secretaty Juanite L. Harnpton, Secretary Carla B. Howery, Assistant Executive Officer and Director, Teaching

Services Program Lionel A. Maldonado, Deputy Executive Officer and Director. Minority

Fellowship Program William H. Martineau, Executive AssociateIGovernance Manager Jen L Suter, Marketing & Meetings Manager Nancy L. Sylvester, Receptionist Donald N. Stanley, Mail Room and Shipping Clerk Cassandra M. Twardowski, Business Manager

Buslrwrrrs

1.1:30 am. 1 :30 p.m. 11:30 am. 1 :30 p.m. 1 :30 p.m. 11:m am. 230 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 1 1 :30 a.m. 11:30 am. 8:30 a.m. 3:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 930 a.m. 5:30 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 530 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 1 1 :30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 8:30 am. 1:30 p.m. 8:30 am. 12:30 p.m.

Fkoeptbns

Saturday. 6:30 p.m.

630 p.m. 6 : s p.m. Friday, 630 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Saturday, 6:30 p.m. Saturday. $30 p.m.

Future ASA Annual Meetings

1 9 9 0 - A ~ u s ~ 11-15 W8~hingt0n Hilton and Towers

Washington, DC

1991-August 23-27 Cincinnati Convention Center

Cincinnati, Ohio

1992-August 20-24 David L Lawrence ConventionlExposithm Center

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania .

Member Orientation and Welcoming Party

All new members of the Association, and those who would like to know more about ASKS governance structure and how to become involved in ASA activities, are invited tothe Member Orientation and Welcoming Party on Wednesday, August 9, from 6:30-8:00 p.m. in Yosemite Hall on the Ballroom Level.

This welcome is sponsored by the ASA Committee on Membership. Members of ASA Committees and Sectionsand several ASAofficers and editors will be on hand to discuss avenues for formal and informal invol- vement in the Association. Refreshments will be provided along with the free information. New members and first-time meeting participants are particularly encouraged to be present for this informative event!

DAN The seventeenth annual Departmental Alumni Night (DAN) will be held

on Wednesday at the close of the first evening plenary session, approxi- mately 10:30 p.m.. in the Imperial Ballroom on the Ballroom Level. Just find the banner frdm the institutibn you attended, served, are serving, or hope to serve, and meet colleagues to reminisce about graduate school days, relay recent rumors, and create new coalitions.

Each graduate department of sociology in the United States and Can- ada was invited to fly its banner to attract alumni and friends. A "home base" will also be provided for sociologists in business and industry as well as for international scholars and guests.

Make sure your meeting plans include the social event that brings all your friends together in one place at one time!

Honorary Reception Since 1984, the American Sociological Association has been joined by

sociology departments and regional societies in co-sponsoring the annual Honorary Reception that follows the President's address and the ASA Awards Ceremony. This year the Association is pleased to acknowledge the following as co-sponsors of the Honorary Reception:

Department of Sociology, Michigan State University, from which Presi- dent Huber received her PhD;

Department of So,ciology, The Ohio State University, where Huber is presently Dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences;

Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley; Department of Sociology, University of California, Riverside; Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California,

San Francisco: and Basil Blackwell, I~c.,'AsA's new publisher of Sociological Theory, Soci-

ological Methodology, and in h e near-Mure, Sociological Practice Review.

We invite all participants to join with our co-sponsors at the Honorary Reception in Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level, at 6:30 p.m. to express our appreciation, congratulations, and best wishes to the Presi- dent and major award winners on what promises to be afestive occasion.

ASA Business Meeting The annual ASA Business Meeting will begin at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday,

August 12, in Continental Ballroom 5 on the Ballroom Level. All members of the ASA are encouraged to attend to hear Association officers present their reports to the membership and to consider resolutions from ASA members offered for discussion and action.

Resolutions for the Business Meeting must be delivered to the ASA Headquarters Office (Toyon Room, 4th Floor) in the San Francisco Hilton before 500 p.m. on Friday, August 11. Each resolution must indicate the name and affiliation of the submitter and identify the person who will actually present the resolution at the Business Meeting. Those received before the deadline will be posted in the ASA Registration Area so that members may become familiar with upcoming business. Resolutions submitted to the Executive Office by the Friday deadline will be given preference on the Business Meeting agenda; unposted resolutions will be permitted, up to the limit of time available before the 10:20 p.m. adjournment

Reminder. . . Only current voting members of the ASA may submit, present, discuss and vote on Business Meeting resolutions.

Student Hospitality Room Students attending the Annual Meeting may make use of the Student

Hospitality Room. This year the Saratoga Room, 4th Floor, will be used for this purpose. The Student Hospitality Room will be open from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Wednesday through Satuday, and from 8:00 a.m. to4:OO p.m. on Sunday, to provide a place for students to meet, caucus, make dinner arrangements, etc. Some refreshments will be provided each day. Addi- tionally, students will have the opportunity to peruse graduate bulletins from various sociology programs around the country. All students regis- tered for the Annual Meeting are welcome to use of this hospitality room.

Student Reception The ASA Membership Committee and the Honors Program Student

Association will be co-hosting a reception on Friday, August I i , from 6:30 to 8:20 p.m. in the Student Hospitality Room (Saratoga, 4th Floor) for all students registered at the Annual Meeting. This isan opportunity tosocial- ize with other students attending the meeting.

Activities of Other Groups General information on activities af various groups meeting in conjunc-

tion with ASA is listed below and in the Program. In addition to the published meeting schedule,several organizations will have membership information and publications on display in the Table Space Area in the Ballroom Level corridors.

AIDS Quarterly-Saturday. August 12,430-6:20 p.m.-Lombard Alpha Kappa Delta-Saturday, August 12,4:30-6:00 p.m.-Belmont American Journal of Sociology Editorial Board-Saturday, August 12.

12:30-220 p.m.-Sonoma Armenian Behavioral Science Association-Friday. August 11,6:30-8:20

p.m.-Sausalito Association for Latinalo Sociology-Thursday, August 10, &30-10:30

p.m.-Yosemite C

California Sociological Association-Saturday, August 12. 630-7:30 p.m.-Continental Parlor 1

"Career Possibilities in Medical Sociology" (Barbara Altmanj-Wednes- day, August 9,6:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 2

Chairs of Caliimia State University Departmentsof Sociology-Saturday, August 12,7:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 1

Chairs of PhD Departments of Sociology-Thursday, August 10, 10:30 a.m.-1 2:20 p.m.-Yosemite B

Christian Sociological Society-Thursday, August 10,8:30-10:30 p.m.- Yosemite B

"Future Directions in Durkheim Scholarship" (Robert Alun Jones)- Friday, August 1 1.6:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 1

Coalition for Using Sociology-Wednesday, August 9,6:30-8:20 p.m.- Cypress

"Conversations with Significant Medical Sociologisls" (Elaine J, Lenkeij- Thursday, August 10,8:30-10:30 p.m.-Continental Parlor 7-8

Honors Program-Tuesday, August 8, 2:OO-5:00 p.m. (followed by re- ception)-Yasemite B; Wednesday, August 9, 8:30-10:20 am.- Lombard; Thursday, August 10. 7:OO-8:30 p.m.-Tiburon; Thursday, August 10, 830-la30 p.m. (reception sponsored by University of Virginia)-Belrnont; Friday, August 1 1, 23-420 p.m.-Continental Ballroom 5; Friday, August 11, 6:30-8:X) p.m.-Cypress; Saturday, August 12,10:30 a.m.-1 2:20 p.m.-Lombard; Sunday, August 13,8:30 a.m.-12:00 noon-Tiburon

Indiana University Alumni-Friday, August I 1,630-8:00 p.m.-Tamalpais ISA Research Committee No. 39 on Disasters (Russell Dynes)-Friday,

August 1 1,6:30-8:X) p.m.-Marin ISA Working Group on Housing and the Built Environment (Elizabeth

Huttmanl-to be announced, see bulletin boards National Council of State Sociological Associations-Friday, August 11,

6:30-8:20 p.m.-Belvedere B North American Chinese Sociologists Mini-Conference-Tuesday, Aug-

ust 8, a30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.-Sausaliio and Marin North American Chinese Sociologists Association-Thursday, August 10,

&30-10:30 p.m.-Cypress Open Meeting for Sociologists Interested in Researchon Social Change in

Taiwan, from the 1960s to the Present: Discussion of a Proposed Collaborative Research Project (Robert M. Marsh)-Wednesday, August 9,6:30-820 p.m.-Belvedere

Problems .of the Discipline Grant Working Group (Elizabeth Almquist, Dudley L. Poston, Jr., Kathryn Ward)-Saturday, August 12,2:30-6:20 p.m.-Belvedere A

Quaker Sociologists-Thursday, August 10,8:30-1030 p.m.-Sausaliio Radical Caucus-Friday, August 11,630-8:20 p.m.-Yosemite C "Reevaluation Counselling" (John MacDougal1)-Wednesday, August 9,

6:30-8:20 p.m.-Shasta "Remembrances by Students, Colleagues and Friends of Bill Hodge"

(Gerald Surtles, Carole Snow and Herman Turk; cash bar)-Thursday, August 11,8:30-10:30 p.m.-Diablo

"Researchers in Gender and Researchers in Emotions: Learning from One Another" (Lyn H. Lofland and Judy GersonJ-Friday, August 11, 630-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 7-8

"Social Psychology Dissertations in Progress" (Timothy J. Owens)- Thursday, August 10,830-10:30 p.m.-Continental Parlor 2

Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction-Thursday and Friday, August 10-1 1-Van Ness

Sociological Forum Editorial Board-Friday, August 1 1,820-1 0:20 a.m.- Whitney

Sociological Inquiry Editorial Board-Saturday, August 12, 230-4:00 p.m.-Belmont

Sociological Practice Association-Thursday, August 10, 9:30-10:30 p.m.-Yosemite A

Sociological Practice Association Publications Planning Meeting for The Practicing Sociologist, Clinical Sociology Review and Socidogical Practice-Friday, August 11,6:30-820 p.m.-Belmont

Sociological Research Association-Thursday, August 10, 200-1 1 fKl p.m.-Imperial A

Sociologists AIDS Network-Research Roundup, Wednesday, August 9, 6:30-820 p.m.-Continental Parlor 1; business meeting, Thursday, August 1 0,8:30-10:30 p.m.-Continental Parlor 1

Sociologists for Women in Society-Wednesday through Sunday, August 9-1 3-Teakwood

Sociologists Lesbian and Gay Caucus-panel. Wednesday. August 9, 6:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 3; business meeting. Thursday. August l0,7:00-9:00 p.m.-Continental Parlor 3; "Professional Survi- val as a Gay or Lesbian Sociologist" panel, Saturday, August 12, 630-8:M p.m.-Continental Parlor 3

"Step Recovery Concerns: Teaching and Personal Involvement" (Dan McMurryl-Friday, August 11.6:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Parlor 3

SWS Minority Scholar Fundraising Comedy Show-Friday, August 11, 6:30-8:20 p.m.-Continental Ballroom 6

"Teaching Medical Sociology: What Should Students Read? The Use of Texts, Anthologies, Fiction and Narrative", co-sponsored by the ASA Teaching Services Program and the Section on Medical Sociology (Raymond DeVries, Phil Brown, Fred Wolinsky, Catherine Riessman, Richard HesslerJ-Friday, August 11,6:30-8:20 p.m.-Yosemite A

Theory andsociety Reception-Thursday, August 10, &30-10:30 p.m.- Whitney

University of Chicago Alumni Reception-Friday, August 11, 6:30-8:20 p.m.-Shasta

University of Virginia deception for ASA Honors Program-Thursday, August 10,8:30-la30 p.m.-Belmont

University of Wisconsin Reception-Thursday, August 10, 8:30 p.m.- midnight-Tamalpais

"Women in Science: Needed Research" (Henry Etzkowitz, Jim Beniger, Pinina Abir-Am, Mary Frank Fox, Carol Kemelgor, Scott Long, Phyllis Moen, Lynn Mulkay, Lois Peters, Peter Stein, Harriet ZuckennanJ- Thursday, August 10,8:30-10:30 p.m.-Continental Parlor 9

General Information The San Francisco Hllton is headquarters for the 1989 ASA Annual

Meeting. All Annual Meeting sessions, services and activities are located at the Hilton.

Meeting rooms are itemized below; refer to the map on page in the Program for exact locations.

Meeting Rooms Name Level

......................................... Belmont Room .4th Floor ................................... Belvedere Room A-B .4th Floor

........................................ Carmel Room.. .4th Floor ............................... Continental Ballrooms 4-6 .Ballroom ............................. Continental Parlors 1-3,7-9 .Ballroom

....................................... Cypress Room.. .4th Floor .......................................... Diablo Room .4th Floor

................................ Executive Board Room.. .Ballroom ........................ Grand Ballroom Salon A-B .Grand Ballroom

................................... Green Room.. .Grand Ballroom ................................... Imperial Ballroom A-B Ballroom

......................................... Imperial Suite .19th Floor ........................................ Lassen Room.. .41h Floor ........................................ Lombard Room .6th Floor

........................................... Marin Room .4th Floor .......................... Mason Room ............... : .ah Floor

...................................... Monterey Room.. .4th Floor ................................................ Plaza A-B Lobby

.......................................... Powell Room .~UI Floor ........................................ Saratoga Room .4th Floor ........................................ Sausalito Room .4th Floor

.......................................... Shasta Room .4th Floor ....................................... Sonoma Room.. .4th Floor

........................................... Sutler Room .6th Floor Tamalpais Room ......................................- .4th Floor

.......................................... Taylor Room. .MI Floor ....................................... Teakwood Room .4th Floor

......................................... Tiburon Room .4th Floor

............................................ Tower Room.. Lobby

......................................... Toyon Room.. -4th Floor ....................................... Van Ness Room .6th Floor

WalnutRoom ........................................... 4thFloor ......................................... Whitney Room .4th F h r ......................................... Yosemite A-B-C Ballroom

........................................ Yosemite Hail.. .Ballroom

Location of Activities ASA Information-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level ASA Office-Toyon Room, 4th Floor Child Care-Monterey Room, 4th Floor Didactic Seminar Information-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom

Level Employment Service-Plaza and Tower Rooms, Lobby Level Exhibits-Grand Ballroom Salon B, Grand Ballroom Level Locator File-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level Media Registration-Walnut Room, 4th Floor Message -change-Continental-Imperial Ballroom Corridor Paper Sales-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level Registration-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level Resources for Attendees with Special Needs-Grand Ballroom Salon A,

Grand Ballroom Level Restaurant Resewation Service-Booth 308, Grand Ballroom Salon B

Student Hospiiali Room-Saratoga, 4th Floor Tickets Desk-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level Tour Information-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level Table Space-Ballroom Level Corridors

ASA Information-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

The Information Desk is staffed with ASA Executive Office personnel who are able to provide information on membership, subscriptions, and publications. Copies of the 1989 issue of the Guide to Graduate Depart- ments, the 1988 Directory of Deparfments and Directory of Members, and the cumulative journal index are available, as are other ASA publica- tions. Samples copies of ASA journals are available for inspection.

ASA Office-Toyon Room, 4th Floor The Headquarters Oflice will be staffed from Tuesday through Sunday

by Executive Office personnel from Washington, DC. Office hours are &00 am.-6:00 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday; 8:00 am.-4:00 p.m., Sunday. The demandson staff time and equipment are limited to official ASAlunctions. Secretarial services are not available; attendees needing secretarial assistance may contact the Hiiton Business Center near the 4th Floor elevators.

Child Care-Monterey Room, 4th Floor A child care program is being provided by Jen Suter and Susan Frensilli

of the ASA ExecuiiveOffice Staff. Care will be availableduring the daytime program sessions (8:OO am. to 6:30 p.m.) for infants and older children. Evening care must be arranged on an individual basis through local babysitting agencies specializing in this service.

We are pleased to announce that the following individualslcompanies have generously offered to help co-sponsorthe 1989Child Care Program, thus defraying some of its expenses and lowering daily fees to parents: Austin TravellMMA, Jane and Jack Carey, Greenwood PresslPraeger Publishers, ILR Press. Macmillan Publishing Company, New Day Films, Sociological Abstracts, Inc., Sociologists for Women in Society, Jen and Larry Suter, and Wadsworth Publishing Company. We thank each con- tributor for assisting ASA in providing another quality kinder-convention experience for your children.

Lunch and snacks will be provided; however, parents may arrange to take their children outfor lunchor bring a special bag lunch with them in the morning if they prefer.

Charges for those who did not pre-register their children for the Child Care Service will be $45.00 per child for a half day (8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.) and $65.00 per child forthe entire day. (For children using the service for shorter periods, the half-day fee will apply in order to encourage more stable use, discourage frequent dropping in and out, and simplify pay- ment.] Children who have not pre-registered with the service will be accepted on a space-available, first-come first-sewed basis only.

Reminder: All parentstguardians using this service must also be paid registrants for the Annual Meeting.

Didactic Seminar Information-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

Those already enrolled for seminars should have received their tickets with their meeting packets. Some tickets may still be available for Didactic Seminars; check at the Tickets Desk for up-to-date information.

Seminar tickets are non-refundable and cancellations cannot be accepted. You may, however, sell your ticket to someone else if you are unable to attend.

Employment Service-Plaza and Tower Rooms, Lobby Level

The 1909 ASA Employment Service is open from 1:OO-590 p.m. on Tuesday, August 8: and from 8:30 a.m. to 530 p.m. on Wednesday through Saturday. August 9-12. The service is not open on Sunday, August 13.

Facilities will be available for reviewing employment listings, exchang- ing messages, and interviewing. If you have pre-registered as a candidate forthe Employment Service, reporttothe Plaza Room as soon as wssible to activate~yo"rfi1e. If you have hot registered, you should do so as'early as possible. Attendees wishing tomake full useofthisserviceshould register by 530 p.m. on Wednesday, August 9.

All persons using this Service must register for the Annual Meeting as well as for use of the Employment Service. Once registered, you will be issued a pass permitling your entrance to the Service any time it is open. No one will be admited without a pass. Fees for use of h e Employment Service: ASA member applicants-$1 0; non-member applicants-$25; Employers-$50.

During the Annual Meeting in Atlanta last year, 66 employers l i e d 125 openings, including 18 positions outside academia, and 265 candidates registered wlh the Sewice. Over 1,200 interviews were scheduled.

Exhibits-Grand Ballroom Salon B, Grand Ballroom Level All Annual Meeting attendees are encouraged to browse through the

Exhibits located in the Grand Ballroom. Exhibi open on Wednesday, August 9, and close on Saturday, August 12. Exhibit hoursare9:OOa.m.to 5:OO p.m. on Wednesday-Friday, August 9-1 1, and 9:00 a.m. to 200 p.m. on Saturday, August 12.

Plan your schedule to include several visits to the 1989 ASA Exhibi to browse through the latest publications, explore current computer hard- ware and software, chat with representatives of statistical and informa- tional literature, view the latest film releases, arrange your dining reserva- tions, and lunch with colleagues in the lounge area at the back of the hall. Seethe Directoryof Exhibitors listed elsewhere in this Program for names and booth numbers for all exhibitors, and don't forget to look through the Program for special ads.

Locator File-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

Locator cards will be filled out by convention attendees as they pick up their registration packets. These cards will then be available for reference at the ASA lnformation Deskduring the meeting to helpcolleagues contact each other while in San Francisco. Message Exchange boxes are located in the corridor between the Continental and Imperial Ballrooms so that attendees may have 24-hour access.

Media-Walnut Room, 4th Floor Media representatives are invited tostop by for registration packets and

interview assistance.

Paper Sales-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

The 1989 Paper Sales Room is open from 1:OO-5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, August 8; 8:00 a.m.-530 p.m. on Wednesday through Saturday, August 9-1 2; and 8:00 am.-1 :00 p.m. on Sunday, August 13. Papersare available at the price of $2.00 each. All eligible papers which were submitted to h e Executive Office tor duplication andlor distribution at the Annual Meeting appear on the list of "Available Papers" (copy included in your registration packet). Authors who indicated that they would bring copies with them lo the Annual Meeting are urged to deliver them to the Paper Sales room as soon as possible upon arrival.

Papers may be purchased as long as supplies last; orders for future delivery cannot be accepted. Requests for papers which have sold out or

were not supplied may be sent directJy to the author@). In orderto facilitate this procedure, a "Rosler of Authors" which includes names and addresses of authors may be purchased for $2.00. Papers may also be available through Sociological Abstracts, Inc.; check the abstracts booklet for information.

The ASA Office is not able to return unsold copies of papersto individual authors after the Annual Meeting. However, authors may pick up remain- ing copies of their own papers on Sunday, August 13, after 11 rn a.m.

Note: All persons wishing access tothe Paper Sales Room must be paid registrants for the Annual Meeting; badges are required for entrance into this area

Resources for Attendees with Special Needs-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

The ASA lnformation Desk willcoordinate resourcesduring the conven- tion week for registrants with physical disabilities who are attending the Annual Meeting. Again this year, the Information Desk is conveniently located adjacent to the ASA registration area. H you sent in a special services request prior to the meeting, please

check in at the ASA lnformation Desk on your arrival to ensure that you receive the assistance you need.

Those concerned about special resources and disabiliies should note that there is an Open Forum on Oisabilities Issues on Wednesday, August 9, at 4:30 p.m. in the Marin room on the 4th Floor. The forum is open to all convention attendees.

Restaurant Reservation Service-Grand Ballroom Salon B, Grand Ballroom Level

Reservations Tonightl is sponsoring this year's restaurant reservation service. Stop by Booth 308 for information on area restaurants and assist- ance in making reservations. This service is available from 9a0 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Wednesday through Friday, August 9-1 1, and 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. on Saturday, August 1 2.

Section lnformation Table-Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand Ballroom Level

lnformation on the 27 ASA Sections, including copies of 1989 Section newsletters, is available in the ASA lnformation area at the Section table, which is staffed by representatives of the various sections. Section repre- sentatives will also be present at the Member Orientation and Welcoming Patty on Wednesday, August 9, in Yosemite Hall at 6:30-8:00 p.m.

Tours-Plaza A, Lobby Level Those already enrolled for tours should have received their tickets with

their meeting packets. Please check at the Tickets Desk in the ASA registration area (Grand Ballroom Salon A, Grand 8allroom Level) for any cancellations or changes in site schedules.

Orientation sessions for tour groups will be held in the Tour Orientation area in Plaza A on the Lobby ~evel . -~ l l groups will depart from the Taylor Street Exit of the Hilton. Tickets are reauired for access to the orientation and departure areas.

Tourtickets are non-refundable and cancellations cannot be accepted. You may, however, sell your !iak-?t to someone else if you are unable to attend.

COMMllTEE MEETINGS {NOTE: Anendam at these meetings is lknitedta themembers deach wmmee, excepl W e de3mled as "0PEN':J AAC Survey T&sk F m

Thursday, August 10.230420 p.m.-Tamalpais. 41h Floor Friday. August 11.1&30 am.-1290 p.m.-Belvedere A.4th Flow

American S o c M g i i F o u r d a b Advisory a m - Saturday. August 12,930-1020 am.(wlhASFT~stees)-Green Room. Grand Ballroom Level Sahrrday. Augrs112 10:m am.-1220 p.m.-Belvedere B.4lh Floor

American Sociological Foundation Truslcres Saturday, August 12.9:30-1020 am. (with ASF A d v i i Commitlee)-Green Roan. Grand Ballroom Level Saturday. AuguSt 12.10a am-1 220 p.m.-Green Rmm, Grand Ballroom Level

ASAIAAAS Liaison CMnmIeu Saturday. Augusl12 830-1020 am.-Bewere B.4m Flmr

ASA Business Meeting--OPEN Saturday, August 12.830-10:30 pm.-Continental Ballmom 5, Ballroom Level

Awards Policy. M i MI Frlday, August 11,830-1020 am.-Sonoma 4th Fbci

Career d D~stlngplished Scholarship Award Seleclion Cornmillee Thursday. Auggl 10, 12:30-420 p.m.-Marin. 4th Floor

CerMicatiwl. Evaluation Commitlee on Saturday. August 12.1230-220 p.m-Execuiive Board Room. Ballroom Level

Celtifkabbn. OversQhI Commitlee MI Friday, August 11.123&22C pm-Belvedere 6.4lh Floor.

Cwrmiees. Commitlee on Sunday, August 13,830 am.420 p.m.-tassen. 4m Flow

Consortium ol S x k g i i l Asr#lciafhs Friday. August 11.10:30-1220 p.m.-Sonoma 4th Flow

1980-89 Council Sahlrday. Augusl12.2:30620 p.m.-Yoremite 6. Ballroom L e d

l m 0 9 Council Members-at-- Thursday. August 10.12SO-420 p.m.-Sanoma.4lh Floor

1989-90 Cwncil . - - - - - - - - . . - . Sunday. A w s t 13.2:30-8:30 pm.-Yosemite B. Bsllrocm Level Morday. Awust 14.8:30 am.-5SO 30.m-Yassm* B. Ballroom Level

Disabil& lss;e& Open Forum on .

Wednesday. August 9.4:30-8:20 p.m. (OPEN)-Marin. 4th Flwr DismUEon Award SeleWn Cornminee

Wednesday, August 9.4:30-60 p.m.-Tarnalpais. 41h Floor Distinguished Career Award far Uw Pfacliw of Sociologl S e W i Cornmillee

Fndav. Auaust 11.8:30 am.-12x1 0.m.-Lombard. Blh Flmr - - - - . - - -

Dimng; 2 ~ontribvtrons to Teaching Award ~dec(ion c a n m m ThuMav Awust 10.8.30 am-1 220 ~.m.-Wvaere A 4th Floor

D i m ~ ~ s h e d Siholarli m l i c a t m AW& ~elaclicn ~wnkinee Saturday. Augvsl12.2:30-6:20 p.m.-Marin. 4m Floor

DUB&-Jdmson-Frazier Award Selection Commmee Friday. August 11.8:30 a.m.-1 220 p.m.-Belmont 4th Floor

Dues Slructure, COmmW on New Sunday. August 13,8:30-10m am.-Belronf 4th Floar

Employment CommMee on Friday. August 11,8:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Green Room, Grand Ballroom Leuel

Exchanges wlm Fue~gn Scholars. Council Subcommit$e on Friday. Augusl 11.2:30-420 p.m.-Green Room, Grand Ballroom Level

ExecubLe O h e and Budget, Committee on the Tuesday, August 8 , l la am-5XKl p.m.-Lan. 4th Fbw

Federal Standards for the Employment d S o c i i s t s . Cwnmiltes on Thursday. August 10.2:30-4:m p.m.-~ehredere A. 4th FIOOI

FmeCan of Research and Teaching. C o m i l l w on Thursday. ~ u s l 1 0 . 8 . 3 0 am.-1220 pm.-Shasta. 4ih FIOOI

Graduate Education. Task Group on Friday. August 11, 7:30-%XI am-Imperial suite

H m s Program, Council Subcornmillee on the Sunday. Augusl 13,10'30 am.-1220 p.m.-Whilney, 4th Floor

Jessie Bernard Award Selection Commitlee Wednesday. August 9.8:30-10.20 am.-leosen. 4th Flav

Maslw's Level CwWaiion Program. Cormhe m Wednesbay.August 9.830-1Qm am.-Shesta. 4lh Floor

Masers Level Certmcalion Progrr:) Exarnlnalion Subcommii Wednesaay, A~gusl9.12 30-4.20 p.m.-Shasla. 4th Floor

Masters Level CMhcalm Program Credenbak Subcomm#eb Thmav. AM-I 10 12-30-410 0 m -Belvedere 0.4lh Floor

~embecshjp. &mittee on Tuesday. August B.700-1&00 p.m.-Lassen. 4th FI~M Wednesday. August 9.830 am-1220 p.m.-Executive Board Room. Ballroom Level Thursday. August 10,8:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Balmor4 4th Floor

Membership Area Flepceaentative9 Wednesday. Augusl9,230-4.20 p.m. (workshop)-Lombard. Bth Floor

Minority F e l M p Program, C o m m h on Re Fraay. Augusl 1 1,230-6:20 p.m.-Lombard, 6lh Floor

Mirrcrity Prdessianal DevdqmM Program. CommiUea on Ihe Smrday. August 12.830 am.-120 p.m.-Belrnont 4lh Flom

NationaI S(atlst~ca. Commmee on Friday. August 11.4.30-6:20 p.m.-Marin. 41h F b r

Nominations. Commatee on Wednesday, August 9. 8:W am.-620 p.m.-Sonoma, 4th Floor

Meeting Schedule Palkipalim. T& Force on

Saturday, Augrst 12.10~30 am.-1220 p.m.-Execulive Board Room. 8allmom Level PhD CeMlion in Demography. Cornmillee MI

mursday. Augrst 10.8:30-1020 am--, 4lh lo or PhD Cartihcation in Law and Sacial W o l , Commit& m

Wednesday, August 8,10:30 am.-1220 pm.-Tamalpais, 4lh Floor PhD CertmcabMl in Medical Sociology, bmmllteo on

Thursday. August 10.230-4:20 p.m.-Oreen Roan. Grand Ballmom Level PhD certification in Organizama! Analysis. Committee on

Flidav. Auaust 11.8:30-1020 am.-Belvedere B.4th Flwr PhD &c&on in &mi Pol cy and Evaluatm ~isearch. Conun#ee on

Wednesday. August 9.4.30-6.20 o.m.-Swta. 4th Floor P ~ D ~wlification in ~ o c i ~ s y c h & , Commrnee on

WecJnesday. Augusi 9.1033 am.-1220 p.m.-Shaglcr. 4th F~OM Problems of the Discipline. Council SubcommW on

Thursday, August10.830-10:20 am.-Lombard. 6th Flwr Professional Development Program A d v i i Cammillee

Wednesday. August 9.12:30-2% p.m.-labsen. 4m Flaw P r k i o n a l Emics, Cornminee on

Wednesday. August 9.230-620 p.m.-Executiw Board Room, Ballroom Level 1989 Program Commitlee

Saturday. must 12.12~30-2'20 p.m.-la8SBn, 4th Floor 1990 Program CommW

Friday, August 11,12:3M:20 p.m-lasben.4lh Floor 1991 Program CommW

Thursday, Augusl 10.1230-F20 p.m.-luuren. 4th Floor Public Information. Canmiltee on

Friday, August 11,2:30-620 p.m.-Sonoma, 4th Fbor Putdi~~~tiom. Cwnmitlee on

Tuesday. Augusl8,730-9-SO p.m (Editors)-Teekwoocl B. 4th Floor Tuesday. August 8,7:30-9:30 p.m. (Elected MembemFTeakmod A. 4th Floor Wedwsday, August 9 . 8 3 am.-6:20 p.m.-Tiburon. 4th Flow

Regional and Slate Socobgcal Asxr~aMn OClcen W n g Thursdav. Aucusl10.10'30 am.-1 220 om.-Lombard. 6lh F b r

Regulaticm~d &arch, Canmima on '

Fnday. Augusl 1 1 .8:30-10:20 am.-Belvedere A. & Flwr R a p r e w h n e s s in ASA E l m s . C o r m h e m

Friday. Augusl 1 1 ,430-6:20 p.m.-bl&e B.4th Fbor s%c!kmBoard

FMay. August 11,2304:20 p.m.-Yosemite A, Bdlroom Level S d h O(ficers. Orienlalian lor

Foday. August 11, 1Q30 am.-1220 p.m.-Tiburon. 4lh Floor Sections, C o r n m i i o n

Friday. August 11,3:30-420 p.m. [with .Sectb Board)-Yosemile A, Ballroom Level Friday. Augusl 11,430-620 p.m.-Green Room. Grand Ballroom Lltvel

Sociity and Perms wim Disabilities. Commillee on Wednesday, Augusl9,4308:20 p.m. (Open Forum]-Marin. 41h Floor Thursday, August 10,1230-4:20 p.m.-Lombard. 8th Floor

Sociological Praclice. Cornmitee on Saturday. Augrrsl12,8:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Marin. 41h Flmr

Sociology in the Uementary and anddary School. Task Force on Thursday. A u w t 10.8'30 am.-1PM p.m.-Tamalpais. 4Ih Floor

Status oi H~mosexuak in Sociol~gy. Committee on Wednesday. August9,10:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Green Room, Grand Ballmom Level

S W s d Racial and Ethnic Mirorities in Sociology, Committee on Thursday, August10.8:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Eehedere B.4th F b r

Slatus d Women in Sociology. Ccinmittetr on Thursday. August 10.8:30 am.-1220 p.m.-Green R m , Grand Ballroom Leval

Teacher-SchoIar Sabbalical Proposal Commiliee Friday. August 11.230-42U pp-m.-9elvedere A, 4lh Floor

Teaching. Committee on Friday. August 11,4:30620 p.m.-Belvedere A, 4lh Floor Saturday. August 12 .83 am.-12:20 p.m.-Belvedcrre A. 4th Floor

W o M Sociiogy. h m i t l w on Wednesdav. Auausl9.230-6:20 ~ .m.-Gr~n Room. Grand Ballroom Level

World ~oclo!& <ason ~epese&vds Wednesday. August 9.5 30-620 p m.-Grwn Paom. Grand Ballmom Level

EDITORIAL BOARD MEETINGS American Socicbgkal Review MiiU Board

Thursday, August 10, 12:30-220 p.m.-Whiiy. 4th Floor Contempaary Socrology Edilorial Board

Friday. August 11.1230-220 p.m.-Whiiy. 4th Floor Jouroetd H e m an4 Social Behavior Edi i ia l Boerd

Friday. August 11,1230-2M p.m.-Shasla. 4th Flow Rase hfamg~@ Seriar Edilwial9oani

Thursdav. A u U 10.1230-2Zt 0.m.-DiaMo. 4th Floor

~ o c ~ a l ~ e t h o d d o g y E&I Board . Saturday. August 12,1230-220 p.m.-Tamelpis, 4lh Floor

Socido&al Prectice Review Ediiorial Board Friday. Augusl 11, 1230-220 p.m.-Diablo, 4ih Floor

Socbbgk.4 Rmwy Ediicfial Board Saturday, Augusl12.12LW-220 p .m.-P i . & Fbci

Sociology d Educabn Editorjal Board Salurdav. Awust 12.1230-220 0.m.-Whim. 4th Floor

T-hing && M i i a l Board Saturday. August 9.12:30-2:20 p.m.-Shasta, 4th Floor

Directory of Exhibitors (Listed alphabetically with booth numbers)

Aldine de Gruyter (31 1) Allyn and Bacon, Inc. (41 2) The Association of American University Presses, Inc.

(41 1,413) Basic Books (51 8) Basil Blackwell, Inc. (408) Bureau of the Census (207) Cambridge University Press (508) Columbia University Press (503) Conference Book Service, Inc. (502) Walter de Gruyter, Inc. (31 1 ) The Edwin Mellen Press (71 1,713) F. E. Peacock Publishers, Inc. (21 7) The Free Press (51 1 ) Garland Publishing (51 5) General Hall, Inc. (1 1 2) Ginn Press (21 8) Greenhaven Press (31 8) Greenwood PresslPraeger Publishers (1 02, 104) Harper & Row (51 2,514,516) Harcourt Brace Jovanovich (302) Harvard University Press (41 7) Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. (61 5) Humanities Press International, Inc. (401 ) Humboldt Journal of Social Relations (61 6) ISM Corporation (21 2,214,216) ICS Pressllnstitute for Contemporary Studies (204) ILR Press (7 1 4) International Cultural Foundation (202) International Labor Office (203) Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social

Research (1 1 8) JAI Press Inc. (304) Krieger Publishing Company, Inc. (407) Lexington Books (403) Macmillan Publishing Company (51 3) Mayfield Publishing Company (61 8) McGraw-Hill-Random HouselAlfred A. Knopf College

Division (606,608) M. E. Sharpe, Inc. (41 8) Mouton de Gruyter (31 1) The National Center for Health Statistics (205)

National Institute of Justice (1 1 6) Nelson-Hall Publishers (1 06) New American Library (306) New Day Films (61 4) NewsBank, Inc. (703) N WSA Journal (701 ) Oxford University Press (31 3) Peter Lang Publishing, Inc. (501) Plenum Publishing Corporation (406) Prentice-Hall(505) The Publishers Book Exhibit, Inc. (31 6) Random House, Inc. (603,605,607) Reference and Research ServiceslLEFT Index (201 ) Reservations Tonight! (308) Rose Monograph Series (506) Routledge (31 5,317) Rutgers University Press (405) Sage Publications, Inc. (21 3,215) Sociological Abstracts, Inc. (1 08) SociologistslProgrammers' Cooperative (705,707) Stanford University Press (61 7) State University of New York Press (61 1 ) St. Martin's Press, Scholarly & Reference Division (61 2) Survey Data EntrylCraig Roberts (71 5) Taylor & FrancislHemisphere (602,604) Temple University Press (41 4,416) University of California Press (305,307) The University of Chicago Press (31 2,314) University of Illinois Press (61 1 ) University of North Carolina Press (507) University Press of America (402,404) University Press of Kansas (507) University of Wisconsin Press (61 3) Unwin Hyman, Inc., formerly Allen & Unwin (504) Wadsworth Publishing Company (206,208) Waveland Press, Inc. (301) Wesleyan University Press (601 ) Westview Press (303) The World Bank (51 7) Worth Publishers, Inc. (21 1 ) Yale University Press (41 5)

Monday, 9:00 am.

Monday, August 7 9:00 a.m. Sessions 1. Professional Workshop. Job Clinic

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

(to 1 2:00 noon; 1 :30-5:30 p.m.) Richard K. Irish, 1 ranscentury Corporation

Tuesday, August 8 9:00 a.m. Sessions 1. Professional Workshop. Job Clinic

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

(to 1 2:00 noon; 1 :30-3:00 p.m.) Richard K. Irish, Transcentury Corporation

9:30 a.m. Sessions

2. Teaching Workshop. Academic Leadership: Orientation for New Chairpersons

Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level

(to 430 p.m.) Lee H. Bowker, Humboldt State University Hans 0. Mauksch, University of Georgia Dennis R. McSeveney, University of New Orleans

1 1 :00 a.m. Meetings

Committee on the Executive Office and Budget (to 5:00 p.m.)- Lassen, 4th Floor

2:00 p.m. Other Grou~s Honors Program Orientation Meeting (to 5:00 p.m.)-Yosemite 6,

Ballroom Level

7:OOp.m. Meetings Membership Committee (to 10:OO p.m.)-lassen, 4th Floor

7:30 p.m. Meetings Committee on Publications, Ediiors (to 9:30 p.m.)-Teakwood 6,

4th Floor Committee on Publications, Elected Members (to 9:30 p.m.)-

Teakwood A, 4th Floor

Wednesday, August 9 8:30 a.m. Meetinqs Committee on Master's Level Certification Program-Shasta, 4th

Floor Membership Committee (to 12:20 p.m.)-Executive Board Room,

Ballroom Level Committee on Nominations (to 6:20 p.m.)-Sonoma, 4th Floor Committee on Publications (to 6:20 p.m.)-Tiburon, 4th Floor Jessie Bernard Award Selection Committee-Lassen, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of Peace and War Council Meeting (to 9:30

a.m.)-Belmont, 4th Floor

8:30 a.m. Other Groups Honors Program-Lombard, 4th Floor

8:30 a.m. Sessions

3. Thematic Session. Effects of Class Consciousness on Collective Action

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Presider: Myra Marx Ferree, University of Connecticut Craig Calhoun, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Aldon Morris, University of Michigan Discussion: Reeve Vanneman, University of Maryland

4. Advances in Evaluation Research

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Paul Reynolds, University of Minnesota Attributional Bias in Participant's Program Evaluations: Magnitude

and Direction in Judgments of College Courses. Richard J. Gigliotti and Foster S. Eluchtel. University of Akron

Cross-State Variations in Medicaid Effectiveness: An Examina- tion of Impact on BlacklWhite Infant Mortality. Reid M. Golden and David Baker, Hartwick College

Why Equal Effectiveness at Reducing Recidivism is Not Asso- ciated with Equal Efficiency: A Comparison of Two California Programs. Marvin Prosono, University of California-San Fran- cisco

Interaction of Participant Characteristics and Program Intensity in Affecting Employment Success. CarlSimpson, Western Wash- ington University

Discussion: Ronald W. Manderscheid, National Institute of Mental Health

5. National Development

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Victoria E. Bonnell, University of Califor- nia-Berkeley

Aristocrats and Armies. Meyer Kestnbaum, Harvard University Founding Moments and National Identity. Lyn Spillman, Univer-

sity of California-Berkeley

Siam into Thailand: Micro and Macro Practices in Building a Modernizing Nation-State. Peter Vandergeest, University of California-San Diego

Discussion: Reinhard Bendix, University of California-Berkeley

6. Small Group Processes: Interaction, Status, and Affect

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Martha Foschi, University of British Columbia Presider: James C. Moore, Jr., York University Group Interaction, Stability, and Reconstruction. Kathleen Carley,

Carnegie Mellon University Decisions, Dependency and Commitmenl: An Exchange Based

Theory of Group Development. lrving Tallman, Washington State University

More than Reactions to Norm Violation: The Effects of Relation- ship Structure on Emotional Responses lo Inequity. Karen A. Hegtvedt, Emory University

Congruent Structures of Affect and Status. Robert K. Shelly, Ohio University; Murray Webster, Jr., Stanford University and San Jose State University: Joseph Berger, Stanford University

Discussion: Thomas J. Fararo, Stanford University

7. Social Control: Conceptual and Theoretical Issues

Belvedere, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: John R. Sutton, University of California- Santa Barbara

Foucault's Subject: The Analysis of Power and the Problem of Social Control. Margaret J. Heide, New School for Social Research

The Public, Social Control and the "Autonomy of the State" in the New Deal. Dario Melossi, University of California-Davis

Down But Not Out: The State Mental Hospital, Deinstitutionaliza- tion, and Social Control. William Gronfein, Indiana University- Indianapolis

Discussion: Stanley Cohen, Hebrew University

8. Sociolinguistics

Yosemite 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin

Social and Language Boundaries among Adolescents. Teresa Labov, University of Pennsylvania

"Educating the Public": Disabili and the Management of Talk in Public Places. Carol Brooks Gardner, lndiana Univer- sity-Indianapolis

The Interactional Organization of a Congressional Hearing. Timothy Halkowski, University of California-Santa Barbara

The Compulsion of Proximity. Deirdre Boden, Washington Uni- versity; Harvey Molotch, University of California-Santa Barbara

9. Sport and Leisure

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Robert M. Jiobu, Ohio Stqte University Leisure and Delinquency. Robert Agnew, Emory University;

David M. Petersen, Georgia State University Goodbye to all That: Upper-Class and Big Three Dominance of

American Sport. E. Digby Baltzell, University of Pennsylvania Locker Room Talk. Timothy Jon Curry, Ohio State University

Social Mobility Opportunities Through Sports Parlicipation, by Race and Gender. Beth E. Vanfossen and Merrill J. Melnick, State University of New York College-Brockport; Donald Sabo, D'Youville College

10. Stratification: Organizations and Careers

Marln, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Toby L. Parcel, Ohio State University Determinants of Promotions in Different Types of Organizations.

Joe L. Spaeth, University of Illinois-Urbana Organizational Stratification and the Size of the Pie: Environmen-

tal Constraints on Organizational Income Streams. Donald Tom- askovic-Devey, North Carolina State University

Reciprocal Effects Between the Wage Structure and the Market Power of Firms. Thomas A. DiPrete, Duke University

Life-Cycle Jobs and Changes in the Career-Launching Process. Valerie K. Oppenheimer, University of California-Los Angeles

Discussion: James N. Baron, Stanford University

11. Section on Political Sociology. Rethinking the Social Causes and Consequences of Revolution

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: William Brustein, University of Minnesota Presider: Jack Goldstone, Northwestern University Explaining Revolutions in the Contemporary Third World. Jeff

Goodwin and Theda Skocpol, Harvard University Bringing Class Back In: Revolution and the Agrarian Bourgeoisie

in Central America. Jeffery Paige, University of Michigan Revolution and State Formation. Charles Tlly, New School for

Social Research Thoughts on Rationality and Revolution. Michael Taylor, Univer-

sity of Washington Revolutions for What? Lessons from Latin America. Susan Eck-

stein, Boston University Discussion: Jack Goldstone, Northwestern University

12. Sectlon on Sociology of Population. Population Issues in Developing Areas

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Larry Long, U.S. Census Bureau The Temporal Sequencing of Productive and Reproductive Activi-

ties of Puerto Rican Women. Barbara A. Zsembik, University of Michigan

An Assessment of the One Child Policy in China after 1980. Ulla Larsen, University of California-Berkeley

Dynamics of Migration and Fertility in Jordan. John M. Wardwell, Washington State University; Diana L. Cornelius, University of Texas

Life Expectancy in Less Developed Countries: Socioeconomic Development or Public Health? Richard G. Rogers, Univer- sity of Colorado

13. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware

(continued on next page)

Wednesdau, 8:30 a.m. Session 1 3, continued 1. Women, Change, and Stress: Presider and Discussion: Mary Zimmerman, University of Kansas An Investigation Into Women's Stresses in Higher Education

Small Group Settings. Betty Frankle Kirschner, Kent State University-Trumbull

Picking Up the Pieces: Redefining and Managing Post-Divorce Relationships. Judith Thomas, Denison University

2. Campus Violence Against Women: Presider and Discussion: Mary Margaret Fonow, Ohio State

University American College Students' Attitudes Toward Rape Victims and

Beliefs in a Just World. Jeaw Mei Chen, National Chengchi University, Taipei; Phylis Lan Lin, University of Indianapolis

Gender Traditionality and Perceptions of Date Rape. Shirley A. Scritchfield and Julie Masker, Creighton University

3. Feminism and Methodology: Presider and Discussion: Louise Levesgue-Lqoman, Regis College Reflections about Ongoing Qualitative Research on Waitresses:

Revision as Process. Eleanor LaPointe, Rugers University 4. Women, Leadership, and Social Participation: Presider and Discussion: Arlene Kaplan Daniels, Northwestern

University Women and Social Welfare: A Political Economy Perspective on

Leadership. Patricia Yancey Martin, Florida State University; Roslyn H. Chernesky, Fordham University

"Public" Work and Social Participation: The Case of Farm Women. John Wilson, Duke University

5. Women and Policing: Presider and Discussion: Margaret Zahn, Northern Arizona

Universily White Male, Black Male, Female: Affirmative Action and Status of

Women in Policing. Susan Martin, Police Foundation A Case Study of Black and White Women in an Urban Police

Department: Preliminary Findings. Natalie J. Sokoloff, John Jay College-City University of New York

6. Gender and Organizations: Presider and Discussion: Rachel Kahn-Hut, San Francisco State

University Gender Studies in the Sociology of Organizations: Toward a More

Comprehensive Analysis. Laura O'Toole, University of Dela- ware

Sex and Politics as Methods of Social Control of Women in the Corporation. Rosemary Wright, University of Pennsylvania; Mercedes A. Taliano, Meredith College

The Impact of Gender Orientation in a Coal Mine: A Reassess- ment of Kanter's Structural Theory. Kristen R. Yount, Univer- sity of Kentucky

7. Gender Identity and Social Interaction: Presider and Discussion: Dair L. Gillespie, University of Utah Sex of Interviewer Effects in Telephone Surveys on Gender Roles.

Susan L. Maser, Lloyd 6. Lueptow, and Brian F. Pendleton, University of Akron

Gender Roles and Power-Based Conflict Management Strate- gies. Paul L Wienir, Paul Yelsma, and Carolyn Pepper, Western Michigan University

Gender and Adolescent Self-Evaluations: A Study of Hierarchical and Relational Sources of Self-Esteem. Gary f. Jensen, Uni- versity of Arizona; Gregory L. Wiltfang, Wichita State Univer- sity

8. Race and Gender: Presider and Discussion: Wendy Ng, University of California-San

Diego

Narrow Spaces and Dark Enclosures: Defining the Impact of Race, Class, and Gender on African-American Women's Lives. Mona Phillips, Spelman College

Barriers to Higher Education for Asian-Pacific American Females. Rosalind Y. Mau, University of Hawaii-Manoa

9. Discovering our Foremothers: Women as Sociological Theorists: Presider and Discussion: Eleanor Vander Haegen, Keene State

College Harriet Martineau: An Early Woman Sociologist. Robin L. Roth,

Lesley College Theoretical Contributions to Feminist Sociology: The Life and

Work of Helena Znaniecki Lopata. Barbara Ryan, Widener University

10. Gender and the Division of Labor: Presider and Discussion: Christine Williams, University of Texas-

Austin Theorizing about Gender Relations and Household Economic

Strategies in an Industrializing Mexican Border City. Gay Young, American University

Working-Time, Gender Division of Labor, and the Status of Women. Judith Buber Agassi, Carleton College

9:30 a.m. Meetings Section on Sociology of Peace and War Business Meeting (to

10:20 a.m.)-Belmont, 4th Floor

1 0:30 a.m. Meetings Committee on PhD Certification in Law and Social Control-

Tamalpais, 4th Floor Committee on PhD Certification in Social Psychology-Shasta,

4th Floor Committee on the Status of Homosexuals in Sociology-Green

Room, Grand Ballroom Level

10:30 a.m. Sessions -

14. Thematic Session. Consequences of Aging Societies for Individuals

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Samuel H. Preston, University of Pennsylvania

Mountains or Molehills: Just What's So Bad About Aging Socie- ties Anyway? Timothy Smeeding, Vanderbilt University

The Poverty of Impoverishment Theory: Rewards to Age in American History. Brian Gratton, Arizona State University

The Influence of Demographic Change on Health Care Needs of the Elderly. Christine Himes, Pennsylvania State Univer- sity

Discussion: Thomas Esuenshade, Princeton Universitv

15. Special Session. Eaat Asia and Theories of Social and Eeonomlc Organizations

Continental Ballmom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: William L. Parish, University of Chicago

Patterns of Asian Capitalism. Gary G. Hamilton, University of California-Davis

Development Strategies and Economic Organizations in Latin America and East Asia. Gary Gereffi, Duke University

Work and Class in the New East Asian Capitalism. Hagen Koo, University of Hawaii

16. Professional Workshop. Vita vs. Resume: Sociologists Approaching Business (Co-sponsored by Sociologists in Business)

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Stephen A. Buff, American Sociological Association Christine Wright-lsak, Batlen, Barton, Durstine & Osborne

17. Teaching Workshop. Strategies in Dealing with Man- dated Assessment

Belvedere, 4th Floor

William S. Johnson, Ball State University Mary Lou Wylie, James Madison University

18. Informal Discussion Roundtables. International

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Militarism and Social Development in the Third World. Brad Bullock, Randolph-Macon Women's College

2. A Close-Up to the Middle Eastern Women: Screams of Naval el Saadawi and Adalet Agaoglu. Dilek Cindoglu, State Univer- sity of New York-Buffalo

3. State Corporatism and Labor in Venezuela. Trudie 0. Coker, Florida International University

4. American Emigration Within the Developed World. Arnold Dashefsky, University of Connecticut Jan De Amicis, Utica College; Bernard Lazenvitz, Bar-llan University

5. War-Uprooting and Political Mobilization Among Central Amer- ican Refugees. John L. Hammond, Hunter College

6. LatinotHispanic Ethnic Identity. EdwardMurguia, Arizona State University; Phylis C. Martinelli, St. Mary's College

7. Muslims in a Christian Land: Dilemmas of Second-Generation Moroccans in the Netherlands. Bud 8. Khleif, University of New Hampshire

8. State-Sponsored Mass Culture: The Case of Television in India. Arvind Rajagopal, University of Califoria-Berkeley

9. The "Who is a Jew" Controversy in Israel. Ovadia Shapiro, University of Haifa, Israel

10. American Sociologists Teaching in the Peoples Republic of China. Kay A. Snyderand Thomas C. Nowak, Indiana Univer- sity of Pennsylvania

11. Social Science Research and Teaching in Southern Africa. Allan W. Wicker, Claremont Graduate School

12. A Study of a Market Town in the Pearl River Delta, Guangdong Province. Zhao-Fa He, Zhongshen University, People's Re- public of China

13. A Status Attainment of Middle Eastern Immigrants in lhe United States as Found in the U.S. Census Data for 1970. David M. Tavako/i, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania

14. The Salman Rushdie Affair: A Post Modernism We Could Do Without. Vera Zolberg, New School for Social Research; Mohamad Tavakoli-Targhi, Illinois State University-Normal; Janet Abu-Lughod, New School for Social Research; Mah- moud Sadri, Northwestern University; Ahmad Sadri, Lake Forest College

19. Ethnomethodology: Structures of Practical Action

Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Harold Garfinkel and John Heritage, University of California-Los Angeles; Don H. Zimmerman, University of California-Santa Barbara

The Structure and Communicative Character of Practical Action: Clues from the Study of the Performance of Magic. D. Law- rence Wieder, University of Oklahoma

Plausible Deniabili and the Production of Conventional History in the Iran-Contra Hearings. David Bogen and Michael Lynch, Boston University

The Floor as an Occasioned Object of Secondary Instruction, and as an Ordinary Organizational f hing. Douglas MacBeth, Uni- versity of California-Berkeley

The Classical Roots of Ethnomethodology. Richard A. Hilbert, Gustavus Adolphus College.

Discussion: Jeff Coulter, Boston University

20. Multilevel Approaches to Criminological Research

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Robert J. Sampson, University of Illinois Presider: Marvin D. Krohn, State University of New York-Albany Class, Compliance Structures, and Deliquency: An Empirical

Assessment of an Integrated Structural-Mamist Theory. Ste- ven F. Messner and Marvin D. Krohn, State University of New York-Albany.

BlacklWhitelHispanic Differentials in Crime: A Multilevel Analy- sis. Robert Nash Parker, University of Iowa: James Unnever, Radford University

Age and Race Effects on the Crime-Unemployment Relationship. Dwayne Smith, Joel Devine, and Joseph Sheley, Tulane University

Re-examining Fear of Crime: Understanding Contextual and Indi- vidual Differences. Jeanette Covington, Rutgers University; Ralph Taylor, Temple University

The Contextual Influence of County Racial Composition on Racial Dispariiies in Criminal Sentencing. Brent Baxter, University of Washington

21. Rational Choice Theory as Applied to Religion (co- sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion)

Sir Francis Drake Hotel

Organizer: Laurence R. lannaccone, Santa Clara University Presider: Benton Johnson, University of Oregon The New Pluralism in American Religion and Its Sociology. R.

Stephen Warner, Institute for Advanced Study and University of Illinois-Chicago

The Rational Choice Approach to Religion: Progress and Pros- pects. Laurence R. lannaccone, Santa Clara University

The Weakness of Monopoly Faiths: Market Forces and Catholic Commitment Rodney Stark and James C. McCann, Univer- sity of Washington

Discussion: Mary Brinton, University of Chicago

22. Education and Society: Issues in Secondary Education

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Kenneth W. Jackson, Texas Southern University Presider: K. Sue Jewell, Ohio State University

(continued on next page)

Wednesday, 10:30 amme Session 22, continued Leaving School Early: Stopping-Out and Dropping-Out Among

American Youth. Jane Mauldon, The RAND Corporation Testing Becomes Curriculum: Teachers' Responses to Mandated

Standardized Testing. Judy Fish, University of California-Los Angeles; Janicemarie Allard, California State University-Los Angeles

Minimum Competency: Can We Afford Less Than the Maximum? Rodney 0. Coates, University of North Carolina-Charlotte; Karen Rose Wilson, Texas A&M University

The Impact of the Economic and Socio-Cultural Environment on Statewide High School Dropout Rates. Kevin M. Fitzpatrick and William C. Yoels, University of Alabama-Birmingham

Discussion: Jomills H. Braddock, Johns Hopkins University

23. War and Its Effects

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Robert Laufer, City University of New York-Brooklyn College

Effects of War on Migrant Families in Iran: The Prevalence of Social Problems. AkbarAghajanian, University of Washington

Military Service as a Turning Point in Life. Cynthia Gimbel and Rachel Sweat, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Predictors of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder in an Oregon Cohort. Sheila Cordray and Brandy Brittan, Oregon State University

Ethnicity and the Effects of War Trauma, Richard L. Hwgh, San Diego Stale University

24. Section on Political Sociology: Refereed Roundtables

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Richard K. Scotch, University of Texas-Dallas; Lily M. Hoffman, Eugene Lang College-New School for Social Research

1. Politics and the American Capitalist Class: The Political Stratification of the American Capitalist Class. Craig

Jenkins, Ohio State University Business Unity and Class Consciousness: Some Empirical Evi-

dence from the American States. Berkeley Miller, Kansas State University; William Canak, Tulane University

Campaign Finance Reform and Wealthy Capitalist Families: Con- tributions to the 1972 and 1984 Presidential Campaigns. Michael Patrick Allen and Philip Broyles, Washington State University

2. The New Elite Framework: Opposing Views: A New Elite Framework for Political Sociology. G. Lowell Field,

University of Connecticut; John Higley, University of Texas- Austin: Michael G. Burton, Loyola College in Maryland

The New Elite Paradigm: A Critical Assessmenl Paul Cammack, University of Manchester

3. Gender Inequalrty, Politics, and Social Structure: Shotgun Wedding, Unhappy Marriage, No-Fault Divorce?: Re-

thinking the Feminism-Marxism Relationship. Ben Agger, State University of New York-Buffalo

Global Restructuring and the Restructuring of Gender and Work. Kathryn Ward, Southern Illinois Univers'w

Psychoanalysis: A Structural Theory of Gender Inequality. Chris- tine Williams, University of Texas-Austin

4. Political Mobilization and Pollical Change: The Middle East

Making Facts: The Social Origins of Irredentism in Israel. Dahlia Austridunn, University of California-Los Angeles

The Socio-Political Effects of the Palestinian Problem. Hassan Elnajjar, University of Georgia

5. Political Mobilization and Political Change: Latin America: Pluralism of Authoritarianism: The Emerging Politicat Culture of

Mexico. Edgar Butler, University of California, Riverside; Jose Luis Reyna, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales and El Colegio de Mexico

6. Class Structures and Politics: Class Capacities and Union Politics: Nineteenth Century Coal and

Metal Miners. Sharon Reitman, University of Michigan Political and Market Factors in the Production of Class and Occu-

pational Structures. Rudy Fenwick, University of Akron 7. Class and the Capitalist State: Contemporary Studies: Distributional Conflict. Politics, and International Competitiveness.

Philip J. O'Connell, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill The Structured Network of Bargaining in the Political Economies

of Austria and West Germany. Karen Shire, University of Wisconsin-Madison

8. Corporate-State Relationships: What Corporate PAC Officials Say About Politics. Dan Clawson,

University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Alan Neustadtl, Uni- versity of Maryland

Corporate Political Professionals: An Analysis of Women in Cor- porate Government Relations. Denise Scott, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

9. Institutional Influence, Ideology, and the State: The Political Sociology of Ideology: Social Structure, Autonomy,

and Ambiguity. Gene Burns, Princeton University Foundation and Power The Role of Private Foundations in Educa-

tional Policymaking. Kevin Doughetty, Manhattan College Professors in Parliament: The Italian University in the State, 1953-

58, '63-68, '79-83. Robert H. Ross, Wellesley College 10. Comparative Studies of the Welfare State: The Political Economy of Interdependence and Convergence in

the Welfare State of Democracies Small and Large. Philip Armour, University of Texas-Dallas; Richard Coughlin, Uni- versity of New Mexico

Gender, Class, and Citizenship in the Analysis of the Welfare State. Julia S. O'Connor and Charlene Mia//, McMaster University

Belgium and Social Policy: The Influence of Philosophical, Reli- gious, and Linguistic Differences on Policymaking. Kathleen Young, Bates College

1 1. The Politics of Health Care Provision: The Restructuring of the Medical Induslry: The Role of Unified

Class Action. Beth Mintz, University of Vermont; Peter Frei- tag, Clarkson University

State and Expert: Peer Review Organizations and Federal Regu- lation of the Medical Profession. Beth Stevens, New York University

t 2. Youth and Politics: Political Party Identification and Issue Attitudes: Confusion and

Misalignment Among Young Adults. Dana Dunn, Raymond A. Eve, and Sherry Hudson, University of Texas-Arlington

Youth Cohort Size and Political Instability: A Cross-National Test. Leslie Wasson, Eckerd College

"I Saw How She Got Screwed and Learned from It": Political Socialization Regarding Feminism. Naomi Abrahams, Uni- versity of California-Santa Barbara

13. Ethnicity and Rural Public Policy:

Wednesday, 10:30 amm Rural Minorities and Poverty Policy. Leif Jensen, Pennsylvania

State University Culture, Law, and Inequality in Historical New Mexico. Alfonso

Morales, Northwestern University 14. Community Politics: Social Context and Social Contacts: Political Participation and

Neighborhood Integration. Deborah A. Abowitz, Bucknell University

Urban Institutions and Low Income Minority Communities: From Adversaries lo Partners? Lily M. Hoffman, New School for Social Research

25. Section on Sociology of Emotions. The Visual Study of Emotions

Cypress, 4th Floor (to 1 1 :30 a.m.) Organizer and Presider: Douglas Harper, Slate University of New

York-Potsdam Presentation of Emotions and Social Class: A Visual Study. Dou-

glas Harper, Slate University of New York-Potsdam The Visual Study of Marital Conflict. Suzanne Retzinger, Univer-

sity of California-Santa Barbara

26. Section on Sociology of Population. U.S. Fertility and Family Patterns Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Larry Long, U.S. Census Bureau Presider: Ronald Rindfuss, University of North Carolina-Chapel

Hill Does Motherhood Matter in Abortion Choice among American

Women? Joanne M. Badagliacco, Pomona College The influence of Family Background on Resolution of Adolescent

First Premarital Pregnancies in the United States. Elizabeth C. Cooksey, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Sterilization Anxiety and Fertility Control in the Later Years of Childbearing. H. Theodore Groat, Arthur G. Neal, and Jerry W. Wicks, Bowling Green State University

Background and Early Marital Factors in Marital Stability. Larry Bumpass, Teresa Castro, and James Sweet, University of Wisconsin

Discussion: Gillian Stevens, University of Illinois-Urbana

27. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Feminist Reconstructions of Sociology

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware

Images of Society: Gender and Race in Pictures in Introductory Sociology Textbooks. Elaine J. Hall and Myra Marx Ferree, University of Connecticut

Paradigm Shifts and Feminist Phase Theory in Women's Studies Curriculum Transformation Projects. Joyce McCarl Nielsen, University of Colorado-Boulder

It's Time to Talk About Privilege: Developing An Inclusive Curricu- lum in Sociology. Elizabeth Higginbotham, Memphis State University

Discussion: Barrie Thorne, Universityof Southern California; Max- ine Baca Zinn, University of Delaware

1 1 :30 a.m. Meetinas Section on Sociology of Emotions Business Meeting (to 12:20

p.m.)-Cypress, 4th Floor

12:30 p.m. Meetings Committee on Master's Level Certification Program-Examination

(to 420 p.m.)-Shasta, 4th Floor Professional Development Program Advisory Committee-Las-

sen, 4th Floor

12:30 p.m. Sessions 28. The Decline of Marxism?

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Axel van den Berg, Swedish Institute for Social Research and McGill University

Albert the Worker: Some Empirically-Based Reflections on the Role of the Proletariat in Marxism. Richard f. Hamilton, Ohio State University

Is Capitalism the Cause: Toward Elimination of a "Double Stand- ard." Rick Ogmundson, University of Victoria

Is Anything Wrong with Talent Pooling? Some Remarks on the Marxian Interpretation of Self-ownership. Percy B. Lehning, Haward University and Erasmus Universiteit

Marxism, Liberalism and the Self-conception of the Intelligentsia. Ron Eyerman, University of Lund

From Western Marxism to Post-Marxism? Perry Anderson and the New Left Review. Sven E. Olsson, Swedish lnstitute for Social Research

Eastern Marxism: Problems and Perspectives. Johannes Weiss, Universitaet Kassel

Discussion: James B. Rule, State University of New York-Stony Brook

29. Quantitative Studies of Deviance

Yosemite 6, Ballmom Level

Organizer and Presider: Candace Kruttschnitt, University of Minnesota

Contrasting Crime General and Crime Specific Theory: The Case of Hot Spots of Crime. David Weisburd and Lisa Maher, Rutgers University: Lawrence Sherman, Crime Control Insti- tute and University of Maryland

Dimensions of Legal and Illegal Work: Prestige Ratings From Addicts, Offenders, and Dropouts. Rosemary Gartner, Uni- versity of Toronto; Ross L. Matsued&, Irving Piliavin, and Michael Polakowski, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Measuring Self-Reported Deviance: Cross-sectional or Panel Data? Donald E. Green, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Gender and Deviance. Robert F. Johnson and Howard B. Kaplan, Texas A&M University

Discussion: David F. Greenberg

30. Human Sexuality Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Lynn Atwater, Seton Hall University

{continued on next page)

Wednesday, 12:30 pDmD 22

Session 30, continued Presider: Philip Kayal, Seton Hall University Current Sexual Behavior as a Determinant of Dating, Marriage

and Friendship Desirability: Consideration of the Emotional Context. Susan Sprecher and Kathleen McKinney, Illinois Stale University; Terri L. Orbuch, University of lowa

Sexual Aggression and Control in Dating Relationships. Jan E. Stets, Washington State University; Maureen A. Pirog-Good, Indiana University

Males and Females as Victims of Childhood Sexual Abuse: An Examination of the Gender Effect. Michael Gordon, Univer- sity of Connecticut

Sexualizing Emotions and Intimacy: Male Sexuality and Incestu- ous Fathers. Linda Meyer Williams and David Finkelhor, University of New Hampshire

Discussion: Joan Luxenburg, Central State University

31. Sociology of Mass Communlcatlons

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Robert Horwitz, University of California- San Diego

The Sacred Meets the Profane: Baseball on Strike. Maryellen Boyle, University of California-San Diego

Karabakh and the U.S. Media: A Study in Mythmaking. Levon Chorbajian, University of Lowell

The Media's Market Model: How They Explained the Crash of '87. Kee Robert Warner, University of California-Santa Barbara

From Talk to Text: Newspaper Accounts of Reporter-Source Interactions. Steven E. Clayman, University of Wisconsin- Madison

Discussion: Robert Horwitz, University of California-San Diego

32. The Sociology of Occupations

Belmont, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Eve Spangler, Boston College The Work-Leisure Relationship of Three Occupational Groups of

Working Women. Maureen Harrington, University of Ottawa Career Commitment of Chicago Area Women. Helena Znaniecka

Lopata, Loyola University Engineers and Managers: A Historical Perspective on an Uneasy

Relationship. Peter Meiksins, State University of New York- Geneseo

Are Professions Becoming Desegregated: An Analysis of Detailed Professional Occupations by Race and Gender. Natalie J. Sokoloff, City University of New York-John Jay College

Discussion: Peter Lehman, University of Southern Maine

33. Parent-Child Relations

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Alan Booth, University of Nebraska Family Structure and Parental Practice. Elizabeth Thomson, Uni-

versity of Wisconsin Dollars and Hours: Paying Child Support and Visiting Children

After Divorce. Judith A. Seltzer and Nora Cate Schaeffer, University of Wisconsin-Madison

The Effect of Unemployment on Fathers' Involvement with Their Preadolescent Children. Phyllis D. Coontz, Faith Peeples, Judith Martin and Edward W. Sites, University of Pittsburgh

Absence of a Family Safety Net for Homeless Families. Kay Youna McChesney, University of Pittsburgh

34. Political Sociology: Comparative

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: David Sciulli, University of Delaware Fighting Collectively: Action Sets and Opposition Networks in the

U.S. and West German Labor Policy Domains. David Knoke, University of Minnesota; Franz Pappi, University of Kiel

Private Interests of Legislators and the Overrepresentation of Corporate Interests: Britain in Comparison to Australia. Eva Etzioni-Halevy, Australian National University

The Legacy of Corporatism and the Transition to Democracy in Latin America. Rosario Espinal and Howard Winant, Temple University

The Middle Class and Democracy: The Case of Argentina, Brazil and Mexico. Lisa Fuentes, Boston College

Socio-Historical Models of Spanish American Democratization: A Review and a Reformulation. Carlos A. Forment, Haward University

Discussion: Robert M. Marsh, Brown University

35. Small Group Processes: Power, Exchange, and Equity

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Martha Foschi, University of British Columbia Presider: Cecilia L. Ridgeway, University of lowa Structure, Action, and Outcomes: A Multilevel Analysis of Power.

Linda D. Molm, University of Arizona XNet-Experimental and Electronic Network for the Study of

Power Relations. David E. Willerand John Skvoretz, Univer- sity of South Carolina

Allocation Rules and Group Structure. Barbara Foley Meeker, University of Maryland-College Park; Gregory C. Elliott, Brown University

Creating Equivalence Between 'Simulations and Experimental Manipulations. Jane Sell, Texas A&M University; W.I. Grifith, University of Colorado-Denver

Discussion: Guillermina Jasso, University of lowa

36. Social Interaction

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Sue Fisher, Wesleyan University Presider: Cheris Kramarae, University of Oregon Religious Orthodoxy, Social Control and Clothing: Dress and

Adornment as Symbolic Indicators of Social Control Among Holdeman Mennonite Women. Linda Boynton, University of California-Davis

Worlds Within Worlds: Interactions of Homeless People in Con- text. Rob Rosenthal, Wesleyan University

Patients' Descriptive Activities: The Interactive Constitution of Medical Problems. Paul ten Have, University of Amsterdam

Toward a Feminist Conception of Agency in the Study of Social Interaction. Kathy Davis, University of Utrecht

Discussion: Alexandra Dundas Todd, Suffolk University

37. Section on Sociology of Peace and War. Cultural Pers- pectives on War and the Warrior

Belvedere, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: J. William Gibson, Southern Methodist University

Reproducing Families, Reproducing Wars. Susan Jeffords, Uni- versity of Washington

w is cuss ion: David R. ~ohnson, university of ~ebraska

Men's Romance Novels: The Fantasy of World War Ill as a Limited War. J. William Gibson, Southern Methodist University

Discussion: Francesca Cancian, University of California-lrvine

38. Section of Sociology of Sex and Gender. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

(to 1 :30 p.m.) Organizer: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware 1. Women Across Cultures: Presider and Discussion: Shelley Feldman, Cornell University Women, Men and the Division of Power: A Study of Gender

Stratification in Kenya. Lisa Cubbins, University of Washington Resources and Social Supporl in Determining Women's Roles: A

Comparative Perspective in the Case of South Indian Fish- ing. James L. Norr and Kathleen L. Norr, University of Illinois-Chicago

2. Gender and Politics: The Equal Rights Amendment: Presider and Discussion: Joey Sprague, University of Kansas Gender, Conflict and the State: Comparing Title VII and the ERA.

Cynthia Deitch, Franklin and Marshall College Race and Class Differences in Women's ERA Support. Susan

Marshall, University of Texas 3. Theorizing About Gender: Presider and Discussion: Diane Margolis, University of Connecti-

cut A Critique of the Measurement of Gender: The Case of Femininity.

Barbara J. Risman, North Carolina Stale University 4. Women and Social Activism: Presider and Discussion: Ronnie Steinberg, Temple University The Role of a Feminist Community Organization and Feminist

Scholars in a Union Organizing Drive. Judy Aulette, Univer- sity of North Carolina-Charlotte

Generating Protest and Acquiescence at Work Women's Knowl- edge in a Plant Shutdown. Judith Wittner, Loyola University

5. Breaking the Rules: Gender and Non-Conformity: Presider and Discussion: Melinda Cuthbert, Yale University Factors Influencing Nontraditional Recreational Choice: The

Case of Women Motorcyclists. Carol J. Auster, Franklin and Marshall College

Rock and Roll, Beats and Bad Girls in the 1950's. Wini Breines, Northeastern University

6. Gender, Work and Technology: Presider and Discussion: Robin Leidner, University of Pennsyl-

vania Husbands' and Wives' Perception of Wives' Work. Joan Spade,

Lehigh University From Hi Touch to Hi Tech: Nursing in a Changing World. Susan

Weeks, Washington State University 7. Feminist Theory: Presider and Discussion: Judith Lorber, City University of New

York-Graduate Center and Brooklyn College W.E.B. DuBois, Feminism and the Decentering of Social Theory.

Roslyn Wallach Bologh, College of Slaten Island and City University of New York-Graduate Center; Marcia Goodman, City University of New York-Graduate Center

Transcending the Public'Private Divide: Feminist Theory and "The Social." Karen V. Hansen, University of California- Berkeley

1:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Business Meeting (to

220 p.m.)-Imperial A. Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Meetings Membership Area Representatives-Lombard Committee on Professional Ethics (to 6:20 p.m.)-Executive

Board Room, Ballroom Level Committee on World Sociology (to 6:20 p.m.)-Green Room,

Grand Ballroom Level

2:30 mm. Sessions

39. Thematic Session. From Interaction to Structure

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Presider: Morris Rosenberg, University of Maryland Crescive and Enacted Social Change. Carol Conell, Stanford

University Organizing Technologies in Collective Action. Pamela Oliver,

University of Wisconsin-Madison Discussion: Sheldon Stryker, Indiana University

40. Special Session. Comparative Stratification Research in Canada

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: John Myles, Carleton University Comparative Class Analysis: Locating Canada in the Context of

the United States and Scandinavia. Wallace Clement, Carle- ton University

Class and Power in Canadian Sociology. Robert Brym, University of Toronto

Canada's Crisis of Permeable Fordism: Implications for Politics. Jane Jenson, Harvard University

41. Didacticseminar. Analyzing Social Interactive Processes

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

ficket required for admission San Vuchinich, Oregon State University

42. Professional Workshop. Utilizing Sociology in Policy Formation (Co-sponsored by the Coalition for Utilizing Sociology-composed of the Sociological Practice Ass- ociation, the Society for Applied Sociology, the SSSP Task Force on Applied Sociology, the ASA Section on Sociological Practice, and Sociologists in Business)

Yosemite 8, Ballroom Level

Marvin Olsen, Michigan State University Robert Althauser, National Science Foundation and lndiana

University David O'Brien, University of Missouri-Columbia Robert Scott, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral

Sciences Harrison Trice, Cornell University Carol Weiss, Haward University

Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. 43. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Introductory Sociology

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Brent Bruton, Iowa State University Ann Sundgren, Tacoma Community College

44. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Law and Economy

lmperlal B, Ballroom Level

1. The Social Organization of U.S. Health Care in the 21 st Century. James G. Anderson, Purdue University; Marilyn M. Ander- son, Methodist Hospital of Indiana

2. Explaining Rape Reform Legislation: An Aggregate Analysis. Ronald J. Berger and W. Lawrence Neuman, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

3. Merit Selection of Judges: A Case Study of Upward Mobility Among Politically Active Lawyers. R.A. Cohen and A.M. Cohen, Research Office

4. Cancelled 5. Informal Economy: Search for a Unifying Theme. Abol Hassan

Danesh, Colby College 6. Weber. Beliefs, and Temporary Political Interest Groups. F.

Frederick Hawley, Louisiana State University 7. Author Meets Critics: Beyond Monopoly: Lawyers, State

Crises, and Professional Empowerment. William T. Gal- lagher, University of California-Berkeley; Terence C. Halli- day, American Bar Foundation

8. Cancelled 9. The Political Economy of High-Technology Development Pro-

grams in the American States. Kevin T. Leicht, Pennsylvania State University

10. Cultural Legitimacy and the Construction of Technology: The Social Shaping of Technical Content. Suzanne Onorato, Duke University

1 1. Current Developments in the Mental HeallhILaw Interface: An Ongoing Discussion. Marvin Prosono, University of California- San Francisco

12. Social Science Research and Litigation. Judy Rothschild, National Jury Project

13. The Demographics of Professional Mobility: Grade Ratios and Partnership Opportunities in the Large Law Firm. Raymond Russel!, University of California-Riverside

14. On the Affinity of Legal Theory and Organizations Theory. Mark C. Suchman, Yale Law School and Slanford University: Andrew L. Creighton, University of Washington; Elaine V. Bachman, Harvard University

15. Technology, Social Organization, and Changing Skills: The Coal Industry. Clarence R. Talley, University of Cincinnati

'

45. Disability

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Eileen M. Crimmins, University of Southern California Presider: Mitchell P. LaPlante, University of California-San Fran-

cisco Return to Work Factors That Affect Injured Workers. Margaret P.

Ray and Monica A. See Washington State University Patterns of Change in Disability and Wellbeing: II. Lois M. Ver-

brugge and Joseto M. Reoma, University of Michigan Industrial Back Sprain that Exceeds the Time of Physiological

Healing: An Exploratory Analysis. Ernest Volinn, David Van Koevering, and John D. Loeser, University of Washington

Macro and Micro Variables Impacting Vocational Rehabilitation Among Individuals with a Chronic Disability. Nancy G. Kutner and Donna Brogan, Emory University

Discussion: Mitchell P. LaPlante, University of California-San Francisco

46. Sociology of Religion: Culture, Religion, Morality and Education (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion)

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Roland Robertson, University of Pittsburgh Presider: Lynn Davidman, University of Pittsburgh Inner-Worldly Individualism and the Institutionalization of Purita-

nism in Late-Seventeenth Century New England. Adam Seligman, University of California-Los Angeles

Transgressing the Boundary between the Sacred and the Secu- IarlProfane: A Durkheimian Perspective on a Public Con- troversy. Kenneth Thompson, Open University-England

Vocabularies of Concern and Leadership Transformed: Moral Language at Quaker and Military Boarding Schools. Kim Hays, University of California-Berkeley

Educational Aspirations for the Next Generation: Values of the New Jewish Mother in Israel. Moshe Hartman and Harriet Hartman, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Discussion: Gary Abraham, Saint Bonaventure University

47. Social Control: Emplrlcal Analyses

Belmont, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: John R. Sutton, University of California- Santa Barbara

Incarceration as a Deviant Form of Social Control: Jail Crowding in California. Henry N. Pontell, Wayne Welsh, Patrick Kin- kade, and Matthew Leone, University of California-lrvine

Institutionalization and Public Welfare Spending: An Examination of Trends in Social Policy Spending for U.S. States, 1951- 1983. Ryken Gratret, University of California-Santa Barbara

Outbursts of Repression and Political Tension: A Comparative Analysis of the Use of Incarceration. Lucia Benaquisto, Har- vard University

Discussion: Dario Melossi, University of California-Davis

48. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Race, Gender, and the Social Construction of Knowledge

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware Presider: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown, Montclair State College Black Women as Agents of Knowledge. Patricia Hill Collins, Uni-

versity of Cincinnati Race Differences in the Belief Systems of Abortion Proponents

and Opponents. Karen Dugger, Bucknell University A Womanist Model of Social Change: Nannie Helen Burroughs'

Slabtown District Convention. Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Colby College

Black and White Working Class Women's Schooling: Concepts of Power. Wendy Luttrell, Duke University

Discussion: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown, Montclair State College; Mary Romero, University of California-Berkeley

Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. 49. Section on Sociology of Population. Family History and

Social Change (co-sponsored by the Section on Sociol- ogy of the Family)

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Dennis P. Hogan, Pennsylvania State University

From Arranged Marriage Toward Love Match: The Transforma- tion of Marriage Arrangements in Taiwan. Arland Thornton and Jui-Shan Chang, University of Michigan; Hui-Sheng Lin, Taiwan Provincial Institute of Family Planning

Socialist Institutions and Wealth Flows Reversal in Chinese Fam- ily: A Hypothesis on the Chinese Rural Fefiility Since the Revolution. Kyung-Sup Chang, Brown University

Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Childlessness Among White Women in the United States. S. Philip Morgan, University of Pennsylvania

Marriage, Divorce, and Remarriage: From the 1950s to the 1980s. Andrew J. Cherlin, Johns Hopkins University

Discussion: Tamara Hareven, University of Delaware and Har- vard University

50. Section on Sociology of Emotions. The Emotional Pers- pective: Rethinking Sociology

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Jacqueline P. Wiseman, University of California-San Diego

Presider: Janet Lever, RAND Corporation The American Midas. Lauren Langman, Loyola University-Chi-

cago Affective Structuralism and the Shape of Scientific Theory.

Michael Hammond, University of Toronlo The Emotional Division of Labor: Women's Work and Family Life.

Amy S. Wharton and Rebecca J. Erickson, Washington State University

The Morality of Loss: The Social Construction of Mourning. Mar- tha R. Fowlkes, University of Connecticut

Discussion: Jacqueline P. Wiseman, University of California-San Diego

51. Section on Sociology of Peace and War. Sociological Contributions to the Study of War

Belvedere, 4th Floor Organizer and Presider: Kai Erikson, Yale University Organizations and the Arms Race: Accounting for Escalation.

Gerald F. Davis, Stanford University; Walter W. Powell, Uni- versity of Arizona

Notes on the Social Psychology of Battle. Daniel F, Chambliss, Hamilton College

Toward a Sociology of War. R.E. Canjar Wirtz, University of Maryland

Discussion: Charles Tilly, New School for Social Research

52. Section on Political Sociology. An Encounter with a Key Political Player: The Meaning of the California "Voter Revolt" Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

(to 330 p.m.) Organizer: Richard Flecks, University of California-Santa Barbara Speaker: Bill Zimmerman, Zimmerman, Fiman and Dixon, Santa

Monica; Political Director, Voter Revolt

3:30 ~ . m . Meet inas Section on Political Sociology Business Meeting (to 420 p.m.)-

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

4:30 p.m. Meetings Open Forum on Disabilities Issues-Marin, 4th Floor Committee on Dissertation Awards-Tarnalpais, 4th Floor Committee on PhD Certification in Social Policy and Evaluation

Research-Shasta, 4th Floor

4:30 0.m. Sessions

53. Thematic Session. Creating Inequality Within the Schools

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Presider: Celestino Fernandez, University of Arizona Creating lnequalii in the Schools: A Structural Perspective.

Alan Kerckhoff, Duke University Creating Inequality: An lnteractionist Perspective. Hugh Me-

han, University of California-San Diego Discussion: Barbara Heyns, New York University

54. Professional Workshop. Strategizing Careers

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Elizabeth Menaghan, Ohio State University

55. Teaching Workshop. Methods of Undergraduate Curric- ula: Designing Applied Curricula

Belvedere, 4th Floor

John Seem, Viterbo College Paul Eberts, Cornell Universrty

56. Sociology and Biological Processes

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: J. RichardUdry, University of California- Chapel Hill

The Conceptualization of Social Factors in Animal Models. Klaus U. Kirchgassler, University of Giessen Medical School, West Germany

Artificial Reproduction and Sociology. Kurt W. Back, Duke University

Are Arduous and Risky Behaviors Reinforced by a Physiological High? WaNer Gove and Charfes Wilmoth, Vanderbilt Univer- sity

Social Class and Testosterone Effects on Antisocial Behavior. James M. Dabbs, Jr., Georgia State University

Discussion: Allan Mazur, Syracuse Universiiy

57. The Social Impact of Computers and Telecommunications

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: James E. Katz, Bell Communications Research

(continued on next page)

Wednesdau. 4:30 p-m. Session 57, continued How Organizational Needs Affected Computer Programming

Languages. Richard Giordano, Princeton University Home Information Services: Why Have 1 hey Failed and What Are

the Prospects for Success. Carmen Egido, Bell Communica- tions Research

How Telephone Networks Keep Social Networks Going. Barry Wellman and N. Scot Wortley, University of Toronto; Susan Gonzalez Baker, The Urban Institute

Surveillance in the Workplace: A New Meaning of "Personal" Computing. Peter Brantley and James Rule, State University of New York-Stony Brook

Discussion: Howard Becker, Northwestern University

58. Qualitative Studies of Deviance

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Candace Kruffschnitt, University of Minnesota Presider: Carol Warren, University of Kansas Take This Job and Love It: Coyote as a Case Study in Definitional

Processes and the Metamorphosis of a Social Problem. Val- erie Jenness, University of California-Santa Barbara

Bus Therapy and the Host Community. Is This a Problem? Carl Milofsky, Bucknell University

Identity and Choice Among Urban Park People. Susan Penner and Nancy Snyder, University of California-Berkeley; Mau- rice Penner, University of San Francisco

Functional Aspects of Adolescent Socialization Through Deviant Subcultures: Field Research in Heavy Metal. Bruce Friesen, University of Calgary

Discussion: James D. Orcutt, Florida State University

59. Sociology of Religion: Globalization, Discipline and Reli- gion (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociol- ogy of Religion)

Belmont, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Roland Robertson, University of Pitts- burgh

Religion: Global Narrative of the Body. Bryan S. Turner, State University of Utrecht, The Netherlands

Rational Ontology, New Religious Movements and the World Sys- tem. George M. Thomas, Arizona State University

Assessing Asceticism: Beyond Weber in Conceptualizing the Interplay between Religion and the World. William R. Garrett, St. Michael's College

Religion and Theology in the World System: 1 he Case of Minjung Theology. Frenk techner, Emory University

Discussion: Gary Abraham, Saint Bonaventure University

60. Sociological Practice: From Theory to Utilization

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Kathryn P. Grzelkowski, University of Maine Traditional Applied Sociology: A Critique. J. Lynn England and W.

Keith Warner, Brigham Young University Differentiating Adult Children of Alcoholics: The Effects of Back-

ground and Treatment on ACOA Symptoms. Edward W. GondoM and Robefl J. Ackerman, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Implementation of a New, Coordinated Legal Response to Family Violence. Eleanor Lyon and Patricia Goth Mace, Child and Family Services, Inc.

Chicago's Home Equity Guarantee Program: The Rise and Fall and Rise Again of a Housing Program. Kathleen McCourt and Philip Nyden, Loyola University-Chicago

61. The Welfare State: Comparative and Policy Perspectives

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas How the World System Produces the Welfare State. Albert Ber-

gesen and John Passe-Smith, University of Arizona Sequences of Welfare State Development: The Application of

Optimal Matching Methods to the Origins of Welfare States. Andrew Abbott, Rutgers University; Stanley DeViney, Uni- versity of Kansas

Welfare Expenditure and Policy Orientation in OECD Countries: An Examination of Measurement Issues and Their Theoreti- cal Implications. Julia S. O'Connor, McMaster University

Unequal Opportunities in a West European Welfare State: Some Negative Effects of Unemployment and Occupational Disabil- ity on School Achievements. H. te Grotenhuis and J. Dronkers, Tilburg University

Teenage Mothers and Welfare Dependency: Combining Work and Welfare. Kathleen Mullan Harris, University of Pennsyl- vania

Discussion: Alexander Hicks, Emory University

62. Section on Political Sociology. The Fate of the Sixties Generation: A Panel on Freedom Summer by Doug McAdam and Beyond the Barricades by Jack Whalen and Richard Flacks

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Richard Flacks, University of California-Santa Barbara Presider: Susan Eckstein, Boston University Panel: Hardy Frye, University of California-Santa Crux; James

Gregory, Universityof California-Berkeley; WiniBreines, Nor- theastern Univeristy; Richard Healey, Washington, DC

63. Section on Sociology of Emotions. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida 1. Teaching Emotions and Emotions in Teaching: Presider and Discussion: David Franks, Virginia Commonwealth

University In the Heart of the Classroom: Toward a Sociology of the Emotions

of Teaching. Lynn Atwater, Seton Hall University Pedagogical Issues in Assigning Family Histories. Mark Hum,

Glassboro State College Gender Struggle, Self, and Emotion: The Lived Experience of

Gender. Catherine G. Valentine, Nazareth College of Roches- ter

2. Judaism, Politics, Sex, and Guilt: Presider and Discussion: John Gagnon, State University of New

York-Stony Brook Judaism, Masculinity, and Feminism: An Affirmation. Michael

Kimmel, State University of New York-Stony Brook Judaism, Masculinity, and Feminism: The Dark Side. Gladys

Rothbell, State University of New York-Stony Brook

Wednesday, 4:30 p.m. 3. Emotional Release in the Macro-order: Presider and Discussion: David Maines, Pennsylvania Stale

University Emotion as a Catalyst for Social Change. Pat Wasielewski, Uni-

versity of Redlands The Orgy: Ritual Forms of Emotional Release. E. Doyle McCarthy,

Fordham University; Madeline H. Engel, Herbert H. Lehman College, City University of New York

4. The Social Constructionist-Positivist Debate in the Sociology of Emotions:

Organizer: Thomas Scheff Seven Questions in the Social Constructionist-Positivist Debate.

Theodore D. Kemper, St. John's University Interpreting the Social Constructionist Position. Norman K. Den-

zin, University of Illinois-Urbana 5. Women, Emotion, and Religious Conversion: Presider and Discussion: Mary Jo Neitt, University of Missouri-

Columbia Channeling Feelings and Aspiration in a Religion Direction. Lynn

R. Davidman, University of Pittsburgh Female Converts to Judaism: Managing Emotions. Carol Brooks

Gardner and Linda Guyer, Indiana University-Indianapolis 6. The Role of Emotions in Deviant Careers: Presider and Discussion: David Dodd, Montclair State College Exiting a Deviant Career: The Case of the Alcoholic Turned Coun-

selor. Dave Brown, University of Denver Learning a Deviant Career: The Case of the Spiritualist Medium.

Burke Forrest, University of California-San Diego 7. Generating Emotions with a Personal Computer: Affect Control: A Working Session. Lynn Smith-Lovin, Cornell

University 8. Emotions and Social Process: Presider and Discussion: Norman Goodman Emotions at Work: The Emotional Satisfaction on Doing Bureau-

cracy. Ann Dill, Brown University Modes of Affectivity in the Social Construction of Reality. Michael

Flaherty, Eckerd College Art as Form of Sociation. Michael Kaern, Boston University 9. Emotions, Illness, and Medicine: Presider and Discussion: Michael 8. Kleiman, University of South

Florida Medical Humor: Is It a Benign Force? Peter Finklestein, Stanford

University Breaking the Emotional Rules of Motherhood: The Experience of

Post-Partum Depression. Verta Taylor and Kelly McCor- mick, Ohio State University

Constructing Self-Pity and Self-Blame. Kathy Charmaz, Sonoma State University; Carol Engelbrecht, University of California- San Diego

10. Emotions in Social Interaction: Presider and Discussion: John DeLamater, University of Wis-

consin Emotional Implications of the Reason-For-Call Relationship. C.

Lee Harrington, University of California-Santa Barbara Strong Interactions. Thomas Smith, University of Rochester Categories. Metaphors, and Emotions: Inappropriate Sexual Ob-

jects. Ira Robinson, University of Georgia 1 1. The Relations Between Being a Psychoanalyst and a Sociolo-

gist: A Conversation for Practitioners. Nancy J. Chodorow and Neil Smelser, University of California-Berkeley

64. Section on Sociology of Population. CloundtaMes

Imperial A, Baffroom Level

(to 330 p.m.) Organizer: Larry Long, U.S. Census Bureau 1. The Role of Religion in Location Preferences and the Migration

Decision-Making Process. Ken R. Smith, University of Utah 2. Inheritance Patterns and Estate Tax Data: The lntergenera-

tional Wealth Study. Janet McCubbin and Jeffrey P. Rosen- feld, Internal Revenue Service

3. Men, Masculinity, and Ferlility: The Case of the Baby Boom. Virginia Powell, Beloit College

4. Effects of Maternal Employment on Child Development. Sonalde Desai, RAND Corporation

65. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Violence Against Women

continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware Presider: Lynda Lytle Holmstrom, Boston College Wife Abuse and Divorce. Demie Kurz, University of Pennsylvania;

Kathleen Coughey, Philadelphia Health Management Cor- poration

Material and Social Responses to Wife Abuse: The Importance of Shelter and Housing in Challenging Male Violence. R. Emer- son Dobash and Russell P. Dobash, University of Stirling

Rape Blame, Adversarial Sexual Beliefs, and Feminism. Mary Margaret Fonow and Laurel Richardson, Ohio State Univer- sity; Virginia Wemmerus, Ohio Department of Mental Health

Violent Acts and Injurious Outcomes in Married Couples: New Data from the National Survey of Families and Households. Lisa Brush, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Discussion: Lynda Lytle Holmstrom, Boston College

66. Student Session. Student Research: A Window on the Discipline I (co-sponsored by the Honors Program Stu- dent Association)

Lombard, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Trudie Milner, University of Alberta Attachment and Service Satisfaction as Indicators of Community

Satisfaction: A Demonstration of the Benefits of Cooperation between Non-correlated Variables. Stephanie Sayers, North Carolina State University

Discussion: Samuel R. Brown, University of Pennsylvania Structural Determinants of Salary and Benefits in the Workplace:

The Relative Merits of Labor Market, Firm and Industrial Resource Perspectives on Rewards for Work. Vicky M. MacLean, Duke University

Discussion: Thomas A. Doering, University of North Texas Divestitute as Disaster-The AT&T "Survivors of Buffalo Creek."

Rosemary Wright, University of Pennsylvania Discussion: Wendy L. Hagerman, Indiana State University An Examination of Transitional Housing for the Homeless: A Pro-

posed Model for Montgomery County, Ohio. Katherine R. Rowell, Wright State University

Discussion: Jonathan B. VanGeest, Michigan State University

Wednesdau. 5:30 pmm. 530 p.m. Meetings Section on Sociology of Population Business Meeting (to 6:20

p.m.)-Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Welcoming and Orientation Party-Yosemite Hall, Ballroom Level Section on Sociology of Emotions Reception-Imperial B, Ball-

room Level Section on Sociology of Peace and War Reception-Whitney, 4th

Floor Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender Reception-Continental

Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

6:30 p.m. Other Groups Coalition for Using Sociology-Cypress, 4th Floor Open Meeting for Sociologists Interested in Research on Social

Change in Taiwan from the 1960s to the Present: Discussion of a Proposed Collaborative Research Project (Robert Marsh)-Belvedere, 4th Floor

"Career Possibilities in Medical Sociology" (Barbara A/tman)- Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Sociologists AIDS Network "Research Roundupn-Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Sociologists Lesbian and Gay Caucus Panel-Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

8:30 p.m. Sessions

67. Plenary Session. MicrolMacro Looks at Stratification

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Presider: Doris Y. Wilkinson, University of Kentucky Historical Change and Ritual Production of Gender. Randall

Collins, University of California-Riverside Women and Wealth and Well-being of Nations: Macro-Micro

Interrelationships. Rae Lesser Blumberg, University of California-San Diego

Discussion: Samuel H. Preston, University of Pennsylvania

Thursday, August 10 8:30 a.m. Meetings Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award Selection Com-

mittee (to 1220 p.m.]-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Committee on Freedom of Research and Teaching (to 12:20

p.m.)-Shasta, 4th Floor Committee on Membership (to 1220 p.m.)-Belmont, 4th Floor Committee on PhD Certification in Demography-Lassen, 4th

Floor Committee on the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Sociol-

ogy (to 12:20 p.m.)-Belvedere B, 4th Floor Committee on the Status of Women in Sociology (to 1220 p.m.)-

Green Room, Ballroom Level Council Subcommittee on Problems of the Discipline-Lombard,

6th Floor Task Force on Sociology in the Elementary and Secondary

School (to 12:20 p.m.)-Tamalpais, 4th Floor Section on Microcomputing Council Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)-

Sausalito, 4th Floor Section on Social Psychology Business Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)-

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

830 a.m. Sessions

68. Thematic Sessions. MicroIMacro Dilemmas in Organi- zational Analysis

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Presider: Mary Fennell, Pennsylvania State University . *Mything Link. Lynne Zucker, University of California-Los

Angeles Linking Micro and Macro: Organizations as Problems, Organi-

zations as Solutions. Paul DiMaggio, Yale University Discussion: James N. Baron, Stanford University

69. Special Session. Crisis in the Farmbelt Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: David L. Brown, Cornell University The Financial Well-being of Farm Operator Households in

Farming-Dependent Counties. Susan Bentley, USDA-ERS The Socioeconomic Position of Elderly Residents in Farming-

Dependent Counties. Nina Glasoow and David L. Brown, - 1 0:30 p.m. General Activities coke11 University

Social and Political Adaptation of Farm Women to the Farm Crisis.

Departmental Alumni Night-Imperial Ballroom, Ballroom Katherine Meyer and Linda M. Lobao, Ohio State University

Level Gender and Class Dimensions of Off-Farm Employment: Re- sponse to Farm Crisis in the Cornbelt and Mississippi Delta. Max J. Pfeffer, Rutgers University; Jess C. Gilbert, university of Wisconsin

Discussion: Jan Flora, Kansas State University

70. Didactic Seminar. Studying Klnshlp Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

(to 11 :30 a.m.) Ticket required for admission Alice S. Rossi and Peter H. Rossi, University of Massachusetts-

Amherst

1 hursday, 8:30 am. 71. Professional Workshop. Writing for Sociotogy Journals

Yosetmite A, Ballroom Cewl

William Form, Ohio State University William Parish, University of Chicago Sheldon Stryker, Indiana University Richard L. Simpson, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

72. Teaching Workshop. Peaceful Alternatives to the War System: Courses and Curricula

Tlburon, 4th Floor

Presider: John MacDougall, University of Lowell Conflict Resolution. James Laue, George Mason University Third-World Perspectivesand Non-Violent Social Change. Sudar-

shan Kapoor, California State University-Fresno Alternative Defense and Alternative Security. Carolyn Stephen-

son, University of Hawaii Peace Movements and the End of the Cold War. Paul Joseph,

Tufts University Reflections on the Pedagogy of Peace. Lester Kurtz, University of

Texas-Austin

73. The Sociology of Asian Americans

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom level

Organizer and Presider: Evelyn Nakano Glenn, State University of New York-Binghamton

New Patterns in the Garment Industry: State Intervention, Women, and Work in Hawaii. Joyce Chinen, Honolulu Community College

Economic Ulility of lnvolvemenl in an AssimilaCed Ethnic Group. Marilyn Fernandez, The Ounce of Prevention Fund-Chicago; Stephen Fugita, University of Illinois-Chicago

Report of a Longitudinal Study of the Vocational Acculturation of Hmong Adolescents: Preliminary First-Wave Findings. Timo- thy Dunnigan and Daniel Martin, University of Minnesota

Adaptation Stages and Mental Health of Korean Male Immigrants in the U.S. Won Moo Hurh and Kwang Chung Kim, Western Illinois University

Coping with Racial Discrimination: Asian American's Strategies. Wen H. Kuo, University of Utah

Discussion: Russell Endo, University of Colorado-Boulder

Yosemlte C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ann R. Tickamyer, University of Kentucky Marital Quality and Wives' Dependency. Sara S. McLanahan and

Laura Sanchez, University of Wisconsin Mate Availability and Marital Outcomes Among Black Americans.

K. Jill Kiecolt, Louisiana State University; Mark A. Fossett, University of Texas-Austin

Shi iork Wives and Husbands: The Meaning of Marriage When Scheduling Conflicts. Rosanna Hertz, Wellesley College; Joy Charlton, Swarlhmore College

Marital Non-Cohabitation: Separation Does Not Make the Heart Grow Fonder. Ronald R. Rindfuss, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; Elizabeth Harvey Stephen, George- town University

75. Public Opinion I: Social Issues Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom L e d

Organizer: A. Wade Smith, Arizona State University Presider: Rebecca G. Adams, University of North Carolina-

Greenboro The Social Bases and National Contexts of Middle-Class Liberal-

ism and Dissent in Western Societies: A Comparative Study. Steven Brint, Yale University

Military Experience and Tolerance: An Empirical Study of Vete- rans and Non-Veterans. Nan Yang and William Alex Mcln- tosh, Texas A8M University

Opinions About AIDS Before and After the 1988 Public Informa- tion Campaign. Eleanor Singer and Theresa F. Rogers, Columbia University

Understanding the Gender Gap in the 1984 Elections. Robed 8. Smith, AETNA Life Insurance Company

76. Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance. Macrosociology of Imprisonment

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: James Inverarity, Western Washington University

Trends in Social Control in Post-War England and Wales. Chris Hale, University of Kent-Canterbury

Ethnic Population Change and Nineteenth Century Imprisonment Susan R. Pitchford and Robert Crutchfield, University of Washington

Differential Involvement versus Differential Treatment Revisited: Legal and Methodological Issues in Measuring Racial Dis- crimination in Sentencing. Wiliiam Sabol, University of Mary- land

Discussion: Steven Spitzer, Suffolk University

77. Section on Marxist Sociology. Examining the Middle Classes: Empirical Realitiesand Theoretical Possibilities

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizers: Peter Meiksins, State University of New York- Geneseo; Peter Whalley, Loyola University-Chicago

Presider: Peter Meiksins, State University of New York-Geneseo Class Structure and Class Formation in the U.S. and Sweden: The

Problem of Knowledge Controllers. Carolyn Howe, Holy Cross College

Family Income Polarization in the 1980s: New Pressures on Wives. Husbands and Young Adults. Stephen Rose and David Fasenfest

Middle-Class Politics in the New East Asian Capitalism: The Korean Experience. Hagen Koo, University of Hawaii-Manoa; Eui-Hang Shin, University of South Carolina

Discussion: The Middle Class-Pollical Implications. Martin Oppenheimer,

Rutgers University The Middle Class-Theoretical Implications. Peter Whalley, Loy-

ola University-Chicago

78. Section on Sociological Practice. Running a Graduate Program in Applied andlor Clinical Sociology

Yosemlte 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University Panel: Laura Kramer, Montclair Slate College; Jim Sherohman,

St. Cloud State University

79. Section on Sociology of Sex and Gender. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Margaret L. Andersen, University of Delaware 1. Gender and Occupational Choice: Presider and Discussion: Mary Frank Fox, Pennsylvania State

University Who Most Influences Occupational Choice: The Role of Inside

and Same Sex Influencers. Michael Betz, University of Ten- nessee; Lenahan O'Connell, Carson-Newman College

The Pre-Med Persistence Gap: Do Females Opt Out or Are They "Cooled Out?'Robert Fiorentine, University of California- Los Angeles

Women Lawyers in a Capital City: The Effects of Political Orienta- tion and Workplace Characteristics on Disparagement, Har- assment, and Work Satisfaction. Janet Rosenberg, Widener University; Harry Perlstadt, Michigan State University; Wil- liam R.F. Phillips, Widener University

2. Violence and Social Change: Presider and Discussion: Diana Scully, Virginia Commonwealth

University Rape and Battery: The Limitalions of Law Reform. Pauline 8. Barf

and Margaret Byrne, University of Illinois-Chicago A New Approach Towards the Analysis of Police Behavior

Towards Domestic Violence Cases. Amy M. Hayenhjelm, George Washington University

Second Step: A New Approach to Reducing Violence Against Women. Jeanne E. Kohl, University of Washington; Kathy Beland, Committee for Children-Seattle; John Moritsugu, Pacific Lutheran University

3. Households, Work, and Gender: Presider and Discussion: Matjorie L. DeVault, Syracuse University The Social Construction of Shared Parenting: Social Networks

and Parental Discourse. Scott L. Coltrane, University of California-Riverside

The Distribution of Household Tasks: Does Wife's Employment Status Make a Difference? Beth Anne Shelton, State Univer- sity of New York-Buffalo

Young Children and Job Satisfaction. Sandra L. Hanson, Catholic University

4. Women and Islam: Presiders and Discussion: Mary Elaine Hegland, Sanla Clara

University; Carol Delaney, Stanford University Islamic Fundamentalism and Egyptian Women. Shahin Gerami,

Southwest Missouri State University Virile Male, Fetishited Female: Islamic Construction of Sexuality.

Soofia K. Hussain, Nassau Community College Sudanese Women's Attidues Toward Their Position in Islamic

Life. Tekle Woldemikael, Hamilton College 5. Gender, Care and Responsibility: Presider and Discussion: Emily Abel, University of California Lessons from the Street: Ethnography and AIDS Outreach to

Women. Cathy Reback, California State University-Long Beach

6. Gender, Deviance, and Social Problems: Presider and Discussion: Richard Wilsnak, University of North

Dakota From High School to College: Changes in Women's Self Concept

and Its Relalionship to Eating Problems. Sharlene Hesse- Biber and Margaret Marino, Boston College

Gender, Styles of Deviance, and Problem Drinking: Evidence from the 1985 Household Survey on Drug Abuse. Cynthia Rob- bins and Steve Martin, University of Delaware

The Effect of Race, Economic Support, and Life Structures on the Participation on Female Drug Users in Prostitution. Leon Pettiway, University of Delaware

7. Women and Religion: Presider and Discussion: Susan Farrell, City University of New

York-Graduate Center Women and the Divine: The Reconstruction of God and Spiritual-

ity. Janet L. Jacobs, University of Colorado-Boulder Women in "Men's Roles": A Case Study of Female Pastors in the

Southern Baptist Convention. Marilyn Metcalf- Whittaker, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

8. Attitudes and Gender Ideology: Presider and Discussion: Jennie Kronenfeld, University of South

Carolina Being Female in the Eighties: Conflicts Between New Opportuni-

ties and Traditional Expectations. DavidR. Novack, Washing- ton and Lee University; Lesley Lazin Novack, Mary Baldwin College

Race and Ideological Consensus in Gender Relations. Emily Wright Kane, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

9. Transforming the Discipline: Presider and Discussion: Marlene Mackie, University of Calgary Class and Gender: A Review and Re-Organization of Extant Liter-

ature. Diana Khor, Stanford University Reconceptualizing a Feminist Population Studies. Ludmilla Kwitko

and Patricia O'Hagan, University of Hawaii-Manoa Gender and Feminist Scholarship in Sociology: Tracing a Decade

of Journal Publication, 1975-1 985. Beth Weinstein, Univer- sity of Washington

10. Gender, Culture, and the Self-Help Movement: Presider and Discussion: Muriel Cantor, American University "COSMO" as Big Sister: A Critical Articulation. Laura E. Carr,

Rutgers University; Paul Shapiro, Fashion Institute of Tech- nology

Reading Between the Lines: How and Why Women Read Self- Help Books. Wendy Simonds, City University of New York- Graduate Center

80. Student Session. Roundtables (co-sponsored by the Honors Program Student Association)

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Debra S. Harvey, Catholic University of America 1. Signs, Symbols and Language as Cultural Indicators: Organizers and Presiders: Lorna Lueker, University of California-

San Diego; Lee Meihls, National University Scientific Discourse: The Case of Dishpan Fusion. William

Brigham, University of California-San Diego Feminist Uses of Eros. Sally Davis, Catholic University of America Waves of Semiosis: Surfing's Iconic Progression. Pierce J. Flynn,

National University Office Folk Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. Darrell Y.

Hamamoto, National University

Thursday, 8:30 a,mI The Transformation of Tales: The Work of Dialogic Features,

Dramatic Elements, and Expressive Symbols in Popular Cul- ture. Sheila Hittleman-Sohn, University of California-San Diego

2. Women's Issues: Ongoing Research: Organizer: Ann Oakes, University of North Texas Minoriiies and Work in the U.S. Elizabeth Almquist, University of

North Texas The MaledFernale Earnings Gap. Dana Dunn, University of

Texas-Arlington The People's Republic of China: Women and Occupations. Tho-

mas Doering, University of North Texas Women's Economic and Political Status. Ann Oakes, University of

North Texas 3. Contemporary Issues in Social Movement Theory and Research: Organizer: Neghin Mogavi, University of Hawaii Comparative Effectiveness of Non-Violent and Violent Social

Movement Organizations in America. John Crist, Syracuse University; Bob Edwards, Catholic University of America

Making Multi-Issue Demands in a Single-Issue Movement: Repro- ductive Rights and the Pro-Choice Movement. Suzanne Staggenborg, Indiana University

Developing Culture of Addiction and Recovery in America. Tanya Smith, Ohio State University

State Theory and Resource Mobilization: Points of Fruitful Inter- change. Craig Jenkins, Ohio State University

4. Sociology of Education: Organizer: Rose Marie Ohm, National Conference of Christians

and Jews Education and Social Class Effects on Employment Attitudes.

lone Y. DeOllos, Arizona State University State Control of the Curriculum: Political Incorporation and

Implementation of the Curriculum. David P. Baker, Catholic University of America; David L. Stevenson, Office of Re- search, U.S. Department of Education

Who Should Do Our Fighting for Us: Education and Attitudes Toward Composition in the Military. Dean Landers, Arizona State University

Effects of Increased Educational Attainment in African-American Kin Relations. Diane M. Boachie, Southern Methodist Univer- sity

5. Criminology: Organizer: Neil Goodman, University of New Mexico Discussion of Rape and Criminal Justice: The Social Construc-

tion of Sexual Assault. Gary D. LeFree, University of New Mexico

A Gang as Corporate Actor: A Rational Choice Perspective. Pam- ela A. Rodriguez, University of Chicago

Categorizing Incoming Inmates with Respecl to Those with Learn- ing Disabilities. Karren Baird-Olsen, University of New Mexico

6. Institutions: Organizer: Pamela A. Christensen, Pennsylvania State University The Rahway State Prison Lifers Program: A Retrospective. Sid-

ney Langer, Kean College A Look at Intercollegiate Athlete Careers in Regard tu a Total

Institutional Environment: A Descriptive Study in the Sociol- ogy of Sport. Sheryl Stryker-Bell, Auburn University

Multicultural Education: Trends Toward Critical Thinking and Experiential Learning in Grades K-12. Rose Marie Ohm, National Conference of Christians and Jews

The Knights of Columbus. Phil L. Muncada, Catholic University of America

7. Family: Organizer: Donna Holland, Bowling Green State University Marital Negotiations on Fertility Conlrol: Decisions on Vaseclom-

ies and Tubal Ligations. Arthur G. Neal, Bowling Green Stale University

Education, The Best Contraceptive to Lower Fertility in Pakistan. Fayyaz Hussain, Michigan State University

8. Medical Sociology: Organizer: Deanna Chang, University of Hawaii Recasting a Vision: Retrospective Interpretations of a Hospital's

Mission. Jeffrey Kamakahi, University of Hawaii The Etiology of AIDS: A Fierce Discourse between Scientists.

Olga H. Kits, Queen's University Living Conditions of the Filipino Elderly. Macrina Abenoja, Uni-

versity of Hawaii A Study of Mid-Level Administrator-Professional Work Salisfac-

tion at the Hawaii State Hospital. M. Christine Talmadge, Hawaii Loa College

9. Potpourri: Organizer and Presider: Camille Wright-Miller, Hollins College A Comparison of Jewish and Native First Names in the 1910

Census. Risa Agin, University of Pennsylvania Multi-National Corporations: A Blessing or A Curse for the United

States and the Third World? Omar Altalib, George Mason University; Edward G. Hamborsky, Jr.

An Approach to Attitudinal Research on Hispanic Language Var- ieties in a Multiple Group Context. Arantzazu Ceberio, Uni- versity of Central Florida

Sport as a Tool in Third World Development: An Overview of the Issues. Susan A. Hyatt, Colorado Stale Universily

10. What Do We Do, How Do We Do It, and Why? Concepts, Issues, and Problems in Sociological Writing:

Organizers: Vickie Jensen, University of Oklahoma; Christopher Weltin, Northwestern University

9:30 a.m. Meetings Section on Microcomputing Business Meeting (to 10:20 a.m.)-

Sausalio, 4th Floor

9:30 a.m. Sessions 81. Section on Social Psychology. Cooley-Mead Award

Presentation

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

(to 10:20 a.m.) Organizer and Presider: ViMor Gecas, Washington State University Emotional Self-Objeclification. Morris Rosenberg, University of

Maryland

10:30 a.m. Meetings Regional and State Association Officers-Lombard, 6th Floor Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Council Meeting (to 11:30

a.m.)-Yosemile C, Ballroom Level

Thursdau. 10:30 a.m.

Chairs of PhD Departments of Sociology-Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

10:30 a.m. Sessions

82. Thematic Session. From Exchange to Structure

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Victor Nee, Cornell University Presider: James E. Blackwell, University of Massachusetts-

Boston The Micro Foundations of Social Structure: An Exchange

Perspective. Karen S. Cook, University of Washington Rational Organization. James S. Coleman, University of Chi-

cago Discussion: Peter Blau, University of North Carolina-Chapel

Hill; Michael Hechter, Russell Sage Foundation

83. Professional Workshop. Women's Studies Research Centers

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Myra Marx Ferree, University of Connecticut Cheris Kramarae, Center for the Study of Women in Society,

University of Oregon Heidi Hartmann, Institute for Women's Policy Research Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley Center for Research on Women Patricia MacCorquodale, Southwest Institute for Research on

Women, University of Arizona

84. Teaching Workshop. Teaching Sociology in the Rell- glously Affiliated Liberal Arts College

Tiburon, 4th Floor Raymond DeVries, St. Olaf College Mary Ann Groves, Manhattan College Robert A. Clark, Whitworth College

85. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Organizations

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Caregiving in Different Domains. Emily K. Abel, University of California-Los Angeles; Margaret K. Nelson, Middlebury College

2. Community Action Programs in Addressing the Needs of "The Underclass." Leonard Berkey, Albion College

3. 19th Century American Institutions and the Emergence of Bureaucracy. Paul Eisenhauer, Lafayette College; George Dowdell, St. Joseph's University; George Brooks, University of Pennsylvania

4. Industrial Policy and Rural America. William W. Falk, University of Maryland; Thomas A. Lyson, Cornell University

5. Corporatism and Higher Educational Policy in Massachusetts. David L. Levinson, Merrimack College

6. Measuring the Coproduction of Services by Public Agencies and Informal Social Networks. David J. O'Brien, University of Missouri-Columbia; Mark Tausig and Subhasree Subedi, University of Akron

7. Cost Containment in Medical Education: Funding, Implernenta- tion, and Evaluation. David J. Pratto and James K Skipper, Jr., University of North Carolina-Greensboro

8. The Effects of Bureaucratization on Commitment and Resource Mobilization in Voluntary Organizations. Cruz Torres, William Alex Mclntosh, and Mary Zey, Texas A&M University

9. Corporatism in Sweden: Progressive Change? Bruce M. Zel- kovitt. Washburn University; Kenneth S. Wagner, Stockholm University; Karen L. Field, Washburn University

10. The Politics of Professionalism: Alternative Interpretations of Social Service Work. David Wagner, University of Southern Maine

1 1. The American Fire Department and the Capitalist State. Barry Goetz, University of California-Berkeley

86. Ethnomethodology: Studies In Technical Knowledge and Technical Praxis

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Harold Garfinkel and John Heritage, University of California-Los Angeles; Don H, Zimmerman, University of California-Santa Barbara

Presider: Don H. Zimmerman, University of California-Santa Barbara

The Real Time Locally Achieved and Locally Understood Division of Labor in the Operations Room at the London Air Traffic Control Center. Robert J. Anderson, Xerox Corporation; Wes Sharrock, University of Manchester; John A. Hughes, Uni- versity of Lancaster

Social Change and Theories of Social Change in the Political Economy of Federal Programs of Health Services in the Islands of the U.S. Pacific Trust Territory. Albert 6. Robllard, Deane Neubauer, and Divina Robillard, University of Hawaii

Anonymity and ldentity in Computer Conferencing Systems. Beryl Bellman, Western Behavioral Sciences Institute

Left of Ethnomethodology. Melvin Pollner, University of California- Los Angeles

Discussion: HaroldGarfinkel, University of California-Los Angeles

87. Family Transitions

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Alan Booth, University of Nebraska Family Transitions, Cycles, and Social Change. Glen H. Elder, Jr.,

University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Historic European Household Structures and the Capitalist World

Economy. Arthur S. Alderson and Stephen K. Sanderson, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Widowhood and Depression: Explaining Gender Differences in Vulnerability. Debra Umberson, University of Texas; Ronald C. Kessler, University of Michigan

Homogamy in Intimate Relationships: Why Birds of a Feather Flock Together. Judith A. Howard, Philip Blumstein, and Pepper Schwartz, University of Washington

Discussion: Norval Glenn, University of Texas

88. Immigration: Gender and Labor Force Issues

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Mary M. Kritz, Cornell University Presider: Douglas T. Gurak, Cornell University Why So Many Women: Cross-National Variation in the Sex Com-

position of U.S. Immigrants. Katherine M. Donato, University of Chicago

Determinants of Immigrant Fertility in the United States: 1980. Naintara Gorwaney, Maurice D. Van Arsdol and David M. Heer, University of Southern California

Immigrant Women Go to Work: Analysis of Immigrant Wives Labor Supply. Haya Stier, University of Chicago

Regional Differences in Immigration and Economic Structure in Australia. Knysztof Zagorski

Discussion: Luis M. Falcon, Northeastern University

89. Race, Ethnicity and Health Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Diane R. Brown, Howard University; Elena Yu, Paci- ficlAsian American Mental Health Center

Presider: Gary King, University of Connecticut Health Center Infant Health Among lndochinese Refugees: Patterns of Infant

Mortality, Birthweight and Prenatal Care in Comparative Macro-Micro Perspectives. Ruben G. Rumbaut and John R. Weeks, San Diego State University

The Risk of Low Birthweight Among Hispanic Women in New York City: How Important is Descent? Terry J. Rosenberg, Com- munity Service Society of New York City

Macro- and Micro-Perspectives on Social Correlaies of Hyper- tension Outcomes Among Black Americans. Nancy G. Kutner and Donna Brogan, Emory University

Race, Poverty and Postneonatal Mortality in Urban Places. Tho- mas LaVeist, University of Michigan

Discussion: Clifford L. Broman, Michigan State University

90. Section on Asia and Asian America. Occupation and Social Change: Asian Perspectives

Sausalito, 4th Floor Organizer and Presider: William Liu, University of Illinois-Chicago Occupational Prestige, Status, and Class in Urban China. Yanjie

Bian, State University of New York-Albany Jobs, Sex Rations, and Marriage in the PRC. Richard Barrett and

William P. Bridges, University of Illinois-Chicago Conceptual and Measurement Problems of Employment and

Unemployment: An Investigation info the Different Forms of Employment and Unemployment. Thomas D. Jayawardene, Westmont College

Sojourning and Ethnic Solidarity: Indian South Africans. Gary Klein, University of Pennsylvania

Discussion: Eui-Hang Shin, University of South Carolina

91. Section on Marxist Sociology. Class, State and Crisis

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Levd

Organizer: Martin J. Murray, State University of New York-Bing- hamton

Presider: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University The Age of Restructuring and Environmental Decline. John Bel-

lamy Foster, University of Oregon Sunbelt Capital and Conservative Political Realignment. James

Salt, University of Oregon The Stages and Long Cycles of Capitalist Development. Haldun

Gulalp, State University of New York-Binghamton Class Analysis of Regulation: Some Observations En Route lo a

Theory. Robin Stryker, University of Iowa In Defense of Analytical Marxism. Thomas Mayer, University of

Colorado Discussion: Rhonda F. Levine, Colgate University

92. Section on Microcomputlng. Teaching Sociology with Computers: Problems and Solutions Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: John A. Sonquist, University of California-Sanla Barbara

Presider: Donald Ploch, University of Tennessee Mega Frustration: Learning How to Use a Personal Computer.

Reva Shapiro, University of San Francisco Panel. Fred S. Halley, State University of New York-Brockport;

Thomas Van Valey, Western Michigan University; Lynn Smith-Lovin, Cornell University

93. Section on Social Psychology. Work Opportunities and the Individual Lifecourse (co-sponsored by thesection on Sociology of Aging)

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Jeylan T. Mortimer, University of Minnesota; Matilda White Riley, National Institute on Aging

Presider: James S. House, University of Michigan Changes in Work Structures and Adult Development Kenneth I.

Spenner, Duke University Deriving Meaning from Work Structure: Psychological Models of

Socialization versus Constraint. Joanne Miller and Charles W. Smith, City University of New York-Queens College

lndustrial Dislocation and Retirement Patterns among Auto Work- ers. Madonna Harrington Meyer and Jill Quadagno, Florida State University

Discussion: David L. Featherman, University of Wisconsin- Madison

94. Section on Sociological Practice. Refereed and Informal Roundtables

Imperial 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Arthur 8. Shostak, Drexel University Refereed Dialogues: Contemporary Issues in Applied andlor Clin-

ical Sociology 1. New Insights into Sociological Practice: A Critique of Critical Assumptions about Applied Sociology. J.

Lynn England and W. Keith Warner, Brigham Young Univer- sw

How do Practitioners Define Sociological Practice? Josephine A. Ruggiero, Providence College; Louise C. Weston, Environ- mental Strategies, Inc.

2. New Career Possibilities: Professional Organizational and CuRural Factors Affecting Change

in Industrial Alcoholism Programs. Michael W. Smith, Boston University

The Role of the Applied Sociologist in Defining Family Violence. Richard O'TooIe, Stephen Webster, and Anita W. O'Toole, Kent State University

Informal Presentations 6. Do Sociologists Have Any Responsibility for How Their

Research is Used? John W. Riley, Jr., Chevy Chase, MD Can Findings and Reports be Structured to Protect Their Integrity?

Ross Koppel, Social Research Corporation-Philadelphia 7. Psychodynamic Approaches to Organizational Conflict: How

Applied Sociology Might Have Saved the Saturday Evening Post. Ted Goertzel and Barbara Fiorella, Rutgers University

(continued on next page)

Thursday, 10:30 a.m. Session 94, continued The Growth of the Temporary Employment Relationship: How

Applied Sociology Views Flexibility and inequality in the New Economy. Rob Moore, Saint Joseph's University

8. Getting Clients and Gaining Resources: Marketing an Applied Research Center. Mark Peyrot, Loyola College

Practice Outside of Academia. Mark lutcovich, Keystone Univer- sity Research Corporation

9. Family Time Management: A New Tool for Clinical Sociologists. Me1 Kalish, Hughes Aircraft Company

Care Provider as Obstacle: Diagnosis and Clinical Remedy. Fred Hoffman, Blackborn Care Home-Los Angeles

Integrating Faculty Research, Student Learning, and Social Change in Community Settings. Kathryn P. Grtelkowski, University of Maine

10. The Sociologist as a Market Research Consultant: Applying Sociological Social Psychology. Roger A. Straus, National Analysts

The Sociologist as an Applied Futurist: Guidelines for Enjoying Forcasting Roles. Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University

The Sociologist as a Small Business Manager. Marjorie F. Newman

11. Applied Sociology and Neighborhood Revitalization: Using City Tax Information to Acquire Properties and Putthe Brakes on Urban Flights. Charles Gallagher, Temple University

Sociology of Business: Updating Applied Sociology. Carolyn Dexter

Applied Sociology and Focus Groups. Ronnie 5. Braun, Scott Taylor Research

1 2. Higher Education Administration as Sociological Practice. William A. Pearman, Sacred Heart University

13. Perestroika and Soviet Applied Sociology: The Case of Tatyana Z aslavskaya. Freda Casner, State University College- New Paltz

14. Sociologisfs Involved in Drug Abuse Prevention. W. David Watts, Southwest Texas State University; Michael Garr, Wilkes College

Community Involvement Project. Ann Marie Ellis, Southwest Texas State University

I 1 :30 a.m. Meetings Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Business Meeting (to 1220

p.m.)-Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

12:30 p.m. Meetings American Sociological Review Editorial Board-Whitney, 4th

Floor Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award Selection Committee

(to 420 p.m.)-Marin, 4th Floor Committee on Master's Level Certification Program Credentials

(to 420 p.m.)-Belvedere B, 4th Floor 1991 Program Committee-Lassen, 4th Floor Committee on Society and Persons with Disabililies (to 420

p.m.)-Lombard, 6th Floor 1988-89 Council Members-at-Large (to 4:20 p.m.)-Sonoma, 4th

Floor Rose Monograph Series Editorial Board-Diablo, 4th Floor

Section on Asia and Asian America Council Meeting (to 1:30 p.m.)-Sausalito, 4th Floor

Section on Sociological Practice Council Meeting (to 1 :30 p.m.)- Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

1 2:30 mm. Sessions 95. Divorce

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Arland Thornton, University of Michigan World War I1 and Divorce: A Life Course Perspective. Eliza K.

Pavalko and Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill

Dimensions of Temporality and Marital Dissolution. Tim 8. Hea- ton, Brigham Young University

Premarital Sex and the Risk of Divorce. Joan R Kahn, University of Maryland; Kathryn A. London, National Center for Health Statistics

An Application of Becker's Model of Marital Disruption Incorporat- ing Measures of Utility. Thomas L. Hanson, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Marital Choice and Instability. Neil G. Bennett, Heide Goldstein, and Rikki Abzug, Yale University

Discussion: S. Philip Morgan, University of Pennsylvania

96. Research in the Sociology of Emotions Continental Parlor 2, Ballmom Level

Organizer: Candace Clark, Montclair State College Presider: Gordon Clanton, San Diego State University Gender and the Social Construction of Emotions: The Feminiza-

tion of Psychological Distress. Catherine Kohler Riessman, Smith College

Coping with the Crisis of Breast Cancer: A Process of Emotion Management Betsy Louise Fife, Indiana University

Hiding Behavior: Toward Resolving the Shame Controversy. Thomas J. Scheff and Suzanne M. Retzinger, University of California-Santa Barbara

Supermarket Customer Service: Emotional Labor or Emotional Work? Martin Tolich, University of California-Davis

Discussion: Sherry1 Kleinman, University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill

97. Population Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Donald J. Hernandez, US. Bureau of the Census

Rural Development and Household Fertility: Electrification in Bangladesh. Gordon F. De Jong and Gretchen T. Cornwell, Pennsylvania State University; Warren C. Robinson, Popula- tion Council; Md. Nazrul Hoque, Texas A&M University

Change in Extended Family Living Among the Elderly in South Korea, 1 970-1 980. Susan De Vos and Yean& Lee, Univer- sity of Wisconsin-Madison

Are There Really Only TwoTypes of Women: Labor Force Partici- pants and Nonparticipants? Audrey Vanden Heuvei, Univer- sity of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

IsThere a Parent Gap in Pocketbook Politics? Kennth S. Y. Chew, University of California-lrvine

Discussion: Marta Seoane, University of Southern California; Elwood 0. Carlson, University of South Carolina

Thursday, 12:30 p-m- 98. Rural Coping Strategies In Times of Rural Crisis

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Charles Geisler, Cornell University Family Strategies in a Subsistence Rural Economy: Beech Creek

Kentucky, 1950-1 942. Dwight Billings and Kathleen Blee, University of Kentucky

Rural Farm Women and Work: The Farm Crisis Years. Helen Moore, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Jane C. Ollenburger, University of Minnesota-Duluth; Sheryl J. Grana, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Rural Disintegration and Suicide in Japan. Satomi Kurosu, Uni- versity of Washington

Rural Development as Response to Rural Crisis. Harry R. Potter, Purdue University; Clarita Lantican, National Economic and Development Authority-Philippines

Discussion: Philip MeMichael, Cornell University

99. Science: The Social Context

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Mary Frank Fox, Pennsylvania Slate University

A Model of Journal Peer-Review Procedures. Lowell Hargens, University of Illinois

Structural Conditions of Stratification in Scientific Disciplines. Yehouda Shenhav, Tel Aviv University

Getting a Good Job: Gender Differences Among Academic Psy- chologists. Jeanne Hurlbert, Louisiana State University; Rachel Rosenfeld, University of North Carolina

Gender and Publication. Linda Grant, University of Georgia; Kathryn Ward, Southern Illinois University

Discussion: J. Scott Long, Indiana University

100. Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Bryan S. Turner, Rijkuniversiteit te Utrecht, The Netherlands

Presider: Leiteke van Vucht Tijssen, Rijkuniversiteit te Utrecht, The Netherlands

Reading Wallstreet: Late-Capitalist, Postmodern Contradictions in the American Social Structure. Norman K. Denzin, Uni- versity of Illinois-Urbana

After Nostalgia. Roland Robertson, University of Pittsburgh Simmel and the Theoryof Postmodern Society. Denna Weinstein,

DePaul University; Michael A. Weinstein, Purdue University

Habermas and the Completion of the Project of Modernity. David Ashley, University of Wyoming

Modernity, Postrnodernity and the Present. Barry Smart, Univer- sity of Auckland, New Zealand

101. Section on Crime, Law and Deviance. Refereed and Informal Roundtables

Imperial B, Ballroom Level Organizer: John F. Galliher, University of Missouri-Columbia Refereed Presentations: 1. The Death Penalty: Presider: Herb Haines, State University College-Cortland Psychiatry and Competency for Execution. Herb Haines, State

University College-Cortland

Kentucky Prosecutors' Decision to Seek the Death Penalty: A Lisrel Model. Thomas J. Keil, University of Louisville

Capital Punishment, Publicity, and Homicides: A Time Series Analysis. Ramiro Martinez, Jr., Ohio State University

2. Victims of Crime: Presider: Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, City University of New York-

Graduate Center Poverty, Inequality and Race as Predictors of Rape in Metropoli-

tan Communities. Cynthia S. Gentry, Wake Forest University Do Recent Criminal Justice Innovations Challenge Male Violence

and Support Battered Women? Russell Dobash and Re- becca Dobash, University of Stirling

3. Female Deviance and Crime: Presider: Barbara H. Zaitzow, Public Opinion Laboratory Female Criminality: Toward a Clarification of Sex-Role Influence.

Barbara H. Zaitzow, Public Opinion Laboratory Explaining Deviant Behavior Among Adolescent Girls: Internal

Social Control and Differential Association. Raymond A. Eve and Linda P. Rouse, University of Texas-Arlington

A Method for Murder: The Study of Female Homicide. Nancy C. Jurik, Arizona State University and Wellesley College

4. Drugs and Alcohol: Presider: Anthony J. Cortese, Southern Methodist University Claims-Making and Drug Trafficking: The Mexican Connection.

Anthony J. Cortese, Southern Methodist University; Nick Maroules, Illinois State University

Social Differentiation in Alcohol Abuse Among Young Adults. Roger A. Wojtkiewicz, Louisiana State University

Crack Dealing: Emerging Structures and Functioning. Bruce D. Johnson, Terry Williams, Kojo Dei, and Harry Sanabria, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

5. Violence: Presider: Jay Corzine, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Poverty, Race and Violence: An Analysis of Urban Homicide

Rates. Jay Corzine and Janet Kay Wilson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Deadly Connections: Culture, Poverty and the Direction of Lethal Violence. Lin Hoff-Corzine, Kansas State University; Jay Corzine, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; David C. Moore, Doane College

Informal Discussions: 7. Growth and Development of Policy Systems: Presider: Mark S. Gaylord, City Polytechnic of Hong Kong Harold Traver, Hong Kong University; John Ely, University of

California-Santa Barbara; Mahesh Nalla and Margaret P. Zahn, Northern Arizona University; Neil Weiner, University of Pennsylvania

8. Racism and the Criminal Justice System: Presider: Celesta A. Albonetti, Temple University Lloyd Klein, University of Wisconsin-Center Washington County;

Joan Luxenberg, Central State University; James R. Davis, New York City Department of Probation: Hiroshi Fukurai, Texas A&M University; Richard Krooth, University of Califor- nia-Berkeley

9. Social Control in Prisons: Presider: Amy Craddock, Research Triangle institute Matthew Silberman, Bucknell University 10. Mothers in Prisons: Presider: Jennifer J. Wallace, Lake Forest College

(continued on next page)

Session 1 0 1, continued 1 1. Counterterrorism: Presider: Gilda Zwerman, State University of New York-Old

Weslbury Ilene Philipson, New College of California; Robin Wagner-

Pacifici, Swarthmore College 12. Drug Use Forecasting Project: Drug Use Among Arrestees: Presider: Lana Harrison, National Institute of Justice

102. Section on Marxist Sociology. Historical Sociology of Revolutions

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Martin J. Murray, State University of New York-Binghamton

Models of Revolution and the Iranian Case: A Synthesis of Struc- tural Resource Mobilization and Political Process Theories. Misagh Parsa, Dartmouth College

One Revolution or Two? The Iranian Revolution and the Islamic Republic. Val Moghadam, Brown University

The Popular Movement in the Portuguese Revolution: Historical Mirage or Political Blind Spot? John L. Hammond, City Uni- versity of New York-Hunter College and Graduate Center

Conceptual Lacunae in the Study of Revolution, Counter-Revo- lution, and Thermidor: Some Theoretical Implications of Recent Developments in the PRC and USSR. Morton Wenger, University of Louisville

Discussion: Walter Goldfrank, University of California-Santa Cruz

103. Section on Mkrobomputing. Microcomputer ApplCca- tions In Sociology: New Developments

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: John A. Sonquist, Universityof California- Santa Barbara

HyperResearch: A Computer Program for the Analysis of Qualita- tive Data Using the Maclntosh. Sharlene Hesse-Biber, Paul Dupuis, and Scott Kinder, Boston College

MOKSCAL: A Non-Parametric Item Response Theory Model for the Assessment of the Unidimensionalily of Dichotomous Items. Elisabeth TenVergert and Johannes Kingma, Univer- sity of Utah; Michael Gillespie, University of Alberta

Using Expert Systems to Design Social Science Research. Edward Brent, University of Missouri

Merit Evaluations for Computing in Sociology. Ronald E. Ander- son, University of Minnesota

Discussion: David R. Heise, Indiana University

104. Section on Social Psychology. Panel Discussions and Refereed Roundtables

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Karen A. Miller, Arizona State University Panel Discussions on Educational Issues in Social Psychology

(1 230-1 :30 p.m.): 1. Teaching Undergraduate Social Psychology: Organizer and Presider: Robert P. Snow, Arizona Slate University Jeffrey Nash, Macalester College 2. What Makes a Good Graduate Education in Social Psychology? Organizer and Presider: Stan Kaplowifz, Michigan State University Jane Allyn Piliavin, University of Wisconsin; Judith Howard, Uni-

versity of Washington

Refereed Roundtables (1 :30-2:20 p.m.): 1. Selected Problems in Social-Psychological Theory: Perspectives of the Self: An Alternative Conceptualization of

Mead's "I" and "me." Lloyd Gordon Ward, Brock University; Robert Throop, Clark Institute of Psychiatry

Indexical Conventions: Recent Micro-Sociology as a Theory of Coercion for a Methodologically Durkheirnian Sociology. Warren Handel, Southern Illinois University

2. The Emergence of Group Solidarii: Perceived Cohesion: Two Dimensions and Their Measurement.

Kenneth A. Bollen and Rick H. Hoyle, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

The Production of Trust: Commitment and ldent i in the Emer- gence of Cooperation. Peter Kdlock, University of Washington

The Second Order Free Rider Problem and the Social Role of Individual versus Collective Sanctions. Douglas Heckathorn, University of Missouri-Kansas City

3. The EducationIWork Transition: Social-Psychological Aspects: Out of the Frying Pan: Accounts of Planning for After Coltege

Graduation. Andrew S. Hiken, University of California-Davis Learning Police Professionalism: A Case Study of Police Recruits.

Elizabeth W. McNulty, Arizona State University 4. Marriage and the Family: Social-Psychological Aspects: The Social Psychology of Mate Selection. Laurie Lane Goldberg,

Arizona State University Socialization for Interaction and Participation: The Role of the

Family in Adolescent Social Activity. Scott Pimley, University of California- Berkeley

5. Sex Differences in Pay Satisfaction: Judith R. Mayo, Arizona Stale University 6. Social Definitions of Health and Disease: Role-Taking Failure and Attributions of Insanity. Clifford L. Sta-

ples, University of North Dakota Gender Beliefs and Mental Health Professionals: Implications for

Diagnosis and Treatment. Barbara C. llardi, Mary M. Fox, and Laurence B. Guttmacher, University of Rochester

The Meanings of Control: Contrasting Views of Adolescents with Diabetes and Diabetes Educators. Kathleen Abbott, Arizona State University

7. Social Psychology and the Legal Process: Social and Conceptual Similarity: Senators and Votes. Raymond

Liedka and Dawn Robinson-Reeve, Cornell University The Social Psychologist as Expert Witness: Court Testimony on

Victim Syndromes. IngerJ. Sagatun, San Jose State Univer- sity

8. Objective and Subjective Stress and the Suicide Continuum: Arnold S. Linsky, Ronet Bachman-Prehn, and Murray A. Straus,

University of New Hampshire

105. Student Session. Student Research: A Window on the Discipline Il (co-sponsord by the Honors Program Stu- dent Association)

Tiburon, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Trudie Miher, University of Alberta Eco and Greimas: 1 he Meaning of Words. Lorna L. Lueker, Uni-

versity of California-San Diego Discussion: Karin Klassen, University of Calgary The Effect of Parental Verbal Abuse on Non-Family Violence.

Adrienne C. Nelson, University of Arkansas-Fayettevile Discussion: Thomas A. Petee, Louisiana State University Law as the Micro-Macro Link in Post Divorce Fathering. Ginna M.

Babcock, Washington State University

1 hursday, 12:30 p,mm Discussion. Christopher Wellin, University of Wisconsin-Milwau-

kee Open Adoption: The Opened Family. Pearl Wolfe, University of

Oregon Discussion: Sherry Stryker-Bell, Auburn University

1:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Asia and Asian America Business Meeting (to 220

p.m.)-Sausalito, 4th Floor Section on Sociological Practice Business Meeting (to 220

p.m.)-Yosemite 8, Ballroom Level

AAC Task Group-Tamalpais, 4th Floor Committee on Federal Standards for the Employment of Sociolo-

gists-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Committee on PhD Certification in Medical Sociology-Green

Room, Grand Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Sessions

106. Thematic Session. Loslng a Generation of Children

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballmom Level

Organizer and Presider: A. Wade Smith, Arizona State Univer- sity

Social Isolation and the Inner-City: Implications for Children. William Julius Wilson, University of Chicago

Discussion: Morris Zelditch, Jr., Stanford University

107. Didactic Seminar. Introduction to Multi State Popula- tion Models

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Ticket required for admission Robert Schoen, University of Illinois-Urbana

108. Didactic Seminar. Measuring Religious Values

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Ticket required for admission Andrew Greeley, National Opinion Research Center

109. Professional Workshop. Media Coverage

Tiburon, 4th Floor

Pepper Schwattz, University of Washington Janet Lever, RAND Corporation Ron Lorentzen, KPIX-TV, San Francisco

1 10. Cross-Disciplinary Contributions to Sociology of Emo- tions Theory

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Candace Clark, Montclair State College

Emotions as Interpersonal Action Programs. Paul Ekman, Univer- sity of California-San Francisco

Affect and Values in Decision Making. Amitai Etzioni, George Washington University and Harvard Business School

Emotion-Culture Linkage: On Relationships Between Sociology of Emotions and Sociology of Culture. Heinz-Gunter Vester, Universitat Munchen

Discussion: Adie Russell Hochschild, University of California- Berkeley

1 11. Lesbianism and Male Homosexuality

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ken Plummer, University Essex Don't Answer Any Questions: The Theory and Practice of Resist-

ance to Deviant Categorization. John Gagnon, State Univer- sity of New York-Stony Brook; Stuart Michaels, University of Chicago

Placing Histories of Ourselves within History: Toward a Perspec- tive on LesbianlGay Theory. Scoff Bravmann, University of California-Santa CFUZ

Ethnic and Temporal Patterns of Gay Male Migration to San Francisco. Stephen 0. Murray, El lnstituto Obregon, San Francisco

First Homosexual and Heterosexual Experiences Reported by Gay and Lesbian Youth in an Urban Community. Judith A. Cook, Andrew M. Boxer, and Gilbert Herdt, University of Chicago

The Division of Household tabor Within Gay and Lesbian House- holds. Marion Tolbert Coleman and Jana M. Waiters, Uni- versity of Texas-Austin

Discussion: William Simon, University of Houston; Mary Mc/n- tosh, University of Essex

1 12. Life Course

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Glenna Spitze, State University of New York-Albany Presider and Discussion: Beth Hess, County College of Morris Life Course, Depression, and the Optimum Age. Catherine Ross,

University of Illinois The Social Construction of Retirement among Professionals

Between Fifly and Sixty Years Old. David Karp, Boston College

The Present Lives of 1960s Civil Rights Activists: The Dreamers Turn Forty. Gerald Marwell, University of Wisconsin-Madi- son; N. J. Demerath 111, University of Massachusetts-Amherst; Michael T. Aiken, University of Pennsylvania

Married with Children: Protest and Ule Timing of Family Life Course Events. Charlotte Chorn Dunham and Vern L. Bengtson, University of Southern California

11 3. Organizations: Intra-Organizational Processes and Problems

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Miller McPherson, Cornell University Presider: David Weakliem, Cornell University Modelling Prospective Duration: Gender Differences in Intention

to Stay with the Current Employer. Kazuo Yamaguchi and Anna Y. Leon-Guerrero, University of California-Los Angeles; Mark W. Plant, General Motors Corporation

(continued on next page)

Session 1 1 3, continued From Corporate Strategies to Institutional Prescription: Adoption

of the Multidivisional Form, 1962-1 968. Donald Palmer, Stan- ford University: P. Devereaux Jennings, University of British Columbia; Xueguang Zhou, Stanford University

Thematic Convergence in Rule Learning; Detection of Compet- ency Traps. Martin Schulz, Stanford University

The Reliabiiiof Organizational Measuresfrom Informant Reports. David Knoke and Naomi J. Kaufman, University of Minnesota

The Physical Structuring of Organizational Action. Martha A. O'Mara, Harvard University

11 4. Political Sociology: American Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: David Sciulli, University of Delaware A Structural Theory of Corporate Political Power. Mark S. Mizru-

chi, Columbia University The Politics of Capitalist Class Segments: A Test of Corporate

Liberalism Theory. Val Burris and James Salt, University of Oregon

The Influence of Labor Insurgency and Radical Organization on New Deat Labor Legislation. Michael Goldfield, Cornell Uni- versity

"New Class" and "Elite Massification" Interpretations of Educated Middle Class Radicalism: A Comparison Using National Elec- tion Study Data, 1972-84. Bill Martin, La Trobe University

Professional Association Voting Patterns: A Mirror of Society? William V. D'Antonio, American Sociological Association; Steven A. Tuch, George Washington University

Discussion: David Jacobs, University d Oregon

1 15. Section on Asia and Asian America. Refereed Round- tables Imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: William L. Parish, University of Chicago 1. Women and Society: Presider: Proshanta K. Nandi, Sangamon State University A Historical Analysis of the Status of Filipino Women from the

1400s to the 80s. Emelda Tabao Driscoll, Syracuse University Hopes and Dreams: Career Aspirations among College Women

in Japan. Ann Cordilia, University of Massachusetts-Boston Labor Force Participation and Attitudes about Gender Issues

among Taiwanese Women. Kevin 8. Smith and Li-chen Ma, Lamar University

Mortality Differentials by Marital Status for Stress-Related Causes of Death in Taiwan. Yow-hwey Hu, National Yang-ming Med- ical College, Taiwan

Images of Women's Self-Growth Groups in Taiwan. Hwei-syin Lu, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

2. Political and Economic Change: Organizer and Presider: Yung-mei Tsai, Texas Tech University Political Change and Labor Movement in Taiwan. Cheng-kuang

Hsu, Academia Sinica, Taiwan 1 he "Economic Miracle" and Political Democratization in Taiwan.

Tsehan Lai, Academic Sinica, Taiwan Development, State Policy, and Industrial Organization: The Case

of Korea's Chaebol. Eun Mee Kim, University of Southern California

Re-interpreting the Taiwan "Miracle": The Emergence of Capital- ism in Taiwan and its Implications for East Asian Societies.

Wen-hui Tsai, Indiana University/Purdue University-Fort Wayne

Folk Religion and Capitalist Development in Taiwan. Hei-yuan Chiu, Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, and National Taiwan University

3. Social Trends in the People's RepubJic of China: Presider: William Lavely, University of Washington One-Child Policy, Changing Family Structure, and Household

Division of Labor in the People's Republic of China. Esther Ngan-Ling Chow, American University; Kevin Chen, Pen- nsylvania State University

The Reform from Below-the Private Economy and the Local Politics in the Rural Industrialization-the Case of Wenzhou in Post-Mao China. Yia-Ling Liu, University of Chicago

Modernization of the Chinese Peasantry: Further Evidence of an Organizational Growth Model. Che-fu Lee, Catholic Univer- sity; Xinheng Yang, Nankai University

Economic Reforms and Urban Development in China. Wen H. Kuo, University of Utah

4. Asian-American Communities: Presider: Sharon M. Lee, University of Richmond State Influence on Southeast Asian Community Development in

the United States. Richard Chabot, University of Hawaii The People of the State of California vs. Fumiko Kimura: But

Which People? Deborah Woo, University of California-Santa Cruz

Vietnamese Refugees and Mobility: Model Minority or New Underclass? Steve Gold, Whittier College; NazliKibria, Wel- lesley College

New Asian Immmigrants: Research and Policy Implications. Manju Sheth, Glassboro State College

116. Section on Crime, Law and Deviance. Criminology, Crime and Human Rights

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: John F. Galliher, University of Missouri-

Columbia Law, Criminology and Human Rights: Bentham, Dworkin and

Beyond. Ted R. Vaughan, University of Missouri-Columbia; Gideon Sjoberg, University of Texas-Austin

The Death Penalty as a Human Rights Issue. MichaelL. Radelet, University of Florida

Dehumanizing Tendencies in So-Called Scientific Criminology. William J. Chambliss, George Washington University

Terrorism and Human Rights Violations: Comparisons of Western European Countries. Jack P. Gibbs, Vanderbilt University

Discussion: James F. Short, Washington State University

117. Section on Marxist Sociology. Refereed Roundtables Imperial A, Ballroom Level

(to 330 p.m.) Organizers: Monika Zechetmayr, Pennsylvania State University-

DuBois; Mike Grimes, Louisiana State University 1: The Interorganizational Structure of Class Compromise: The

Swedish Model and Industrial Policy. J. Kenneth Benson, University of Missouri-Columbia

Missing Links in Theories of the Origins of Class Societies- Transitional, Semi-class Modes of Production. James W. Russell, Eastern Connecticut State University

Thursday, 2:30 p,ml 2: Towards a Structural Theory of the Welfare State: The Contribu-

tions of Three Social Science Literatures. James Dickinson, Rider College

Policy, Research, and Praxis in the Welfare State. George Ti Martin, Jr., Montclair State College

3: Micro-macro Links in the Context of Historical Materialism. M.E.

Gimenez, University of Colorado-Boulder The Trend Toward a Micro-Macro Synthesis: The Relevance of

Mam. Gary Itzkowitz, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point 4: Toward a Critique of Bourgeois Sociology: The Case of Erik

Wright's Classes. Paul Kamolnick, Florida State University Yes, But . . . , the Ideology of the Middle Class. Fredrick Schif,

University of Dayton Developmental Ideas in Planovoe Khozaystvc. Jiri Kolaja, West

Virginia University 5: The Question of Class Consciousness. Joan M. Morris and Jef-

frey S. Huffman, Louisiana State University What the 1988 Election Means: A Mamist Analysis. Walda Katz

Fishman, Howard University; Jerome Scott, Project South 6: Beyond the Accumulation Crisis: Consumer Interests and the

Emergence of a Global Economy. Lloyd Klein, University of Wisconsin Center-Washington County

What do Capitalists Own? A Deconstruction and Analysis of the Property Holdings of the U.S. Capitalist Class. Kenneth J. Neubeck and Dennis 0. Breslin, University of Connecticut

7: Textiles, Import Quotas, and the State. Barry Truchil, Rider

College Sociological Roots of the Nuclear Vietnam Syndrome. Paul

Joseph, Tufts University 8: A Mamisl Critique of Theda Skocpol's Analysis of the French

Revolution. Daniel J. Santoro, University of New Hampshire Revolutionary Development and Imperialist Destabilization: Struc-

tural Aspects of Popular Resistance in the Caribbean Basin. Richard Dello Buono, Rosary College

9: Structuring Classes in States and Markets: The Exploitation of

Individual and Collective Actors. Bruce Western, University of California-Los Angeles

Class Formation Without Class Struggle: An Elite Conflict Theory of the Transition to Capitalism. Richard L achmann, Univer- sity of Wisconsin-Madison

Nationalism and Class Struggle in Contemporary Puerto Rico. Juan Manuel Carrion, Puerto Rico

The Eros Effect. George Katsiaficas, Wentworth Institute of Technology

10: Of Retreat and Anomalies, the Crisis in the Marxist Community.

J. W. Haycock, Brandeis University Whose Research isThis, Anyway: Confessions of a Marxist Work-

ing in a Research Bureaucracy. Fred Pincus, University of Maryland-Baltimore County

The Natural History, the Targets, and the Audiences of the Coun- ter Revolutionary New Story. John Leggett, Highland Park, NJ

11: The Political Economy of Inter-Generational Class Formation.

Jerry Lembke, College of the Holy Cross Class Theory or Class Analysis? A Reexamination of Mam's

Unfinished Chapter on Class. Alvin Y. So and Suwarsono So, University of Hawaii-Manoa

1 2: "Miller Time" in Antebellum America: A Marxist-Historical Apprai-

sal of Drinking Habits of the Working Class. John Mc Willi- ams, Pennsylvania State University-Dubois

International Drug Control: Three Models. Ethan A. Nadelmann, Princeton University

13: The Class Structure of Households and Individuals: A U.S.-West

German Comparison. Joachim Singelmann, Louisiana State University

Immigration, Class, and Racial Formation. John Horton, Univer- sity of California-Los Angeles

1 4: Class, Individualistic Orientation, and Political Patly Identification

Among U.S. Men and Women. Thomas J. Burns, University of Maryland

Does Class Matter? The Relationship Between Class Position and Political Ideology. Michael Calloway and Donald Tomas- kovic-Devey, North Carolina State University

1 18. Sectlon on Social Psychology. Macro-Micro Linkages in Social Psychology (co-sponsored by the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction)

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Sheldon Stryker, Indiana University Identity and Social Structure. Peter J. Burke and Lee Freese,

Washington State University Varieties of Micro-Macro Problems: Their Statement and Solution.

Guillermina Jasso, University of Iowa Improvisation to lnstitutionalization. David R. Heise, lndiana

University The Sociological Significance of Micro-Level Theories of Action:

The Engine that Drives the Chassis. Karen S. Cook and Jodi A. O'Brien, University of Washington

Discussion: James S. House, University of Michigan

119. Section on Sociological Practice. Conducting a Career Off-Campus

Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Arthur B. Shostak, Drexel University Presider: Ross Koppel, Social Research Corporation, Philadelphia Panel: Ross Koppel, Social Research Corporation, Philadelphia;

Roger Straus, National Analysts; J. Walter Cobb, Consultant in Human Relations (retired); Ronnie B. Braun, Scott Taylor Research

Discussion: Susan Labin, U.S. General Accounting Office

330 p.m. Meetings Section on Marxist Sociology Business Meeting (to 420 p.m.)-

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Thursday, 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. Sessions 7:00 p.m. Other Grou~s

120. Plenary Session: Presidential Address and Awards Ceremony

Continental Ballroom 4-5, Ballroom Level

Presidential Address Presider: GIen H. Elder, Jr-, ASA Vice President Introduction. Glen H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina-

Chapel Hill Presidential Address. Joan Huber, The Ohio State University

Awards Ceremony Presider: William J. Chambliss, Chair, ASA Committee on

Awards Policy Common Wealth Award: Recipient Alice S. Rossi Presenter: Joan Huber for the Nominating Committee for the

Common Wealth Award in Sociology 1989 Jessie Bernard Award: Recipients: Samuel Cohn and Joan R. Acker Presenter: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown for the Jessie Bernard

Award Selection Committee 1989 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology: Recipient: David Sills Presenter: Katrina W. Johnson for the Distinguished Career

Award for the Practice of Sociology Selection Committee 1989 Distinguished Contributions to Teaching Award: Recipient: James A. Davis Presenter: Theodore C. Wagenaar for the Distinguished Con-

tributions to Teaching Award Selection Committee 1989 Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award: Recipient: Charles Tilly for The Contentious French (Harvard

University Press, 1986) Presenter: Gary Alan Fine for the Distinguished Scholarly Pub-

lication Award Selection Committee 1989 Career of Distinguished Scholarship Award: Recipient: Jessie Bernard Presenter: Ralph H. Turner for the Career of Dislinguished

Scholarship Award Selection Committee 1989 Dissertation Award: Recipient: To be announced Presenter: Alan M. Sica for the Dissertation Award Selection

Committee

6:30 p.m. Receptions Honorary Reception (co-sponsored by the American Sociological

Association and the Department of Sociology, Michigan State University; the Department of Sociology, The Ohio State Uni- versity; Department of Sociology, University of California- Berkeley; Department of Sociology, University of Caiifornia- Riverside; Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California-San Francisco; and Basil Blackwell, Inc.)-Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Section on Crime, Law and Deviance Reception-John's Grill, 63 Ellis Street

Honors Program (to 8:30 p.m.)-Tiburon, 4th Floor Sociological Research Association (to 1 1 :00 p.m.)-Imperial A,

Ballroom Level Sociologists Lesbian and Gay Caucus Business Meeting (to 9:00

p.m.)-Continental Parlor 3

8:30 p.m. Other Grou~s Association for Latinalo Sociology-Yosemite C, Ballroom Level Christian Sociological Society-Yosemite B, Ballroom level "Conversations with Significant Medical Sociologists" (Elaine J.

Lenkei)-Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level North American Chinese Sociologists Association-Cypress, 4th

Floor Quaker Sociologists-Sausalito, 4th Floor "Remembrances by Students, Colleagues and Friends of Bill

Hodge" (Gerald Suttles, Carole Snow, Herman Turk; cash bar)-Diablo, 4th Floor

"Social Psychology Dissertations in Progress" (Timothy J. Owens)-Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Section on Sociological Practice Reception and Sociological Practice Association Business Meeting-Yosernite A, Bal- lroom Level

Sociologists AIDS Network Business Meeting-Continental Par- lor 1, Ballroom Level

Theory and Society gathering-Whitney, 4th Floor University of Virginia Reception for ASA Honors Program-

Belmont, 4th Floor "Women in Science: Needed Research" (Henry Etzkowitz, Jim

Beniger, Pinina Abir-Am, Mary Frank Fox, Carol Kemelgor, Scott Long, Phyllis Moen, Lynn Mulkay, Lois Peters, Peter Stein, Harriet Zuckerman)-Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Friday, August 11 7:00 a.m. Meetings Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Council Meeting

(to 8:20 a.m.)-Diablo, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of the Family Council Meeting (to 8:20

a.m.)-Lassen

7:30 a.m. Meetings Task Force on Graduate Education (to 9:30 a.m.)-Imperial Suite,

19th Floor

8:30 a.m. Meetings Committee on Awards Policy-Sonoma, 4th Flwr Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology Selec-

tion Committee (to 12:20 p.m.)-Lombard, 6th Floor

Friday, 8:30 a.m, DuBois-Johnson-Frazier Award Selection Committee (to 1220

p.m.)-Belmont, 4th Floor Committee on Employment (to 1220 p.m.)-Green Room, Grand

Ballroom Level Master's Level Certification Examination (to 1220 p.m.)-Marin,

4th Floor Committee on PhD Certification in Organizational Analysis-

Belvedere B, 4th Floor Committee on Regulation of Research-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of the Family Business Meeting-Taylor, 6th

Floor

8:30 a.m. Other Groups Sociological Forum Editorial Board-Whitney, 4th Floor

8:30 a.m. Sessions

121. Thematic Session. Micro-Macro Theoretical Linkages in Social Demography

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: William M. Mason, University of Michigan Presider and Discussion: Barbara Entwisle, University of

North Carolina-Chapel Hill Markets, States, and Bedrooms in Western Europe: 1870-

1960. Susan C. Watkins, University of Pennsylvania Poor People and Poor Places: Deciphering Neighborhood

Effects on Behavioral Outcomes. Marta Tienda, University of Chicago

Multilevel Analysis in the Study of Women's Status and Demo- graphic Change. Karen Oppenheim Mason, University of Michigan

Social Structure and Status Attainment: Micro-Macro Links. Donald J. Treiman, University of California-Los Angeles

Some Notes on the Presence and Absence of Macro Effects. Ross M. Stolzenberg, Graduate Management Admission Counc~l

Problems in Quantitative Comparative Analysis. William M. Mason, University of Michigan

122. Didactic Seminar. Measuring Residential Segregation

Tiburon, 4th Floor

Ticket required for admission Douglas Massey, National Opinion Research CenbrlUniversity

of Chicago

123. Professional Workshop. Sociologists in Biomedical Settings

Cypress, 4th Floor

Linda H. Aiken, University of Pennsylvania

124. Teaching Workshop. Making Sense of the Sociology Major in the Liberal Arts

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Theodore C. Wagenaar, Miami University

Zelda Gamson, New England Resource Center for Higher Education

Paul Eberts, Cornell University Robert Davis, North Carolina A&T State University Kathleen Crittenden, University of Illinois-Chicago Carla Howery, ASA, Teaching Services Program

125. AIDS

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Samuel R. Friedman, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

Health Care and the Social Construction of AIDS. Stephen Crystal and Marguerite M. Jackson, Rutgers University

The Social Context of Condom Usage among Gay Men. Karolynn Siegel, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Martin P. Levine, Bloomfield College; Charles Brooks, Memorial Sloan- Kettering Cancer Center

Needle Sharing among Male Prostitutes: Preliminary Findings of the Prospero Project. Dan Waldorf, Sheigla Murphy, and David Lauderbach, lnstitute for Scientific Ananlysis; Craig Reinarman, Northeastern University; Toby Marotta, Institute for Scientific Analysis

Community Outreach as Applied Ethnography in Combating the Spread of AIDS. Robert S. Broadhead, University of Connec- ticut; Kathryn J. Fox, University of California-Berkeley

Africa and AIDS: Migrant Labor and the Spread of Sexually Transmitled Disease. Charles Hunt, University of Oregon

Discussion: Samuel R. Friedman, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

126. Advancing Criminological Theory

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Robert J. Sampson, University of Illinois The Structuration of Gender and Deviance: A Power-Control

Theory of Vulnerability to Crime and the Search for Deviant Role Exits. John Hagan, University of Toronto

The Idea of Organizations in Criminology. Michael UoWedson, University of Arizona

Crime and Delinquency in the Life Course. John Laub, Northeast- ern University; Robert J. Sampson, University of Illinois

Differential Social Control: A Structural Symbolic lnteractionist Theory of Delinquency. Ross L. Matsueda, University of Wisconsin-Madison

What is the Perceived Seriousness of Crimes? Mark Warr, Uni- versity of Texas-Austin

127. Comparative Historical Sociology: State and Economy

Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Mark Gould, Haverford College Exploring the Limits of Comparative Methods in Historical Sociol-

ogy: Merchant Companies and Early Modern States. Julia Adams, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Rationality and Structure in the "Failed" Capitalism of Renais- sance Florence. Richard Lachmann and Stephen Petterson, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Proletarianization: The Transformation of the American Cowboy, 1865-1890. Janet Gouldner, Washington University

Social Policy in the German Empire: The Myth of the Autonomous State. George Steinmetz, University of Chicago

Discussion: Robert Brenner, University of California-Los Angeles

Friday, 8:30 am, 128. Public Opinion Il-Methodological Issues

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: A. Wade Smith, Arizona Stale University Open and Closed Questions in Stouffer's Communism, Confor-

mity, and Civil Liberties. Emily Wright Kane and Howard Schuman, University of Michigan

Trends in Abortion Altitudes: Evidence from Response Consis- tency Effects. Charles J. Brody and Mark Plunkett, 1 ulane University

Elite Dissensus and Its Origins. Robert Lerner, Althea K. Nagai, and Stanley Rothman, Smith College

A Fair Predicament: Measuring Mild Disapproval of Public Offi- cials. James G. Hougland, Jr., University of Kentucky; Timothy Johnson, University of Illinois

129: Race, Class, and Gender

Con tinen tal Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Bonnie Thornton Dill, Memphis State University

Racial Stratification and Household Structure. Larry H. Shinag- awa, U.S. Census Bureau; Gin Pang, University of California- Berkeley

Class Advantage, Kinship and Race: The Processes Determining Financial Assistance to Women Heading Families from their Kin. Irene Browne, University of Arizona

Race and Marital Status Differences in the Labor Force Parlicipa- tion of Female Family Heads:The Effect of Household Struc- ture. Cynthia Rexroat, Joint Center for Political Studies

Gender Roles Among Low Income Black Women: The Intersec- tion of Class and Race. Robin L. Jarrett, University of Chicago

The Feminization of Poverty: A Second Look. Diana M. Pearce, Institute for Women's Policy Research

Discussion: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown, Montclair State College

130. Section on Collective 8ehavior and Social Movements. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Lewis M. Killian, University of West Florida 1. Theories and Models of Collective Behavior: Presider: Norris R. Johnson, University of Cincinnati Elementary Social Structure and the Resolution of Ambiguity:

Some Results from a Computer Simulation Model. Norris R. Johnson and William E. Feinberg, University of Cincinnati

Social Control and International Labor Migration: An Operational Definition. Lynne L. Snowden, University of Delaware.

A Simmelian View of Social Movements. Will C. van den Hoo- naard, University of New Brunswick

Movement Mobilization: The Case for Political Process Theory. Eric L. Hirsch, Columbia University

2. Social Control and Protest: Presider: J. Michael Olivero, Southern Illinois University Notes Toward a Full Theoretical Framework for Understanding

Prison Riots. J. Michael Olivero, Southern Illinois University Collective Identities and Collective Protest: Rebellions in the

Soviet Concentration Camp System. Grzegorr Ekiert, Har- vard University

American Indian Repertoires of Contention. Joane Nagel, Univer- sity of Kansas

State Repression and Collective Action in South Africa, 1970- 1984. Johan L. Olivier, Human Sciences Research Council, South Africa

3. Participants and Participation: Presider: Steven E. Barkan, University of Maine Leaving the Ranks: A Comparison of Past and Present Members

of a National Anti-Hunger Organization. Steven E. Barkan, Steven F. Cohn, and William H. Whitaker, University of Maine

The Victim-Activist Role in the Anti-Drunk Driving Movement Frank J. Weed, University of Texas-Arlington

A Case Study of a Southern Californian Flying Saucer Cult. R. George Kirkpatrick and Diana Tumminia, San Diego State University

4. Studies in Revolutionary Societies: Presider: Benigno E. Aguirre, Texas A&M University Revolutionary Ideology and Features of Formal Educational

Instruction in Cuba. Benigno E. Aguirre, Texas A&M University The Happeners and the Onlookers: The Orange Alternative as the

Surrealistic Product of Socialist Surrealism. Bronislaw Misz- tall Indiana University-Purdue University

Toward a Synthesis of Theories of Revolution: Five Critical Fac- tors and Their Application to Analysis of the Iranian Revolu- tion. Jim DeFronzo, University of Connecticut

5. Mobilization and Movement Emergence: Presider: Chaya Zuckerman-Bareli, Bar llan University Micromobilization Subprocesses and Preconditions of Movement

Emergence: The Case of Parents Against Silence. Chaya Zuckerman-Bareli and Tova Benski, Bar llan University

Interlinkages Within and Among Extreme Conservative Networks: Their Nature, Breadth, and Significance. Lorraine Majka, Refugee Program, Chicago

6. Success and Impact of Social Movements Presider: Mark Wolfson, Stanford University The Impact of Social Movement Organizations: The Role of

Resources, Age, Lobbying, and Interorganizational Networks. Mark Wolfson, Stanford University

From Bottles to Bombs: The Role of Success and Occupying a Unique Niche in Organizational Transformation. Jurg Gerber, University of Idaho

Free Speech and Free Signs: From Berkeley, 1964, to Gallaudet, 1988. John B. Christiansen and Sharon N. Barnartt, Gal- laudet University

Gender Equality in the U.S. and Canada: Why the Difference? Patrice P. LeClerc, Duke University

7. Macro- and Micro-Processes in Mobilization: Presider: Samuel Cohn, University of Wisconsin-Madison Environmental Variation and Diffusion in Strike Waves: French

Coal Mining 1890-1935. Carol Conell, Stanford University: Samuel Cohn, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Veterans Coalition Against Hanoi Jane: An Analysis of a Social Movement. Anne Barnhardt Hendershott, University of Hart- ford

8. The Media and Social Movements: Presider: John D. McCarthy, Catholic University of America The Impact of Local Collective Action on a Media Cycle: The Case

of the Citizens' Movement Against Drunken Driving. John D. McCarthy and Debra S. Harvey, Catholic University of America

Social Movements and the Mass Media: Towards an Interdiscipli- nary Approach. Liesbeth Van Zoonen, University of Amster- dam; Barry Van Driel, University of California-Santa Cruz

Friday, 8:30 am. Social Movements During Cycles of Issue Attention: A Compari-

son of the Anti-Nuclear Energy Movements in West Germany and the United States. Christian Joppke, University of California-Berkeley

9. Social Movements Through the Lens of Critical Theory: Presider: Kenneth H. Tucker, Jr., New College-University of South

Florida Rethinking Theories of Radical Labor Movements in Early Twen-

tieth Century Europe: A Habermasian Perspective. Kenneth H. Tucker, Jr., New College

The Battered Women's Movement: Therapy or Transformation. Rekha Mirchandi, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

State Crisis and the New Social Movements. Margarita Alario, New School for Social Research

131. Section on Organizations and Occupations. History, International Comparison and The Robustness of Organizational and Occupational Concepts

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Paul DiMaggio, Yale University Presider: Walter W. Powell, University of Arizona Institutional Logic and Economic Explanation. Nicole Woolsey

Biggart, University of California-Davis On the Meaning of Occupational Status: Implications of Increasing

Complexity for How Status is Conceived. William A. Faunce, Michigan State University

Organizational Theory and Comparative Organizational Re- search. James R. Lincoln, University of California-Berkeley

Japanese Organizational Evolution and Western Organization Theory. D. Eleanor Westney, Massachusetts lnstitute of Technology

Strikes as Institution-Building: Union Locals as Strike Outcomes and Strike Moderators in the 1880s. Lynne G. Zucker, Uni- versity of California-Los Angeles; Kam-Bor Yip, Northern Illinois University; Matthijs Kalmijn, University of California- Los Angeles

132. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. The New Sociology of Knowledge: Empirical and Theoreti- cal Approaches

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Henry Etzkowitz, State University of New York- Purchase: Rensselaer Polytechnic lnstitute

Presider: Susan Cozzens, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Knowledge and Discourse in Public Policy Assessment. William

G. Staples, University of California-Los Angeles Newton's "Tacit" Social Physics. Dusan I. Bjelic, Boston University Collective Amnesia and Scientific Progress: The Distorted Pres-

entation of the Institutionalist School by the Conventional Historiography of Economics and its Bearings on the Kuhni- an-Lakatosian Debate. Yuval Yonay, Northwestern University

Invention and Ritual: Notes on the Interrelation of Magic and Intellectual Property in Preliterate Societies. Mark C. Such- man, Yale Law School and Stanford University

Discussion: Stanley Aronowitz, City University of New York Graduate Center and Stephen Cole, State University of New York-Stony Brook

133. Section on Sociology of Education. Refereed Roundta- bles. Current Issues in the Sociology of Education

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Dan C. Lortie University of Chicago 1. Issues in Third World Educational Development: Organizers and Presiders: Mehrangiz Najafizadeh, Mount Saint

Mary's College; Lewis A. Mennerick, University of Kansas Curricular Policy and Priorities in the Third World, 1960-1980.

David Kamens, Northern Illinois University; Aaron Benavot, University of Georgia

Patterns of University Formation in Developed and Less Deve- loped States. Phyllis Riddle, Arizona State University

ideology, Education and Social Change in the Third World. Meh- rangiz Najafizadeh, Mount Saint Mary's College; Lewis A. Mennerick, University of Kansas

Changing Patterns of Authority and Responsibility in Chinese Schools. Lynn Paine and Brian D. DeLany, Michigan State University

Assessing the Role of Education as a Mechanism for Social Transformation: Educational Reform in El Salvador. Lillian Moncada-Davidson, City University of New York-Queens College

The Credit Hour Curriculum of Girls' Secondary Schools in Kuwait. Edith W. King and Muna A/-Musalam, University of Denver

Trends in Post-Revolutionary Iranian Education. Robert E. Ruc- ker, University of Nevada-Las Vegas; Parviz Piran, Allameh Tabatabai University, Teheran, Iran

2. Processes of Allocation within Schools: Presider and Discussion: Joyce Epstein, Johns Hopkins University Middle School Tracking and the Transition to High School. Mau-

reen T. Hallinan, University of Notre Dame Tracking and the Distribution of Status in Secondary Schools.

Adam Garnoran, University of Wisconsin-Madison Historical Antecedents of Special Education. John G. Richardson,

Western Washington University Discussion: Carl Milofsky, Bucknell University 3. lssues in Higher Education: Presider and Discussant: Patricia Gumport, University of Califor-

nia-Los Angeles Academic Timetables: Open-Access Higher Education, Ethnicity

and the Role of Time in Attainment of Postgraduate Degrees. David B. Crook, City University of New York and Columbia University; David E. Lavin, City University of New York

Academic-Success Expectancy and Sex-DissonantISex-Con- sonant Settings. Richard J. Gigliotti and Eric J. Rymer, Uni- versity of Akron

Linking Education and Work: The Effect of College Major- Occupation Fit on Earnings. Mary Nichols Kolb, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

10:30 a.m. Meetings AAC Task Group-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Consortium of Sociological Associations-Sonoma, 4th Floor Orientation for Section Officers-Tiburon, 4th Floor Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Council

Meeting (to 1 1 :30 a.m.)-Taylor, 6th Floor

10:30 a.m. Sessions

134. Thematic Session. Structural Etfects on Career Mobility

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Presider: Thomas DiPrete, Duke University Understanding Job Shifts within Firms. Robert Althauser,

Indiana University Structural Pathways and Switching Mechanisms for Individual

Careers. Shelby Stewman and Kuang-Shih Yeh, Came- gie-Mellon University

Discussion: Charles Halaby, University of Wisconsin; Rachel A. Rosenfeld, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

135. Speeiat Session. AlDS in San Francisco

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Beth E. Schneider, University of California-Santa Barbara

Representatives from seven San Francisco Bay area organiza- tions working on AIDS education, service provision, and public policy, will discuss the unique features of their current activities, ongoing dilemmas, and expectations for the future.

136. Didactic Seminar. Computer Analysis of Qualitative Data

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Ticket required for admission Kathleen Carley, Carnegie-Mellon University

137. Professional Workshop. Clinical Sociology: Implement- ing Empowerment Strategies (co-sponsored by the Sociological Practice Association)

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Elizabeth J. Clark, Montclair State College Jan M. Fritz, National Cancer Institute and Loma Linda University

138. Minority Fellowship Program Session

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer: Aldon Morris, Northwestern University Presider: Kiyoshi Ikeda, University of Hawaii-Manoa To be announced. Duane Champagne, University of California-

Los Angeles State Mediation and Black Class Formation: A MacrolMicro

Dynamic. Sharon Collins Micro-Macro Issues in Immigration. Silvia Pedraza-Bailey, Uni-

versity of Michigan To be announced. William Trent, University of Illinois-Urbana

139. Community

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizers and Presiders: Donald C. Reitzes, Georgia Stale Uni- versity; Deitrich C. Reitzes, Roosevelt University

The Mall: Community for Whom? Steven M. Ortiz, University of California-Berkeley

Homelessness and Affiliation. Mark La Gory and Ferris Ritchey, University of Alabama-Birmingham; Jeff Mullis, University of Virginia

Neighborhood Associations, Political Repertories and Neighbor- hood Exits. R. S. Oropesa, DDB Needham Worldwide Inc.

Racial Differences in Urban Neighboring. Barretf A. Lee, Karen E. Campbell, and Oscar Miller, Vanderbilt University

Discussion: Harvey M. Choldin, University of Illinois

140. Comparative Historical Sociology: The Autonomy of System Levels

Yosemite B, Bellroom Level

Organizer: Mark Gould, Haverford College Presider: Robert Freeland, University of California-Berkeley Cultural Analysis in Historical Sociology: The Analytic and Con-

crete Forms of the Autonomy of Culture. Anne Kane, Univer- sity of California-Los Angeles

The Jewish Ethic and The Spirl of Socialism. Adam Weisberger, University of Pennsylvania

Agency, Structure, and the State: Historical Change in the World System of Metropolises. David R. Meyer, Brown University

What is State Autonomy? Organization Theory and the Political Sociology of the State. Bruce G. Carruthers, American Bar Foundation and University of Chicago

Discussion: Peter Knapp, Villanova University

141. Toward Understanding Labor Markets

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Michael D. Woodard, University of Missouri-Columbia

Relative Wages and Radical Theory of Economic Segmentation. David Weakliem, Cornell University

Measuring U.S. Labor Force Transitions: Shifts Between Good Jobs, Bad Jobs, and No Jobs. Daniel T. Lichter and David J. Landry, Pennsylvania State University

Contested Milieux: Unionization and Protective Structures in Small Firms. Margaret L. Krecker and Angela M. O'Rand, Duke University

Unfulfilled Labor Market Potential and Psychosocial Stress Among Black Men. Gloria Jones Johnson, Iowa State University

Sex, Ethnic Composition, and Wages of Production Workers. Linda 6. Stearns, Russell Sage Foundation and University of California-Riverside

Discussion: Bruce Williams, University of Mississippi

142. Sources of Stress and Psychological Well Being

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Elena S. H. Yu, University of Illinois-Chicago and Paci- fiefAsian Aamerican Mental Health Research Center

Presider: Roger L. Brown, American Medical Association The Life Stress Paradigm and Psychological Well Being. Nan Lin

and Walter M. Ensel, State University of New York-Albany Stress and SociocuHural Predictors of Depressive Symptoms.

Diane R. Brown, Norweeta G. Milburn, Angela Dungee, and Lawrence E. Gary, Howard University

Life Stress, Interpersonal Networks, and Menlal Health among Older Korean Immigrants. Mee Sook Lee, University of Illinois-Chicago

Sources of Job Stress among Physicians: Effects of Gender and Practice Structure. Leyne A. Simpson, University of Georgia

Discussion: Dorothy Smith-Ruiz, Howard University; William T. Liu, University of IllinoisChicago

Friday, 10:30 am. 143. Social Psychology: Social Structure and Personal

Response Contlnental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer Bonnie H. Erickson, University of Toronto Presider: Leonard Pearlin, University of California-San Francisco How am 1 Doing? Structural Variations in the Bases of Self-

Evaluation. Bonnie H, Erickson and David 8. Tindall, Univer- sity of Toronto

Satisfaction and Involvement: Correlation or Causality? Joh Lor- ence, University of Houston

Control or Defense? Attribution Types and Depression. John Mirowsky and Catherine E. Ross, University of Illinois- UrbanaIChampaign

Parental Role Strains, Parental Identity Salience, and Gender Differences in Psychological Distress. Robin W. Simon, Indi- ana University

Discussion: Leonard Pearlin, University of California-San Francisco

144. Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity II

Yosemite C, BaHroom Level Organizer: Bryan S. Turner, RiRijksuniversiteit te Utrecht, Netherlands Presider: Adam Seligman, University of California-Los Angeles Lyotard and Weber: Postmodern Rules and Neo-Katian Values.

Charles Turner, Goldsmiths College, University of London Women, Modernity, and Postmodernity. L. van Vucht Tijssen,

Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht, Netherlands Modernism, Fundamentalism, and Women in Betweeen.Aysegu1

Baykan, University of Pittsburgh Citizenship and Postmodernism. P. Wexler, University of Roches-

ter Postmodernism and the City. Scott Lash, University of Lancaster

145. Section on Organizations and Occupations. Occupa- tions, Organizations, and Stratification in Cross- National Perspective continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

0rganizer:Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Position in the Class Structure and Psychological Functioning: A Comparative Analysis of the United States, Japan, and Poland. Melvin L. Kohn, Johns Hopkins University; Atsushi Naoi, Osaka University; Carrie Schoenbach and Carmi Schooler, National Institute of Mental Health: Kazimierz M. Slomczynski, University of Warsaw

Comparative Perspectives on the Intergenerational Transmission of Occupational Position. Donald J. Treiman and Yusheng Peng, University of California-Los Angeles

The Organizational Embeddedness of Attainment Processes: The Case of Earnings Attainment in Swedish Manufacturing Industry. Peter M. E. Hedstrom, University of Chicago

Wage Structures in Organizations: Determinants of Pay Disper- sion in U.S. and Japanese Manufacturing Firms. Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill; James R. Lincoln, University of California-Berkeley; Jeffrey Pfeffer and Pamela L. Pommerenke, Stanford University

Run Silent, Run Deep: The Ever Pervasive Influence of Culture on Organization in the Far East. Richard H. Hall and Weiman Xu, State University of New York-Albany

Discussion: Arne L. Kalleberg, University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill

146. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Informal Roundtable Presentations Imperial 8, Ballroom Level

(to 11 :30 a.m.) Organizer: Henry Etzkowitz, State University of New York-

Purchase and Rensselaer Polytechnic lnstitute 1. One Conversation or Many: A Case Study of Scientific Discov-

eries. Grant Blank and Marshall Johnson, University of Chicago

2. Foxes, Hedgehogs, and Peer Review. Susan Cozzens, Rensse- laer Polytechnic lnstitute

3. Creationism and Curricula: Religion, Public Education and Science. Susan Losh-Hesselbart, Ella Dennis, and Phil Blood, Florida State University

4. Images, Numbers, and Words: Articulations and Translations of Experience and their Communication in Science. Roger Krohn, McGill University

5. Cooperation or Competition in Science and Scholarship: Socie- tal Influences on the American Academic Elite. Albert /. Goldberg, Israel Institute of Technology; Seymour Martin Lipset, Stanford University

6. The Iron Case and the Academy: An Organizational Perspec- tive on University-Industry Research Relations. Edward Hackett, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

7. Value Constituting Practices, Rhetoric, and Metaphor in Sociol- ogy: Issues in the Sociology of Science. Laurel Richardson, Ohio State University

8. Research Groups in Academic Science. Carol Kemelgor, State University of New York-Purchase; Henry Etzkowitz, State University of New York-Purchase and Rensselaer Polytech- nic lnstitute

9. Harvard Scholars and the Cold War: Producing Social Fictions Through Science. Charles O'Connell, University of California- Los Angeles

147. Section on Sociology of Education. Mostly about Gender

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Dan C. Lortie, University of Chicago College Quality and Future Earnings: Where Should You Send

Your Daughters and Sons to College? Joseph C. Conaty, Office of Research-U.S. Department of Education; Nabeel Alsalam, U.S. Department of Education; Estelle James, State University of New York-Stony Brook; Duc Le To, U.S. Department of Education

Cognitive and Noncognitive Determinants of School Achieve- ment: Gender, Ethnicity and Poverty in an Urban School District. George Farkas, University of Texas-Dallas; Robert P. Grobe and Daniel Sheehan, Dallas Independent School District; Yuan Shuan, University of Texas-Dallas

Gender, School Type and Selective College Attendance: Compar- ing Status Attainment and Status Allocation. Theories of Strat- ification. Caroline Hodges Persell, New York University; Sophia Catsambis, Queens College; Peter Cookson, Jr., New York University

Sources of Organizational Demography: Faculty Sex Ratios in Colleges and Universities. Pamela S. Tolbert and Alice Ober- field, Cornel l University

Discussion: Margaret Mooney Marini, University of Minnesota

148. Section on Sociology of the Family. Refereed Dialogues

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Martha R. Fowlkes, University of Connecticut 1. Perspectives on Motherhood: Motherhood as a Pathway to Power. Melanie Moore and Philip

Blumstein, University of Washington Controlling Motherhood: The Culture of the La Leche League.

Florence Andrews, Carleton University 2. Relationships of Parents with Adult Children: Factors Influencing Mother-Daughter Contact and Intimacy. Kat-

hleen Piker King, Mount Union College; Sally Hurd Dean, Akron Child Guidance Center

Adult Children and the Construction of Self-Identity in Old Age. Susan Eisenhandler, University of Connecticut-Waterbury

3. Family Culture: The Family Emotional Environment: Theoretical, Conceptual, and

Methodological Issues. Eric Plutzer, Iowa State University; George Bohmstedt, American Institutes of Research; Mar- garet Ensminger, Johns Hopkins University-Baltimore

The Family as a Cultural Unit and Its Effect Upon Fatherhood. Rudy Ray Seward, North Texas State University

4. Issues of Age and Timing of Reproduction: The Influence of Paternal and Maternal Age on Outcomes for

Children and Their Adolescent Mothers. Holly S. Ruch-Ross and Marilyn Fernanadez, Ounce of Prevention Fund.

Illegitimate Births Among Southern Blacks: Why Was Frazier Wrong? Kathryn M. Neckerman, University of Chicago

5. Patterns of Agrarian Class Structure and Peasant Household Structure in Fifteenth Century Tuscany. Rebecca Emigh, University of Chicago

6. Contemporary Influences of Family on Work: The Family Context of Work Socialization. Deborah Sherman,

University of Illinois-Chicago Parenthood and Occupational Self-selection. Jennifer Glass and

Valerie Camarigg, University of Notre Dame 7. Work, Family and Community Involvement. Steven Nock and

Paul Kingston, University of Virginia 8. Culture and Markets in Jordanian Bride Prices: On the Diffusion

of Tradition. Herman Turk, University of Southern California; Qublan Maiali, Kerak-Mu'Tah University

9. Child Abuse and Violence in Single-Parent Families. Richard Gelles, University of Rhode Island

10. Normative Features of Childrearing: A Survey of Parents' Problems: Types, Social Group Variation

and Impact. Jeffrey G. Reitzand Rona Abramovitch, Univer- sity of Toronto

Socialization Outside of the Home: Parents' Management of Children's Lives Away from Home. Annette Lareau, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale

1 1 :30 a.m. Meetings Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements Business

Meeting (to 12:20 p.m.)-Taylor, 6th Floor Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Business Meet-

ing (to 1220 p.m.)-Imperial B, Ballroom Level

12:30 p.m. Meetings Contemporary Sociology Editorial Board-Whitney, 4th Floor Journal of Health and Social Behavior Editorial Board-Shasta,

4th Floor Oversight Certification Committee-Belvedere B,4th Floor 19W Program Committee (to 4:20 p.m.)-Lassen, 4th Floor Social Psychology Quarterly Editorial Board-Tamalpais, 4th

Floor Sociological Practice Review Editorial Board-Diablo, 4th Floor Section on Community and Urban Sociology Council Meeting (to

1 :30 p.m.)-Taylor, 6th Floor

12:30 p.m. Sessions 149. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Family

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. The Difference of Parent-Child Relationship Between Only- Child Families and Multi-Child Families in China. Kevin Chen, Pennsylvania State University

2. Accessb Maternity Leave Benefits, Hometime, and Experience- Earnings Profiles of Women. Guy C. Dalto Birmingham- Southern College

3. Is He Heavy? He's My Brother: The Impact of Brothers on the Status Attainments of Women. Carol Diem, University of Arizona

4. Family-Supportive Policies in the Workplace: Exploring the Possibilities. John C. Gessner, College of Saint Thomas

5. Organizational Responses to Employee's Family Needs. Jen- nifer Glass, University of Notre Dame

6. The Role of Families in Programs for Pregnant Teens. Sandra L. Hanson, Catholic University

7. Marital Relationships and the Issues of Decision-Making, Power, and Conflict. Malcolm D. Hill, Pennsylvania State University

8. Legislation That Reflects Family Interests: The Role of Family Associations. Sharon K. Houseknecht, Ohio State University

9. Rationalizing Intimacy: The Social Construction of Heterosex- ual Dating. Richard Ingersoll, University of Pennsylvania

10. Child Care Costs and Women's Employment A Panel Approach. David J. Maume, Jr., University of Cincinnati

11. Current Sociological Developments in Involuntary Childless- ness and Reproductive Technology. Charlene Miall and Ralph Maffhews, McMaster University

12. Rote Impoverishment: A Study of Young Army Wives. Flor- ence R. Rosenberg, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences and Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

13. Family Change and Stability: Feminism and Sociobiology. Kay Michael Troost, North Carolina State University

14. Progress Report on the National Survey of Family Growth. William F. Pratt and Lindy Williams, National Center for Health Statistics

1 SO. Biography, Narrative, and Society

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Jaber F. Gubrium, University of Florida The Beleaguered Self: Self vs. Society in Twentieth-Century

American Autobiographies. Diane Bjorklund, University of California-Davis

Fridau, 12:30 p,mm "A Lot of These Women Aren't Likable": Accounting for Biogra-

phical Misfits. Donileen R. Loseke, Union College Biography and the Search for Women's Subjectivity. Kathleen

Barry, Pennsylvania State University Biography, Narrative, and Memory: A Study in the Construction of

Popular Historical Consciousness. Elizabeth Rauh Bethel, Lander College

Social Context and the Identity of Homosexuals Before the Gay Liberation Movement: A Biographical Analysis Examining Discrimination and Self-concept. Gerard Sullivan, University of Hawaii

151. Sociology of Culture: Institutions and Constraints

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Jeffrey C. Goldfarb, New School for Social Research Presider: Robert Alford, City University of New York Graduate

Center "Morals Versus Art": Censorship, Class Reproduction and the

Victorian Nude. Nicola Beisel, University of Michigan Deconstructing Taste: Class and Culture in Modern America.

David Halle, State University of New York-Stony Brook Post-Totalitarian Culture and Its Contexts. Jeffrey Goldfarb, New

School for Social Research Habitus as Mediator for the Micro-Macro: The Case of the Art

Museum. Vera L. Zolberg, New School for Social Research

152. Social Networks Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Melvin L. Oliver, University of California- Los Angeles

Business Blocs and Realignment: 1980 and 1984. Dan Clawson, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Communication Dilemmas in Social Networks: An Experimental Study. Phillip Bonacich, University of California-Los Angeles

Mimetic Processes in Interorganizational Networks. Roberto M. Fernandez, University of Arizona

To He Who Hath Shall Be Given: The Social Consequences of Network Support in a Tough City. Charles Kadushin and Delrnos Jones, City University of New York

The Network Basis of Social Support. Barry Wellman and N. Scot Wortley, University of Toronto

153. Gender

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Jean Stockard, University of Oregon Sexual Harassment Research: Problems and Proposals. James

E. Gruber, University of Michigan-Dearborn Gender Composition, Reward Structure, and Income Discrimina-

tion Within Occupational Labor Markel. Moshe Semyonov, Tel Aviv University and University of Illinois-Chicago; Yitchak Haberfeld, Tel Aviv University

The Measurement of Gender. Joey Sprague, University of Kan- sas

"We Are Not Doormats": The Influence of Feminism on Contem- porary Evangelicals in the United States. Judith Stacey and Susan Elizabeth Gerard, University of California-Davis

154. History of Sociology

Sociology of the Universal Range. Victor Burke and Anna Celeste Burke, University of Michigan

Family Theory After the Big Bang. David Cheal, University of Winnipeg

Individuals and Community: The Central Concept of G. H. Mead's Sociology. EmanuelSmiken, New School for Social Research

Metatheorizing as a Source of Theory. George Ritzer, University of Maryland

155. Household Division of Labor

Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Patricia Voydanoff, University of Dayton Presider: Dana Vannoy, University of Cincinnati Marital Quality and Satisfaction with the Division of Household

Labor: Variations Across the Family Life Cycle. J. Jill Suitor, Fordham University

Housework in the F amiiy Economy: Sharing Responsibility Among Wives, tiusbands, and Children. Frances Kobrin Goldscheid- er, Brown University and the RAND Corporation; Linda J. Waite, RAND Corporation

Adolescents' Chores: The Differences Between Dual- and Single- Earner Families. Mary Holland Benin and Debra A. Edwards, Arizona State University

Assessing the Terms of Trade: An Empirical Test of the "Eco- nomic Dependency" Model. Julie Brines, Harvard University

Discussion: Lynn K. White, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

156. Qualitative Methodology: New Opportunities Explored

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Shulamit Reinharz, Brandeis University The Structural Anecdote in Social Analysis. Troy Duster, Univer-

sity of California- Berkeley Participatory Research and Working Women: Democratizing the

Production of Knowledge. Francesca Cancian, University of California-lwine

"What Are You Feeling?": Issues in Introspective Mehod. Carolyn Ellis, University of South Florida

Performing the Text Marianne A. Paget, Brandeis University Discussion: Michael R. Hill, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

157. Race, Class, and Gender II Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Bonnie Thornton Dill, Memphis stale University Presider: Karen R. Wilson, Texas A&M University "Small, Foreign, and Female:" Immigrant Women Workers and

Racial Hiring Dynamics in Silicon Valley. Karen J. Hossfeld, San Francisco State University

Ethnicity and Work Among Immigrant Iranian Women in Los Angeles.Arlene Dallalfar, University of California-Los Angeles

Shiftwork's Effect on Women's Interest in Blue-Collar Jobs. Irene Padavic and Therese Murphy, Florida State University

The Effects of Class, Gender, and Race on Compensation: A Pay Equity Analysis of New York State Civil Service Job Titles. Catherine White Berheide, Skidmore College

Failure in Affirmative Action: The Fragility of Black Executives. Sharon M. Collins, University of Illinois-Chicago

Discussion: Denise A. Segura, University of Claifornia-Santa Barbara

Contlnental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Marcel Fournier, Universite de Montreal

Friday, 12:30 p.m. 158. Stratification: Measurement and Conceptualization of

NationaNlnternatlonaI Economies

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Toby L. Parcel, Ohio State University Presider: Kevin T. Leicht, Pennsylvania State University Distinguishing Job Markets in a National Occupational Structure.

Roderick J. Harrison, Harvard University Towards a Standard International Socio-Economic Index of

Occupations. Harry B. G. Ganzeboom and Paul M. De Graaf, State University of Utrecht

The Class Structures of Hungary and the United States. Szonja Szefenyi, Stanford University

State Against Economic Segmentation: An Analysis of the Effects of the Export-Promotion Strategy on Wage Differentials in Korea's Manufacturing Industries. Ho Keun Song and Aage 8. Sorensen, Harvard University

Discussion: Steven Rytina, Harvard University

159. Interpersonal Violence

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Rosemary Gartner, University of Toronto Violence and Gender: Differences and Similarities Across Socie-

ties. Dane Archer and Patricia McDaniel, University of California-Santa Cruz

The Impact of Weaponry on Assault Outcomes. Gary Kleck and Karen McElrath, Forida State University

Verbal and Physical Abuse in Marriage. Jan E. Stets, Washington State University

The Intergenerational Transmission of Family Aggression. Cha- rles Cappell, University of Virginia; Robert 8. Heiner, Spring Hill College

Discussion: Rodney Stark, University of Washington

160. Section on Organizations and Occupations. The Polit- ics of Organizations and Occupational Change

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Daniel 6. Cornfield, Vanderbilt University Workers' Involvement Among Small Manufacturers: The CEO

Barrier. Curt Tausky, University of Massachusetts-Amherst Organizations, Industry, and the State. David Jacobs, University

of Oregon; Michael Useem, Boston University; Mayer Zald, University of Michigan

Politics, Production, and Employee Representation in the United States, 191 7-1 91 9. Jeffrey Haydu, University of California- San Diego

Professions and Organizational Power. Andrew Abbott, Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Workplace Boundaries: Conceptions and Constraints. Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, Graduate Center-City University of New York

Discussion: Daniel B. Cornfield, Vanderbilt University

1:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Community and Urban Sociology Business Meeting

(to 2:20 p.m.)-Taylor, 6th floor

2:30 p.m. Meetings Council Subcommittee on Exchanges with Foreign Scholars-

Green Room, Grand Ballroom Level Committee on the Minority Fellowship Program (to 6:20 p.m.)-

Lombard, 6th Floor Committee on Public Information (to 6:20 p.m.)-Sonoma, 4th

Floor Section Board-Yosemite A, Ballroom Level Committee to Write a Teacher-Scholar Sabbatical Proposal-

Belvedere A, 4th Floor Section on Medical Sociology Council Meeting (to 6:20 p.m.)-

Belmont, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of Education Council Meeting (to 330

p.m.)-Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Other Grows Honors Program-Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Sessions - -

161. Thematic Session. Structural Effects on Women's work

I Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Presider: Paula England, University of Texas-Dallas and Uni- versity of Arizona

Job Queues, Gender Queues. Barbara Reskin, University of Illinois-Urbana

Structural Approaches to Women's Careers. Jerry A. Jacobs, University of Pennsylvania

Discussion: Heidi Hartmann, Institute for Women's Policy Research

162. Special Session. Relations Between English and French in Canada

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballmom Level

Organizers: Raymond Breton, University of Toronto; Maurice Pinard, McGill University

Recent Evolution of Language Composition in Canada. Rejean Lachapelle, Statistics Canada

Fight, Flight, or Accommodate? Quebec's Non-Francophones' Response to Language Conflict. Patricia Fitzsimmons-Le- Cavalier, Carleton University; Guy LeCavalier, Concordia University

Ethnic Movements and the Competition Model: Some Missing Links. Sarah Belanger, McGill Survey Research Laboratory: Maurice Pinard, McGill University

Language Policies in Canada: The Management of Intergroup Relations in Different Socio-Political Arenas. Raymond Bre- ton, University of Toronto

Discussion: Stanley Lieberson, Haward University

163. Didactic Seminar. Methods of Social Network Analysis

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

(to 6:20 p.m.) Ticket required for admission Peter V. Marsden, Harvard University

Fridau. 2:30 pPmm 164. Professional Workshop. Publishing Books

Sausalito, 4th Floor Presider: Lewis Coser, State University of New York-Stony Brook

and Boston College Grant Barnes, Stanford University Press Joyce Seltzer, The Free Press

165. Teaching Workshop. The Content and Quality of Grad- uate Education in Sociology Tlburon, 4th Floor

Maureen Kelleher, Northeastern University-Boston Gerald Klonglan, Iowa State University

166. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fel- lowship Commemorative Lecture Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Introduction. Robert Althauser, National Science Foundation Lecture: Markets, Race, and Gender. Robert Kaufman, Ohio State

University

167. History of Sociology II Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Marcel Fournier, Universite de Montreal E. Franklin Frazier Reconsidered. Tony Plett, California Slate

University-Sacramento The Destruction of the Sociological Imagination. Mike Forrest

Keen, Indiana University-South Bend Marcel Mauss: An Intellectual Biography. Marcel Fournier, Uni-

versite de Montreal Durkheim Among the Statisticians. Stephen Turner, University of

outh Florida Is Elsie Clews Parsons Good Enough to Teach? Desley Deacon,

University of Texas-Austin

168. Popular Culture: New Qualitative Work Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: John R. Hall, University of California-Davis Writing, Hegemony, and Cuisine: The Story of Vegetables, 1945-

1987. Liora Gvion-Rosenberg, State University of New York- Stony Brook

Folk Narratives and Deviance Construction: Cautionary Tales as a Response to Structural Tensions in the Social Order. David G. Bromley, Virginia Commonwealth University

Popularization of Civilized Knowledge in Tokugawa Japan: Eti- quette and Manners as Social Control. Eiko Ikegami, Yale University

Icons of Democracy: Abraham Lincoln and the Representation of American Political Culture. Barry Schwartz, University of Georgia

Dicussion: Michele Lamont, Princeton University

169. No Easy Answers: Prenatal Sex Diagnosis, In Vitm Fer- tilization, and Abortion

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: Rose Weitz, Arizona State University Fatal Knowledge? Prenatal Diagnosis and Sex Selection. Dorothy

C. We-, Boston University School of Public Health; John C. Fletcher, University of Virginia

Attitudes Toward Abottion of Women Who Undergo Prenatal Diagnosis. Aliza Kolker, George Mason University; B. Mere- dith Burke, Family Planning International Assistance; Jane U. Phillips, George Mason University

Physician Involvement in Abortion Pre-Roev. Wade. Carole Joffe, Bryn Mawr College

Choice, Gift, or Patriarchal Bargain? Women's Consent to in vitro Fertilization in Male Infertility. Judith Lorber, Brooklyn Col- lege and Graduate Center-City University of New York

170. Social Impacts of Science and Technology Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Nico Stehr, University of Albetta Presider: Sev Isajiw, University of Toronto Recordkeeping as a Technology of Power. Carolyn Boyes-

Watson, Harvard University The Aura of "High Tech" in a World of Messy Practice: Computer

Graphics and the Visual Communication of Design Engi- neers. Kathryn Henderson, University of California-San Diego

The Advent of Nuclear Weapons and the Formation of the Science-Intensive National Security State. Greg McLauch- Ian, University of Denver

Computing: Gauging Gender and Race Differences in Experience and Access, and Stratification in Access. Joanne M. Bada- gliacco, Pomona College; Robert S. Tannenbaum, Scripps College

Medical Screening in the Workplace: The Issues Surrounding Drug, AIDS, and Genetics Testing. John F. Dumont, Cornell Universtty

The Social Impact of Computers on the Practice of Medicine. James G. Anderson, Purdue University

171. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. The Pros- pects for Neo-Marxism as a Dominant Paradigm in Urban Research

Taylor, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider; John R. Logan, State University of New York-Albany

Neo-Marxism as a Dominant Paradigm: The View from Political Science. Michael Peter Smith, University of Califoria-Davis

Neo-Mamism as a Dominant Paradigm: The View from Geo- graphy. Neil Smith, Rutgers University

Neo-Marxism as a Dominant Paradigm: The View from Sociology. Harvey Molotch, University of California-Santa Barbara

Discussion: Mark Gottdiener, University of California-Riverside

172. Section on Organizations and Occupations. Informal Roundtable Presentations

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Nancy DiTomaso, Rutgets Graduate School of Man- agement

1. Managing Life and Death Across Organizations: The U.S. Organ Procurement System: The Struggle for Organiza-

tional Control of Gift Giving. Helen Levine Batten, Brandeis University

(continued on next page)

Friday, 2:30 pmmm Session 172, continued The Organizational Aspects of AIDS. Charles Perrow, Yale

University Interorganizational Networks of Service Delivery for the Home-

less. Russell K. Schutt, University of Massachusetts-Boston 2. Organizational and Occupational Sources of New Roles for

Women: High Finance, Small Change: Women in Bank Management.

Chloe E. Bird, University of Illinois Industrial and Occupational Change in the Insurance Industry.

Polly Phipps, Bureau of Labor Statistics lnstitutional Change and the Shifting Role of Womens' Colleges.

Ted L K. Youn, Boston College; Karyn A. Loscocco, State University of New York-Albany

3. Organizational Cultures and Subcultures: Keeping the Faith: A Model of Cultural Transmission in Formal

Organizations: J. Richard Harrison, University of Texas- Dallas

Organizational Subcultures Behind the Facade. John M. Jermier, University of South Florida; John W. Slocum, Jr., Southern Methodist University

The Causes and Consequences of Organizational Cultures. Nancy DiTomaso and George Gordon, Rutgers, State Uni- versity of New Jersey

Toward a Macro Model of the Mental Health Sector. Amy Eliza- beth Roussel, Stanford University

4. Organizational and Occupational Internal Labor Markets: Firm Internal Labor Markets and the Structure of Earnings. James

W. Cassell, University of North Carolina Determinants of Positions in an Industrial Organization: An Israeli

Example. Dalia Moore and Gideon Fishelson, Tel Aviv University

Hoarding and Segmenting: The Politics of Job Classification in Two Work Settings. William Finlay, University of Georgia

5. Improving Organizations: Quality and Innovation: Organizational Constraints in the Product Innovation Process:

How Innovation Becomes Rouline. David Prensky, NW Ayer Advertising, New York City

The Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award and National Organization Change for Qualii. William A. J. Golomski, W. A. Golomski & Associates, Chicago

Training for Quality in Organizations. Elizabeth L. Thune, Xerox Corporation

6. Organizational Success and Failure: Investment in Human Capital, Organizational Structure and the

Survival of Manufacturing Organizations. Jerald Hage, Uni- versity of Maryland; Paul D. Collins, Purdue University Kran- nert School of Management

The Ecology of an Institution: American Labor Unions, 1880-1 980. Charles E. Denk, City University of New York Graduate Center

Individual and Structural Determinants of Small Business Suc- cess. Karyn A. Loscocco and Richard H. Hall, State Univer- sity of New York-Albany

7. Changes in an Old Profession: Lawyering: Managing Legal Services: The Transformation of Small-Firm

Practice. Carroll Seron, Baruch College, City University of New York

Megalaw in the United Kingdom: From Prolessionalism to Cor- poratism. John Flood, Indiana University School of Law

Status Within the Profession: The Structure of Deference Among Rural Attorneys. Donald 0. Landon, Southwest Missouri State University

8. Professions in Action: Practitioners Versus Professors: Competitive Professionalization

Projects in Educational Administration. Paul Goldman, Uni- versity of Oregon

Professions in Action: Occupation Formation in LandscapeArchi- tecture. Albert L. Mok, Universitaire Instelling Antwerpen

The Policeman, the Professor, and the Piccolo Player: Profes- sional Power in Organizations. David Cray, Carleton Univer- sity

9. Negotiating Research and Research Results: Opportunities and Constraints in Academia and Business. Christine Wright- Isak, Batten, Bahon, Durstine, and Osborne; Joan Waring, The Equitable Life Assurance Society; Steve Collesano, The American International Group; Roberto Fernandet, Univer- sity of Arizona

10. Worker Responses to Employment and Unemployment: The Differential Impact of Unemployment on White Collar Workers

and Their Spouses. Kathleen Piker King, Mount Union Col- . lege; Dennis E. Clayson, University of Northern Iowa

Work Alienation and Organizational Conflict. Clark Molstad, Cali- fornia State University-San Bernardino

Work Structures and Depression: Organizational and Occupa- tional Determinants of Workers' Reaction to Their Jobs. Jane A. Scott, University of North Carolina

11. Changing Relations of Workers to Organizations: The Restructuring of Employment Relationships: Trends and

Implications. Christine E. Cox, Duke University 1 he Political Economy of Small Firm Growth: The Case of the U.S.

Apparel Industry. Ian M. Taplin, Wake Forest University A Theory of Public Worker Movements and Two Strikes for Com-

parable Worth. Paul Johnston, Yale University Sunset for the Scavengers: The Politics of Degeneration in

Democratic Firms. Raymond Russell, University of California- Riverside

12. Interactions Across People and Departments in Organizations: The Role of Departmental Differentiation and Integration in Adap-

tation to the Environment: The Case of Product Innovation. Deborah J. Dougherty, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

The impact of Management Styles and Organizational Culture on lnnovation and Technology Choices in a High-Tech Corpora- tion. George S. George, Syracuse University

Information Acquisition in Organized Workgroups: Towards a Study of Members' Assessment of Their Right and Duty to Know. Emmanuel Lazega, Yale University

13. Rethinking Fundamental Concepts: The Conceptualization and Measurement of Institutional Envir-

onments. Wolfgang Bielefeld, Stanford University Max Weber and the Study of Accounting Practices. Richard

Colignon, Washington University Beyond Loose Coupling: The Politics of Rationality in Organiza-

tional Theory. Richard lngersoll and John Noakes, University of Pennsylvania

Institutional Patterns in Organizations: Some Suggestions for Analysis. Robert W. Avery, University of Pittsburgh

14. Inequalities for Women in the Labor Force: Men and Women in Nontraditional Workroles: Interactional Patt-

erns and Quality of Worklife. Kaisa Kauppinen-Toropainen, University of Michigan

Friday, 2:30 p,mm Towards a Theory of Sex Differences in Dispute Resolution in the

Workplace. Patricia A. Gwartney-Gibbs and Denise H. Lach, University of Oregon

On Theoretically Merging the Sociology of Pay lnequalityllnequity with Compensation Adminislrative Practice. Eliot R. Ham- mer, Kentucky Wesleyan College

15. Managing Organizations: The Political Economy of Foreign Transplants: The Case of Japa-

nese Auto Investment Robert Perrucci, Purdue University Digging It Out and Dragging It Out: Information Search, Political

Action, and the Duration of Strategic Decision Making. G. R. Mallory, Carleton University

Obstacles to Creating Effective Management in Third World Nations. James L. Norr, University of Illinois-Chicago

173. Section on the Sociology of the Family. AlDS and the Family

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Beth E, Schneider, University of Calilfornia-Santa Barbara

Presider: Sarah Fenstermaker, University of California-Sank Barbara

AlDS and Family Stress. Murli M. Sinha and Joanne M. Jacobs, Rochester Institute of Technology

Women Don't Wear Condoms: AlDS Risk Among Partners of IV Drug Users. Laurie Wermuth and JenniferHam, University of California-San Francisco

Transition from Burying To Caring: Family AlDS Support Group. Barbara G. Sosnowitz, Central Connecticut State University; David R. Kovacs, AlDS Project-Hartford

Barriers in the Response to Women with AlDS in Poor Minority Communities. Melinda Cuthbert, Yale University

An Innovative Approach to Counselling Adolescent Hemophiliacs and Family Members of Hemophiliacs Who are HIV Positive. Cathy Greenblat, Rutgers University

Committee on Sections with Section Board (to 4:20 p.m.)- Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Section on Sociology of Education Business Meeling (to 420 p.m.)-Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

4:30 D.m. Meetings Committee on National Statistics-Marin, 4th Floor Committee on Representatives in ASA Elections-Belvedere B,

4th Floor Committee on Sections-Green Room, Grand Ballroom Level Committee on Teaching-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Section on Organizations and Occupations Council Meeting (to

5:30 p.m.)-Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

4:30 p.m. Sessions

174. Thematic Session. Age, Crime, and the Life Course

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: John Hagan, University of Toronto Presider: Austin Turk, University of California-Riverside Age Structure and Crime: Is There a Connection? Kenneth

Land, Duke University; Patricia McCall, North Carolina State University; Lawrence E. Cohen, University of Cali- fornia-Davis

Compositional and Contextual Effects of Age in Aggregate Crime Rates. Alfred Blumstein and Jacqueline Cohen, Carnegie Mellon University; Richard Rosenfeld, Univer- sity of Missouri-St. Louis

Punishment and Propensity in the Study of Crime in the Lie Course. John Hagan, University of Toronto; Alberto Pal- loni, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Discussion: Charles R. Tittle, Washington State University

175. Professional Workshop. Getting Research Funded

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Presider: William V. D 'Antonio, American Sociological Association Phyllis Moen, National Science Foundation Howard Silver, Consortium of Social Science Associations Wendy Baldwin, National Institutes of Health

176. Teaching Workshop. AlDS Education

Tiburon, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presidec Martin P. Levine, Bloomfield College and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Teaching an Undergraduate Course about HIV lnfection and AIDS. Donna E. Parmelee, Albion College

Teaching a Graduate Course about HIV Infeclion and AIDS. Cathy S. Greenblat, Rutgers University

Teaching about HIV Infection and AIDS from a Medical Sociology Perspective. Carole Campbell, California State University- Long Beach

Teaching about HIV lnfection and AlDS as a Social Problem. Joel Brodsky, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Teaching about HIV Infection and AlDS in a Hostile Environment. Sarah C. Brabant, University of Southwestern Louisiana

Teaching about HIV Infections and AIDS from a Community Organizing and Social Change Perspective. Nancy Stoller Shaw, University of California-Santa Cruz

The Personal is Pedagogical: Coming Out as a Seroposlive and a Caregiver. Martin P. Levine, Bloomfield College and Memor- ial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

177. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Gender, Race, and Ethnicity Issues

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Are There Any Jewish Liberals Left? The Effects of Religion and Socio-Economic Status in Explaining Political Orientation. Steven J. Finkand Arnold Dashefsky, University of Connecti- cut

(continued on next page)

Friday, 4:30 p,m- Session 177, continued 2. Metaphors of Silence and Silencing in Feminist Sociology:

From Insight to Analysis. Marjorie L. DeVault and Chrys lngraham, Syracuse University

3. Network Relations, Belief Systems, Internal Labor Markets: Black Americans' Inclusion and Exclusion. Marlese Dvrr, State University of New York-Albany

4. Ideology and Equity: Occupational Segregation by Sex in the Public Sector. Martha Ecker, Rarnapo College of New Jersey

5. Black Civil Rights Activists Twenty-five Years Later. James Max Fendrich, Florida State University

6. The Sociology of Ethnic-Minority Business. Frank A. Fratoe, U.S. Department of Commerce Minority Business Develop- ment Agency

7. Household Structure, Minority Group Labor Force Participation and Income Attainment Sharon M. Lee, University of Rich- mond; Keiko Yamanaka, Grinnell College

8. Feminism and Rock Music: or Why I Love Guns 'n Roses. Elinor Lerner, Stockton State College, New Jersey

9, Allernative Spirituality and Gender Issues. Wendy G. Lozano, CalifomiaState University-Long Beach; Tanice G. Foltz, Cali- fornia State University-Los Angeles

1 0. Mothers and Women Faculty as Role Models. L. Miller-Bernal, Wells College

1 1 . Portrayal of Gender, Age, and Ethnicity in the Media. Kathleen Maurer Smith, Molloy College; Joan M. Reidy Merlo

12. Dilemmas in Feminist Jurisprudence. Lisa Vogel, Rider Col- lege; Kathleen Daly, Yale University

178. Sociology of the Arts

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Judith Huggins Balfe, College of Slalen Island and City University of New York Graduate Center

The Social Basis of Beethoven's Style. Tia DeNora, University of California-San Diego

Theatricality and Ideology in Fascist Italy. Mabel Berezin, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania

The Indian Arts Fund and the Sponsorship of Native American Arts. Kenneth Dauber, University of Arizona

Impolitic Alt and Uncivii Public Responses in Chicago. Steven Dubin, State University of New York-Purchase

Gentrification and the Avant-Garde in New York's East Village. Anne E. Bowler and Blaine McBurney, New School for Social Research

179. Current Issues in Marxist Analysis

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Jean L. Cohen, Columbia University Presider: Tom Long, University of California-Berkeley Classes and Social Movements: East and West. Michael Bura-

woy, University of California-Berkeley Marxism and Theories of Culture. Gyorgy Markus, University of

Sidney The Debate over Performative Contradiclion: Habermas vs. the

Post-Structuralists. Martin Jay, Universityof California-Berke- ley

Praxis and Action: Mainstream Theories and Marxian Correctives. Johann Arnason, La Trobe University

180. Women in Male-Dominated Protess1ons

Continental Parlor 7-8, ballroom Level

Organizers: Willie Pearson, Jr., Wake Forest University; Jean Stockard, University of Oregon

Presider: Edward H. Thompson, Jr., Holy Cross College The Changing Sex Composition of a Contracting Profession:

Academic Sociology in the Early 1980s. Stephen Kulis and Karen A. Miller, Arizona State University

Career Paths in Higher Education Administration. Rebecca L. Warner, Oakland University; Lois 8. DeFleur, University of Missouri-Columbia; Kimberly Choznowski, Eastern Michi- gan University

Women in the Law: Partners or Tokens. Patricia MacCorpuodale, University of Arizona; Gary Jensen, Vanderbilt University

The Meaning of Male Dominence in a Male-Dominated Occupa- tion: The Public School Superintendency. Susan E. Chase and Colleen S. Bell, University of Tulsa

Discussion: Judith Auerbach, Congressional Fellow, Society for Research in Child Development

181. Sociology of Risk I Sausaiito, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Eugene Rosa, Washington State Univer- sity

Risking the Qualitative Study of Risk. Jerry Jacobs, Syracuse University; Leslie Dopkeen, Health Policy Analysis, Inc.

Media Lawyers as Risk Counselors: Pre-publication and Pre- broadcast Review and the Social Construction of News. Susan P. Shapiro, Northwestern University and the American Bar Foundation

Newspaper Coverage of Dramatic Events and the Reconstruction of Risk: A Collective Behavior Approach. Robert A. Stallings, University of Southern California

Risk Communication: Persuasion or Convergence. Judith A. Bradbury, Science Applications International Corporation

Discussion: Lee Clarke, Rutgers University

182. Social Histories of Working People: Issues and Per- spectives

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ewa Morawska, lnslilute for Advanced Study

An "Other" Side of Gender Antagonism at Work: Men, Boys, and the Remasculinization of Work in the Printing Trade, 1830- 1920. Ava Baron, Rider College

Social Organization and Working-Class Activism in the Paris Commune of 1871. Roger Gould, Harvard University

Entrepreneurs in the American Industrial City: The Social Mean- ing of Self-Employment, 1880-1 900. Melanie Archer, Uni- versity of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

"Homes Are What Any Strike is About:" Immigrant Labor and the Family Wage, 1880-1920. Ron Rothbart, University of Cali- .fornia8erkeley

183. Section on Collective Behavior and Social Movements. Cognitive, Emotional, and Structural Factors in Collec- tive Behavior

Taylor, 6th Floor

Organizer: Lewis M. Killian, University of West Florida

Friday, 4:30 p.m. Presider: David A. Snow, University of Arizona Defining Ihe Moral Issue in Collective Behavior. Ralph H. Turner,

University of California-Los Angetes Movement Strategies as Theories of Social Change. John Lofland,

University of California-Davis; Mary Anna Colwell, University of San Francisco; Victoria Johnson, University of California- Davis

Culture Change and Collective Action. Anthony R. Oberschall, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Discussion: Carol Mueller, lola State University West; Doug J. McAdam, University of Arizona

184. Section on Community and Urban Sociology. Refereed Roundtables.

Imperial 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Thomas M. Guterbock, University of Virginia 1. Why Sociology Abandoned the Community. Harvey M. holdi in,

University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign 2. Megacities: Problems and Prospects. John D. Kasarda, Uni-

versity of North Carolina-Chapel Hill 3. The Concept of Community in the Courtroom: Using Network Analysis to Demonstrate Community-of-Interest.

Thomas M. Guterbock, University of Virginia Making the Case for Community. Kai T. Erikson, Yale University 4. New Research on Racially Mixed Neighborhoods: Social and Ecological Aspects of Neighborhood Racial Integra-

tion. Albert Hunter, Northwestern University The Invasion-Succession Prophecy Revisited. Peter 6. Wood,

University of Oklahoma 5. The Structure of Neighborhood Social Networks: Interpersonal Networks as Community: A Neighborhood-Level

Analysis. Barreti A. Lee and Karen E. Campbell, Vanderbilt University

Domestic Affairs and Network Relations. Beverly Wellman, Uni- versity of Toronto

6. Exploring the Roots of Community Attachment Community Attachment in the United Stales: A Critique of Two

Models. Samuel R. Brown, University of Pennsylvania Creating Community: Rationality and Social Bonds in Modern

Society. Bonnie Lindstrom, University of Chicago 7. Can Community Growth be Managed-and Should It Be? Local Economic Development: Variation in the Effort and Incen-

tives Used to Promote Growth. Tsz Man Kwong, Gary P. Green, and Arnold Fleischmann, University of Georgia

How do Communities Rethink their Growth Strategies?: The Houston Area Survey, 1982-89. Stephen L. Klineberg, Rice University

8. The Structure of Organizations in the Community: Against the "Social Disorganization" Thesis: Community Struc-

ture in a Brooklyn Ghetto Since 1945. Sharon Zukin and Bruce Haynes, City University of New York Graduate Center

Alternative Forms of Neighborhood Organizations. Carolyn S. Breda, Vanderbih University

9. The Changing Housing Market of the Core Cities: Are Services Leading to City Revitalization? An Analysis of the

Cores of Large U.S. Cities, 1970-80. Roxanne Friedenfels, Drew University

The Effect of Housing Affordability Problems on Single House- holds and One Parent Households. Elizabeth Huttman and Margo Franz, California State University-Hayward

10. The Changing Community Life of Developing Countries:

Aspects of Village Life in Rural Egypt: A Sludy of Diversity. Bar- bara Entwisle, University of North Carolina; John B. Caster- line, Brown University; Hussein A.-A. Sayed, Cairo University

1 1. The Social Construction of Commmunity: A Sociological Image of the City: Through Children's Eyes. Silvia

Biitzer, Johns Hopkins University Community and the Homeless and Mentally Ill: The Structure of

Self-Help Groups. Carol J. Silverman, Steven P. Segal, and Elizabeth Anello, University of California-Berkeley

185. Section on Science, Knowledge, and Technology. Science, Technology, and Society Yosemite 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Henry Etzkowitz, State University of New York- Purchase and Renssetaer Polytechnic Institute

Presider: Rosa Haritos, Columbia University University-Corporate Links in Biotechnology II:The Emergence of

a Structure. James G. Ennis, Tufts University The NSF Science for Citizens Program: Death at an Early Age.

James C. Petersen, Western Michigan University Resource Mobilzation and Technology Development: The Role of

Power in Determining Technical Content. Suzanne Onarato, Duke University

American Culture and the Veneration of Science: A Survey of Public Attitudes, 1 945-1 985. Joan M. Morris, Louisiana State University

Discussion: Rob Kling, University of California-lrvine; Cora Mar- rett, University of Wisconsin-Madison

186. Section on Sociology of Education. Education Outside the United States

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Dan Lortie, University of Chicago Presider: Alan R. Sadovnik, Adelphi University The Contributions of Schooling to Economic Growth in East Asia:

Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. J. Michael Armer, lnsook Jeong, and Richard Rubinson, Florida State University

Effective Primary Level Science Teaching in the Philippines. Mar- laine €. Lockheed, The World Bank Josefina Fonacier and Leonard J. Bianchi, NorVlern Illinois University

The Changing Effects of Family Status and Educational Resour- ces on Academic Achievement in Ten Countries, 1970-1 984. Lawrence J. Saha, Australian National University; John P. Keeves, University of Stockholm

Servants and Cultural Transmission within the English Family. Julia Wrigley, Universrty of California-Los Angeles

Discussion: Francisco 0. Ramirez, Stanford University

187. Section on Sociology of the Family. New Directions in Kinship Studies

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Bert N. Adams, University of Wisconsin-Madison Presider and Discussion: Tonya L. Schuster, University of South-

ern California Limiting Reciprocity among Relatives: Theoretical Implications of

a Serendipitous Finding. Bernard Farber, Arizona State University

(continued on next page)

Friday, 4:30 pDm. Session 187, continued Family Cohesion and Psychic Well-Being: Implications over the

Adult Life Course. Robert E. Lee Roberts and Vern L. Bengt- son, University of Southern California

Patterns of Support Among In-Laws in the United States. Ann Goetting, Western Kentucky University

The Elder Parent's Report of Intergenerational Exchange. Donna Hoyert, University of Wisconsin-Madison

5:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Organizations and Occupations Business Meeting (to

6:20 p.m.)-Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

6:30 p.m. Receptions Foreign Scholars Reception-Diablo, 4th Floor Section on Community and Urban Sociology Reception-Imperial

B, Ballroom Level , Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology Reception-

Yosemite 8, Ballroom Level Section on Social Psychology Receplion-Whiney, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of Education Reception-Lassen, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of the Family Reception-Continental Par-

lor 2, Ballroom Level

6:30 p.m. Other Groups Armenian Behavioral Science Associalion-Sausalito, 4th Floor "Future Directions in Durkheim Scholarship" (RobertAlun Jones)-

Continental Parlor I, Ballroom Level Honors Program-Cypress, 4th Floor Indiana University Alumni Reception-Tamalpais, 4th Floor ISA Research Committee No. 39 on Disasters-Marin, 4th Floor National Council of State Sociological Associations-Belvedere

B,4th Floor Radical Caucus-Yosemite C, Ballroom Level "Researchers in Gender and Researchers in Emotion: Learning

From One Another (Lyn Lofland and Judy GersonJ-Con- tinental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

SPA Publications Planning Meeting for The Practicing Sociolo- gist, Clinical Sociology Review and Sociological Practice- Belmont, 4th Floor

"Step Recovery Concerns: Teaching and Personal Involvement" (Dan McMurryJ-Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

SWS Minority Scholar Fundraising Comedy Show-Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

"Teaching Medical Sociology: What Should Students Read? The Use of Texts, Anthologies, Fiction and Narrative", co-spon- sored by the ASA Teaching Services Program and the Sec- tion on Medical Sociology (Raymond DeVries, Phil Brown, Fred Wolinsky, Catherine Riessman, Richard HesslerJ- Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

University of Chicago Alumni Reception-Shasta, 4th Floor

8:30 p.m. Sessions

188. Plenary Session. AlDS and the Sociological Enter- prise

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Beth E. Schneider, University of California-Santa Barbara

Presider: Nancy Stoller Shaw, University of California-Santa cmz

A Sociological Research Agenda for People Living with AIDS. Barry D. Adam, University of Windsor

Progress on a Research Agenda for the Social Consequences of AIDS. Richard A. Berk, University of California-10s Angeles

Sociology, Epidemiology, and the Epistemology of AIDS. Wil- liam W. Darrow, Centers for Disease Control

AlDS and Class, Gender, and Race Relations. Beth E. Schneider, University of California-Santa Barbara

Saturday, August 12 8:30 a.m. Meetings

Committee on Liaison between ASA and AAAS-Belvedere B, 4th Floor

Committee on the Minority Professional Development Program (to 12:20 p.m.)-8elmont, 4th Floor

Committee on Sociological Practice (to 12:20 p.m.)-Marin, 4th Floor

Committee on Teaching (to 12:20 p.m.)-Belvedere A, 4th Floor Section on Methodology Council Meeting (to 9:30 a.m.)-Sausa-

lito, 4th Floor

8:30 a.m. Sessions

189. Thematic Session. Action and Structure in Social Theory Continental Ballmom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Jeffrey C. Alexander, University of California-Los Angeles

Action, Interaction, and the Interaction Order. Ann Rawls, Wayne State University

Power and Agency: A Critique of Giddens' Structuration The- ory. Richard Muench, University of Dusseldorf

Structure and Agency in Marxist Theory. Piotr Sztompka, Uni- wersytet Jagiellonski, Poland

Discussion: Jeffrey C. Alexander, University of California-Los Angeles

190. Special Session. The New Immigration

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Victor Nee, Cornell University

Saturdau, 8:30 a,m. Presider: John Walton, University of California-Davis Asian Immigration: Recent Patterns, Trends and lmpacl Charles

Hirschman, University of Washington; Morrison Wong, Texas Christian University

Ethnic and Family Bases of Immigrant Incorporation. Victor Nee, Cornell University; Jimy Sanders, University of South Caro- lina

Social Structure, Household Strategies and the Cumulative Cau- sation of Migration. Doug Massey, National Opinion Research CenteriUniversity of Chicago

Discussion: Luck Cheng, University of California-Los Angeles

191. Didactic Seminar. Cultural Interpretation

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Ticket required for admission Bennetta Jules-Rosette, University of California-San Diego

192. Professional Workshop. Evaluation Research

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

James Wright, Tulane University

193. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Social Problems

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Social Control at the Margins: Developing a General Under- standing of Deviance. David P. Aday, Jr., College of William and Mary

2. Sociological Implications of Voluntary and Involuntary Com- mitment to Mental Hospitals. James R Davis, Department of Probation, New York City

3. Informalization and Community Care for the Elderly. Elizabeth A. Binney, Carroll L. Estes, and Susan E. Humphers, Univer- sity of California-San Francisco

4. From the Cheerful Robot to the Charming Manipulator: A Mill- sian Approach to the Sociopath. Simon Gottschalk, Univer- sity of California-Santa Barbara

5. New Expectations for Policing. Pamela Irving Jackson, Rhode Island College

6. The Female Police Officer. Pearl Jacobs, Sacred Heart University

7.Determinants of AIDS-Related Knowledge: Cross-Sectional Evidence for a Diiusion Model. Allen J. LeBlanc, Pennsylva- nia State University

8. Homelessness: Where DoThey Go From Here? Dan McMurry, Middle Tennessee State University-Murfreesboro

9. Role of Mass Media in Recent Political Campaigns in the United States. Ashakant Nimbark, Dowling College and Walden University

10. Health Professional Role Boundary Adjustment. Ferris J. Rit- chey, University of Alabama-Birmingham

11. Becoming Citizens: Schools, Political Culture, and Youth. Lawrence J. Saha, Australian National University

12. The Effects of Health and Social Class on the Geographic Dispersion of Older People and Their Helpers. Merril Silver- stein, Eugene Litwak, and Peter Messeri, Columbia University

13. Designing Academic Courses on AIDS. Herm Smith, Univer- sity of Missouri-St. Louis

14. Unemployed Youth and Occupational Fantasy: A Sociological Study. R. S. Smith, Brandeis University

15. Privatization of Corrections: 1 he Future of the Private Prison Industry. MichaelSupancEc, Universityof North Carolina-Wilming- ton

194. Cross-National Research in International Development

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Economic Growth, Disarticulation, and Human Welfare. Randall

G. Stokes and Andy 8. Anderson, University of Massachu- settsamherst

The Social Foundations of International Competitiveness: Exports of Footwear in Argentina and Brazil. Miguel Korzeniewicz, Duke University

The Legacy of the Dynasty: The Nature of Political Continuity and the Case of Modern Korea. Frank Dobbin, Princeton Univer- sity; Jeong-Lim Nam, lndiana University

Wa, Guanxi, and Inhwa: Managerial Principles in Japan, China, and Korea. Jon P. Alston, Texas A&M University

Discussion: Samuel Valenzuela. University of Notre Dame

195. Feminist Theory Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Nancy J. Chodorow, University of California-Berkeley

An Extraordinary Sexuality: The Colonial Construction of Sex and Gender in the West of Ireland. Jane Gray, Johns Hopkins University

For a Feminist Critical Theory. fhomas Meisenhelder, California State University-San Bernardino

Sociological Methods and Feminist Knowledge. Marietta Morris- sey, Texas Technological University

Between Two World's: Women's Transition from Domestic to Wage Labor in the United States. Susan Thistle, University of California-Berkeley

Discussion: Barrie Thorns, University of Southern California

196. Section on Comparative Historical Sociology. Work and Politics in Comparative-Historical Perspective

Yosemlte 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Larry J. Griffin. lndiana University Presider: Michael E. Wallace, Ohio State University The Length of the Working Day and State Protection of Working

Women in Brilain, 1870-1 878. Sonya 0. Rose, Colby College Class Circumstance, Consciousness, and Struggle: Colorado,

1880. Richard Hogan, Purdue University Schooling for Some: Class, Race, and Segregated Labor Markels

in the Early 20th-Century South. Pamela B. Welters and David R. James, lndiana University

Discussion: Michael Wallace, Ohio State University

197. Section on Environment and Technology. Conceptions of "Hazard" in a Technological Age

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: William R. Freudenburg, University of Wisconsin-Madison

(continued on next page)

Saturday, 8:30 a.m. Session 197, continued A Social Movement Analysis of an Environmental Protest Group:

The Dead Pigeon River Council. G. Lachelle Nonis-Hall, University of Tennessee

Plant Closings and Marital Instability: A Dynamic Analysis. Huey- tsyh Chen and Lung-ho Lin, University of Akron

Coping with "Natural" Hazards as Stressors: A Comparative Analysis. T. Jean Blocker, University of Tulsa; E. Burke Roch- ford, Jr., Middlebury College

The Social Psychological Consequences of a Technological Accident: Disaster Structure, Collective Stress, and Per- ceived Heallh Risks. J. Steven Picou, University of South Alabama; Duane A. Gill, Mississippi State University

Discussion: Andrew Szasz, University of California-Santa Cruz

198. Section on Medical Sociology. Social Structure and Mental Health

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Peggy A. Thoits, Indiana University The Benefits of Caring: Gender, Social Support, and Postpartum

Depression. Judith A. Richman, University of Illinois-Chi- cago; Valerie Raskin, Michael Rsese Hospital; CherylGaines, University of Illinois-Chicago

Sex Differences in Symptoms of Depression and Distress in High School Aged Youth in Three Communities. Susan Gore and Mary Ellen Colten, University of Massachusetts-Boston

Innovations in the Measurement of Life Stress: The Significance of Event Resolution. R. Jay Turner, University of British Colum- bia; William R. Avison, University of Western Ontario

Gender Differences in Idioms of Distress after Divorce: A Compar- ison of Quantitative and Qualitative Findings. Catherine Kohler Riessmann, Smith College; Naomi Gerstel, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

"Some of These Questions May Sound Silly": Empirical Standar- dization versus Clinical Application of the Mental Status Examination. Phil Brown, Brown University and Harvard Medical School

Discussion: Carol Aneshensel, University of California-Los An- geles

199. Section on Organizations and Occupations. Sociologi- cal Models of Competition

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Peter V. Marsden, Hzward University Social Structure and Entrepreneurial Opportunity. RonaldS. Burt,

Columbia University Ecological Models of Competition and Mutualism. Glenn R. Car-

roll, University of California-Berkeley Inequality Among Equals: Performance Inequalities in League

Sports. Eric Leifer, Columbia Unversity The Market for Members: Recruitment and Attrition in Voluntary

Associations. J. Miller McPherson, Cornell University Dependence and Interdependence in Career Trajectories. Aage

6. Sorensen, Harvard University

200. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Race, Class, and Gender: Theoretical Explorations and Empirical Studies (ccr-sponsored by the Section on Soclology of Sex and Gender, Section on Racial and Ethnic Minori- ties, and Ssction on Mamist Soclology)

Yosemlte C, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California-Los Angeles Presider: Russell Thornton, University of California-Berkeley Theorizing Gender, Race, and Class. Sylvia Walby, University of

Lancaster The Interaction of Class, Gender, and Ethnicity in the U.S. Stratifi-

cation System. Victor Rios, Jr., Macalester College Race, Class, and Gender: Puerto Ricans in New York. Clara E.

Rodriguez, Fordham University Discussion: James A. Geschwender, State University of New

York-Binghamton; Deborah Karyn King, Dartmouth College: Gail S. Livings, University of California-Los Angeles

9:30 a.m. Meetings ASF Trustees and ASF Advisory Committee (to 10:20 a.m.)-

Green Room, Grand Ballroom Level Section on Methodology Business Meeting (to 10:20 a.m.)-

Sausalito, 4th Floor

10:30 a.m. Meetings ASF Advisory Committee-Belvedere B, 4th Floor ASF Trustees-Green Room, Grand Ballroom Level Task Force on Participation-Executive Board Room, Ballroom

Level

10:30 a.m. Other Groups Honors Program-Lombard, 6th Floor

10:30 a.m. Sessions

201. Thematlc Session. Family Responses to Macro Eco- nomic Change

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Gkn H. Elder, Jr., University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill

Presider: Rand D. Conger, lowa State University Unemployment and Mental Health in a Blue Collar Community.

Ronald Kessler, University of Michigan The Two Faces of Divorce: Women and Children's Interests.

Sara McLanahan, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Russell Sage Foundation

Discussion: Rand D. Conger, lowa State University; Jeylan Mortimer, University of Minnesota

202. Diiaetic Seminar. New Class Theory

T iburon, 4th Floor

Ticket required for admission Ivan Szelenyi, University of California-Los Angeles

Saturday, 10:30 a.m. 203. Professional Workshop. Going on the Academic Job

Market

Contlnental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Judith Treas, University of California- lrvine

Job Seeking as Marketing Activity. Howard E. Freeman, Univer- sity of California-Los Angeles

Job Seeking as Social Interaction. GeraM Marwell, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Job Seeking as Presentation of Self. Catherine White Berheide, Skidmore College

Interrogators: Sandra Boyd, University of Southern California; Dula J. Espinosa, University of California-Santa Barbara; Jodi Omen, University of Washington; Jason Lee,Northern Illinois University

204. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Organizations I1

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Overcoming Bureaucracy: Alternative Workplaces. Lynda J. Ames, State University of New York-Albany

2. Organization and Environment Relations: The Role of Media. Cherni L. Gillman, Narcotic and Drug Research, Inc.

3. The Organization of Domain Change: The Case of the Japa- nese Iron and Steel Federation. Todd Holden, Tohoku Uni- versity; Barry Bozeman, Syracuse University

4. Integrating Micro and Macro Level Data in Assessing Organiza- tion Climates. William G. Saylor and Barbara A. Owen, Fed- eral Bureau of Prisons

5. Efficiency, Control, and Authority in a Factory Regime: The Transformation of an American Steel Corporation. Harlend Prechel, University of Maryland

6. Environments of an Organization Making for Isomorphism: Cooperators versus Competitors. Thomas Schott, University of Pittsburgh; Joseph P. Morrissey, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

7. Organizations and Worker Power: Towards a Specification of the Resource Perspective. Mohammad Siahpush, Ohio State University

8. The Impact of Technology on Organizaional Structure: Applying Macro-Level Knowledge to Micro-Level Analysis. Amichai Silberman, The Hebrew University, Israel

9 .1 he Effect of Vertical Consensus on Work Behavior. Mary Zey and Teresa Stallings, Texas A&M University

205. Research and Policy Issues in the Sociology of Chlld- hood and Youth

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Kathryn M. Borman, University of Cincinnati

Economic and Social Determinants of Children's Welfare in the World System. Sheryl R. Tynes, Trinity University

The Hurried Child: Some Problems of Identification and Mea- surement. Barbara J. Logue, Brown University; Patricia M. Passuth, Drexel University

Comparative Perspectives on Child Abuse and Neglect: Chinese versus Hispanics and Whites. Lawrence K. Hong, California State University; George K. Hong, South Cove Community Health Center, Boston

Winners and Losers in Child Support Enforcement. Gordon H. Lewis, Carnegie Mellon University

Childhood as a Social Phenomenon. Barbara Heyns, New York University; Marc Ventresca, Stanford UniversiM

Discussion: David Lundgren, University of Cincinnati

206. Conversation Analysis

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Douglas W. Maynard, University of Wisconsin

Conflicting Participation Frameworks. Charles Goodwin and Mar- jorie H. Goodwin, University of South Carolina

Reference to Persons in Public Discourse. Bernard Conein, Uni- versity of Paris

When the Medium Becomes the Message: The Case of the Rather-Bush Encounter. Steven E. Clayman, University of Wisconsin; Jack Whalen, University of Oregon

The Organization of Openings in Emergency Calls. Don H. Zim- merman, University of California-Santa Barbara

207. Intimacy and Friendship

Yosemite C, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Maureen T. Hallinan, University of Notre Dame

Trust and Betrayal: Chronic Illness and Intimacy. Kathy Charmaz, Sonoma State University

Reciprocated Friendships: The Persistence of Joint Ties. Warren Kubitschek, University of Notre Dame

Styles of Friendship. J. Barry Gurdin, To Love and To Work: An Agency for Change

The Dissolution of Intimate Relationships: A Hazard Model. Diane Felmlee, lndiana University; Susan Sprecher, Illinois State University; Edward Bassin, Indiana University

Who Do You Know in the Group? Networks and Organizations. Raymond Liedka, Cornell University

Discussion: Edward H. Thompson, Jr., Holy Cross College

208. Social Psychology: Consensus and Discord

Yosernite A, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Bonnie H. Erickson, University of Toronto The Production of Consensus. Noah Friedkin, University of

California Justice and Interpersonal Problem Solving: Stages in the Dissolu-

tion of Commitment. Robert K. Leik, University of Minnesota; Irving Tallman, Washington State University

Role Taking, Values, and Judgments about AIDS-Related Dilem- mas. Michael Schwalbe, North Carolina State University; Clifford L. Staples, University of North Dakota

209. School Processes

Contlnental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Maxine Thompson, North Carolina State University

Catholic School Effects and the Persistence of Gender Dieren- ces in Education. Sophia Catsambis, Queens College

Children's Transition into Full-Time Schooling. Doris R. Enhrvisle and Karl L. Alexander, Johns Hopkins University

"No Exit": Processes of Social Isolation in a Middle School. Cathy Evans and Donna Eder, lndiana University

(continued on next page)

Saturday, 10:30 am, Session 209, continued Foreign Student Academic Performance in U.S. Graduate

Schools: Insights from American MBA Programs. Ross M. Stolzenberg, Graduate Management Admission Council;- Daniel Relles, RAND Corporation

Discussion: Jomills Henry Braddock 11, Johns Hopkins University

21 0. Gender in the Workplace

Yosemite 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ruth Milkman, University of California- Los Angeles

Why Has the Gender Composition of Mexico's Maquiladora Labor Force Changed? Lisa Catanzarite, Stanford University

Serving Side by Side: The Organizational Stratification of Waiters and Waitresses Between and Wihin Restaurants. Elaine J. Hall, University of Connecticut

Gender and Supervision: The Legitimation of Authority in Rela- tionship to Task. Joanne Miller, Queens College-City Univer- sity of New York

Perpetuating Sex Segregation: Effect of Males' Responses on Women's Job Aspirations. Irene Padavic, Florida State University

Discussion: Carole Turbin, Empire State College-State University of New York

21 1. Section on Comparative Historical Sociology. Culture and Consciousness

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Mary Ann Clawson, Wesleyan University Nineteenth Century Fraternal Organizations: Blocks to Working-

Class Formation. Scott G. McNall, University of Kansas Piety, Secularism, Socialism: On Religion and Working-class

Formation in Imperial Germany 1871 -1 91 4. Wiilfried Spohn, Freie Universitat Berlin and The Institute for Advanced Study

Visual Representation as Political Discourse: The Iconography of Women in Soviet Russia. Victoria E. Bonnell, University of California-Berkeley

Political and Cultural Dimensions to Emergent Ethnic Identlies: Alaska Natives in Comparative Perspective. Alfred Darnell, University of Chicago

The Role of Discourse in the Making of English Working-Class Consciousness in the Early Nineteenth Century. Marc W. Steinberg, University of Michigan

Discussion: Sonya 0. Rose, Colby College

212. Section on Environment and Technology. Refereed Roundtables

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

(to 11 :30 a.m.) Organizer: William R* Freudenburg, University of Wisconsin-

Madison 1. The Environment and International Development: Deep Tube Wells: Irrigation is Not Enough. Phil/@ Sutter, Univer-

sity of California-Davis Cultivating Hot Peppers and Water Crisis in India's Desert.

Michael Goldman, University of California-Santa Cruz 2. Marxist Ecology:

Capitalism, Nature, and Socialism. James O'Connor, University of California-Santa Cruz

Socialist Ecology. Andrew Szasz, University of California-Santa Cruz

Contemporary Contradictions of Environmentalism. Daniel Faber, University of California-Santa Cruz

3. Recent Developments in Studies of the Built Environment: A Post-Occupancy Evaluation of Deinstitutionalization. Peter

Orleans A Report from the ASA Ad Hoc Housing Group. Willem Van Vliet,

University of Colorado-Boulder 4. Recent Work on Industrial and Real Estate Development: The Aquifer as Pawn: Politics, Development, and Water. D. Claire

McAdams, Austin, Texas The Political Economy of Sustainable Development.Ann Hawkins

and Frederick H. Buttel, Cornell University

213. Section on Medical Sociology. The Borders of Medical Sociology

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Peter Conrad, Brandeis University "We Are All Natives Now": Anthropology Examines the Person,

Medicine, and Culture. Sharon R. Kaufman, University of California-San Francisco

Can Ethnography Save Bioethics? Barry Hoffmaster, University of Western Ontario

Beyond Paradigms: The Reintegration of History and Sociology. Jack Pressman, University of California-San Francisco

Sociology and Social Epidemiology. S. Leonard Syme, University of California-Berkeley

Discussion: Sol Levine, Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation

214. Section on Methodology. Session

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizers: Kazuo Yamaguchi, University of California-Los An- geles; Trond Petersen, University of California-Berkeley

Presider: Trond Petersen, University of California-Berkeley A Comparison of Local and Global Hazard Rate Models of Life

Events. Nancy B. Tuma, Stanford University; Lawrence L. Wu, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Competing Risk Analysis for Organizational Failure: Models, Inference, and Simulations. Charles E. Denk, City University of New York Graduate Center

The Analysis of Counter Factuals; Substantive Application of Missing Data Methodology. Christopher Winship, Northw- estern University; Robert Mare, University of Wisconsin- Madison

On Experimentation and Social Research. Herbert L. Smith, Uni- versity of Pennsylvania

Discussion: Clifford C. Clogg, Pennsylvania State University Presentation of the 1989 Lazarsfeld Award

215. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Racial and Ethnic Group Formation: Theoretical and Empirical Analyses of Its Causes and Consequences

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Rodolb Alvarez, University of California-Los Angeles Presider: Gary D. Sandefur, University of Wisconsin-Madison Land, Labor, and Group Formation: Blacks and Indians in the

United States. Stephen Cornell, Harvard University

Saturday, 10:30 a.m. Conceptualization of the Black Underclass: Its Political Uses and

Abuses. Joe R. Feagin and Leslie lnniss, University of Texas-Austin

The Other Side of the Process: Racial Formation in Contemporary Brazil. Howard Winant, Temple University

Discussion: Bart Landry, University of Maryland; Lea Ybarra, California State University-Fresno; Rose M. Brewer, Univer- sity of Minnesota-Minneapolis

11 :30 a.m. Meetings Section on Environment and Technology Business Meeting (to

12:20 p.m.)-Imperial B, Ballroom Level

12:30 p.m. Meetings Evaluation Committee on the Certification Program-Executive

Board Room, Ballroom Level 1989 Program Committee-Lassen, 4th Floor Sociological Methodology Editorial Board-Tamalpais, 4th Floor Sociological Theory Editorial Board-Diablo, 4th Floor Sociology of Education Editorial Board-Whiiney, 4th Floor Teaching Sociology Editorial Board-Shasta, 4th Floor Section on Theoretical Sociology Council Meeting-Belvedere A,

4th Floor

12:30 p.m. Other Groups American Journal of Sociology Editorial Board-Sonoma, 4th

Floor

12:30 p.m. . Sessions 21 6. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Theory and Method-

ology Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Problems in Researching Emotions. Fred Hafferty, University of Minnesota

2. Empirical Studies about the Influence of Religion on Educa- tional Achievement: Is It Evidence for the Weber and Merlon Theses? George Becker, Vanderbitt University

3. Sociological Study of Illness and Death: Research Uses of the 1986 National Mortality Followback Survey. Eve Powell- Griner and Gamine Beth Meckel, National Center for Health Statistics

4. Pets, Pests, and Protein: Our Relations with Other Species. Sherri Cavan, San Francisco State University

5. Theory and Methodolgy in Primary Socialization Research. Katheryn Ann Dietrich, Texas A&M University

6. Theory Building: Go Beyond "Crude Regularities." Shang-Luan Yan, Arizona State University

7. New Jobs and New Skills; Substantive and Methodological Issues. David S. Hachen, Jr., University of Notre Dame; Ruy A. Teixeira, USDA Economic Research Service

8. Collective Forgetting: Sociological Implications of Historical Ignorance. Michael C. Kearl, Trinity University

9. Sociology of Psychotherapies. Edith Kurzweil, Rutgers University 10. Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Society. Lauren Langman,

Loyola University-Chicago; Robert Endleman, Adelphi and New School for Social Research

11. Falsifiability and Theory Formulation. Alvin S. Rosenthal, DPRA Inc., Washington, DC

12. Problems Encountered Using Federal Public Use DataTapes. Edward Sabin, Towson State University

13. The Career of a Concept: Subculture. S, Mont Whitson, More- head State University

14. Qualitative Path Analysis: Integrating Micro and Macro Pro- cesses. William R. Brown, University of Central Florida

15. Friendship-A "Forgotten" Sociological Construct: Concep- tualization and Measurement. Chava Nachmias, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

21 7. Sociology of Black Americans

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Diane R. Brown, Howard University The Sociological Legacy of W.E.B. DuBois: A Brief Sketch. Rod-

ney D. Coates, University of North Carolina-Charlotte The Changing Black Class Structure: Measure of Black Progress.

Bart Landry, University of Maryland Race and Weatth. Melvin L. Oliver, University of California; Tho-

mas M. Shapiro, Northeastern University Discussion: Earl Smith, Washington State University

21 8. Sociology of Culture: Theoretical Problematics

Mason, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Jeffrey C. Goldfarb, New School for Social Research

Towards a Social Optics: Culture as "Emic" Glasses. Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers University

Culture as Class Symbolization or Mass Reificalion: A Critique of Bourdieu's Distinction. David Gartman, University of South Alabama

Modernity and the Tasks of a Sociology of Culture. Lawrence A. ScaK University of Arizona

The Novelty or the Work of Art: Benjamin and the Critique of Reception Theory. Jefftey A. Halley, City University of New York Graduate Center

21 9. Dual Earner Couples

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Phyllis Moen, National Science Founda- tion

Determinants of Responsibility for Child Care Arrangements among Dual Earner Couples. RichardR. Peterson and Kath- leen Gerson, New York University

Coworker Couples: Background, Social Relations and Well- Being. Nina Haavio-Mannila, University of Helsinki

I Will Foltow Him: Causes and Consequences of Husbands' and Wives' Willingness to Relocate. William Bielby and Denise Bielby, University of California-Santa Barbara

Wives' Employment and the Psychological Distress of Husbands: A Test of Two Competing Explanations. Elaine Wethington and Kay Forest, Cornell University

Saturday, 12:30 p,m. 220. Qualitative Methodology: Old Problems Revisited

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Shulamit Reinhan, Brandeis University Circumventing Censorship with Qualitative Methods: Affirmative

Action. Frederick R. Lynch, California State University-San Bernardino

Transference and Countertransference in Field Research. Jen- nifer Hunt, Montclair State College

"What Problems Do You Face?" An Approach to Organizational Research. Dean Harper, University of Rochesler

Self-censorship: The Politics of Presenting Ethnographic Data. Patricia Adler, University of Colorado; PeterAdler, University of Denver

Discussion: Arlene Kaplan Daniels, Northwestern University

221. Older People's Social Networks

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Matilda White Riley, National Institute on Aging Presider: Eugene Litwak, Columbia University Role Reversals in the Exchange of Social SuppoR David L. Mor-

gan, Portland State University; Tonya L. Schuster, University of Southern California; Edgar W. Butler, University of Califor- nia-Riverside

Health, Environmental Regimentation, and Self-Esteem Among the Institutionalized Elderly. Bradley J. Fisher, Southwest Missouri State University; Stan A. Kaplowltz, Michigan State University

Ethnic Differences Among Frail Elderly in Size and Composition of Informal Caregiver Networks. Michael C. Thornton, Cornell University; Shelley I. White-Means, Memphis State Univer- sity

Discussion: Anne Foner, Rutgers University; Ronald Abeles, National Institute on Aging

222. Organixations: Organizations and Control

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Miller McPherson, Cornel University Presider: Robert N. Stern, Cornell University Do Bankers Make a Difference?: A Londitudinal Study of the

Effects of Financial Interlocks on the Economic Behavior of Firms. Mark S. Mizruchi, Columbia University: Linda 8. Stearns, Russell Sage Foundation and University of Califor- nia-Riverside

Bank Control, Owner Control, or Organizational Dynamics: Who Controls the Large Modern Corporation? Neil Fligstein, Uni- versity of Arizona

Managers, Boundary Spanners, and Networks of Ties as Con- duits of Information in Organizations. William B. Stevenson, Boston College; Mary C. Gilly, University of California-lrvine

The Impact of Institutional Ties on Inequality: Understanding Wage Dispersion Within Organizations. Dev Jennings and Nancy Langton, University of Briiish Columbia

223. Social Movements of the 1960s

Powell, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Rebecca E. Klatch, University of Califor- nia-Santa Cruz

Gender Differences in the Causes and Consequences of Acti- vism. Doug McAdam, University of Arizona

Political Generational Themes in the American Student Move- ments of the 1 930s and 1 960s. Richard Braungart and Mar- garet Braungart, Syracuse University and State University of New York

Generational Politics, Political Socialization and Social Movement Participation: Theoretical Implications. Joseph R. DeMartini, Washington State University

The Legacy of the Sixties and the Prospecls for a Revival of Student Activism. Milton Mankoff, Queens College

Discussion: Richard Flacks, University of California-Santa Barbara

224. Stratification: Wealth and Inequality

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Toby L. Parcel, Ohio State University Presider: Patricia Roos, Rutgers University Making Money and Making a Self: The Moral Career of Enlrepre-

neurs. Paul G. Schervish and Andrew Herman, Boston College

Social Mob l i at the Top: The Acquislion, Transmission, and Dissolution of Great Fortunes in the Uniled States. David D. McFarland, University of California-Los Angeles

Sources of Earnings inequality in the Black and Whiie Female Labor Forces. Shelley A. Smith, University of South Carolina

Growing Earnings lnequality in the United States: Struclural and Demographic Changes Are Only Half the Story. Michael Hout, Rebecca S. Gradolph, and Eleanor 0. Bell, University of California-Berkeley

Discussion: Robert L. Kaufman, Ohio State University

225. Contemporary Sociological Theory I: Micro-Macro Linkages Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Paul Colomy, University of Denver Presider: Nancy Reichman, University of Denver Micro-Macro Linkage: Community and Society. Thomas J. Scheff,

University of California-Santa Barbara Micro-Macro Linkage in Sociological Theory: Applying a Mela-

theoretical Tool. George Ritzer and Terri LeMoyne, Univer- sity of Maryland

Structural Social Psychology and Micro-Macro Linkages. Edward J. Lawler, Cecilia Ridgeway, and Barry Markovsky, Univer- sity of Iowa

Cultural Analysis and the Micro-Macro Link: The Case of the Politics of Consensus in Spain's Transitions to Democracy. Laura Desfor Edles, University of California-Los Angeles

Discussion: Paul Colomy, University of Denver

226. Teaching Sociology: The Undergraduate Sociology Program and Its Effects Tiburon, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Edgar W. Mills, Springfield College The Gradient of Ignorance and Normative Conflict: A Plague on

Teachers of Sociology. Lee H. Bowker, Humboldt State Uni- versity; David M. Lynch and J. Richard McFerron, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Professional Development Wihin the Interdisciplinary Depart- ment. Rodger A. Bates, Lambuth College

Curriculum and Careers: Evolution and Evaluation of a Program. Charles S. Green 111, Richard Salem, Ronald Berger, W. Lawrence Newman, and Lanny Neider, University of Wiscon- sin-Whitewater

Saturday, l2:30 p-m. Attitude Change or Values Clarification?: Effects of the Gender

Role Course. Jane C. Hood and Jonathan Lord, University of New Mexico

Discussion: Reed Geertsen, Utah State University

227. Urban Sooiology

Yosemlte A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: lvan Light, University of California-Los Angeles Structural Determinants of Homelessness in the United States.

Martha E. Brown and Lauren J. Krivo, Ohio State University Neo-Fordism, the Restructuring of Capital, and the New Form of

Settlement Space. Mark Gottdiener, University of California- Riverside

Urbanization in China under Communist Rule. Mary Jo Huth, University of Dayton

Comparative Costs and Industrial Decline: Another Pseudo-Fact. Dominic Chan, Jung-Kyu Lee, and Frank Romo, State Uni- versity of New York-Stony Brook

Industrial and Occupational Clustering Among Iranian Immigrants in Los Angeles. lvan Light, Georges Sabagh, MehdiBozorg- mehr, and Claudia Der-Martirosian, University of California- Los Angeles

228. Work and the Workplace

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ruth Milkman, University of California- Los Angeles

The New Corporate Health Ethic: Lifestyle and the Social Control of Work. Peter Conrad, Brandeis University; Diana Chapman Walsh, Boston University

Labor Unions, Corporations, and Families: Institutional Competi- tion in the Provision of Social Welfare. Daniel 8. Cornfield, Vanderbilt University

Consumers' Reports: Off-Site Management in the Changing Economy. Linda Fuller, University of Oregon; Vicki Smith, University of Pennsylvania

Women as "Servants to Capital": Similarities and Differences in Paid and Unpaid Work in Retailing and Health Services. Nona Y. Glazer, Portland State University

Discussion: Carmen Sirianni, Brandeis University

229. Section on Comparative and Historical Sociology. Ret- ereed Roundtable Presentations

Imperial 8, Ballroom Level

(to 1 :30 p.m.) Organizer: Richard Lachmann, University of Wisconsin 1. Social Structure and Politics: Patterns of Post-Patrimonial Politics. Jeff Goodwin, Hanrard

University Elite Structuration and Social Change: hlernal Forces and Exter-

nal Linkages in the Development of the Chesapeake Bay Colony. Robert E m h Buck, San O i o State University

Domination, Negotiation, and Rationalization: A Long-Term View of Anglo-American Justice. Joseph Tropea, George Wash- ington University

2. National and Religious Boundaries: Class and Nationalism in Spain: Basques and Catalans. Juan

Diez Medrano, University of Michigan The Process and Content of Nationalism: Japan f 868 and Ger-

many 1871 to the 1930s. Brigitte Neary, Duke University

Doclrine and Denominationalism in American Protestantism, 1890-1980. Robert Liebman, Voltland State University: Robert Wuthnow, Princeton University

3. State Structures and Policy Formation: From An Island Strength to a Captured Agency: Explaining the

Transformation of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Gre- gory Hooks, Indiana University

Older Women and the State: Toward a Political Economy of Aging. Carroll Estes and Elizabeth Binney, University of California- San Francisco

The "Exceptional" United States: First New Nation or Last Welfare State? Christopher Pierson, University of Stirling

Native American Land Policies in Canada and the United States. Connie McNeely and Julie Elworth, Stanford University

4. Industrial and Labor Organization: Money and Power: The Influence of Financiers in the Electric

Manufacturing Industry From lnvenlion to Institutionalization. Patrick McGuire, University of Toledo

Pillars of the Labor market: The Roots of lnslitutions to Train and Place Workers in Germany and the United States. Thomas Janoski, Duke University

Analyzing American Labor Policy, 1897-1 980. Some Further Evi- dence. Robert Biggert, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Forms of Trade-Union Representation in Political Parties. Sigurt Vitols and Karen Shire, University of Wisconsin-Madison

230. Section on Medical Sociology. The Social Context of AlDS Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Diane Beeson, California State Univer- sity-Hayward

Living With the Stigma of AIDS. Rose Weitz, Arizona State University-Tempe

Safe Sex Among Male Street Hustlers and Call Men. Rhoda Estep, California State University-Stanislaus; Dan Waldorf, Institute for Scientific Analysis-San Francisco

Sub-Groups at High Risk for AlDS and Their Relationship to the Larger Black Community. Benjamin P. Bowser, California State University-Hayward

Street-based Outreach in Combating AlDS among I.V. Drug Users: The Fate of a Model National Demonstration Project. Robert S. Broadhead, University of Connecticut; Eric Margo- lis, Youth Environment Study

Discussion: Jane Zones, University of California-San Francisco

1 :30 p.m. Meetings Section on Comparative Historical Sociology Business Meeting

(to 2:20 p.m.)--Imperial B, Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Meetings 1988-89 Council (to 6:20 p.m.)-Yosemile 0, Ballroom Level Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award Selection Committee

(to 6:20 p.m.)-Marin, 4th Floor Section on Sociology of Culture Council Meeting-Belvedere 0,

4th Floor

Saturday, 2:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. Other Groups Problems of the Discipline Grant Working Group (Elizabeth Alm-

quist) (to 6:20 p.m.)-Belvedere A, 4th Sociological Inquiry Editorial Board-Belrnont, 4th Floor

2:30p.m. Sessions

231. Thematic Session. Theoretical Perspectives on the Sociology of Culture

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Long, Rice University The Making of Inequali: Cultural and Moral Exclusion in the

French and the American Middle Class. Michele Lamont, Princeton University

Listening to Learn and Learning to Listen: Cultural Theory and American Voices. George Lipsilz, University of Minnesota

Social Systems, Cultural Practices. John Fiske, University of Wisconsin

Discussion: Michael Schudson, University of California-San Diego

232. Special Session. Social Change in Mexico

Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Marta Fends, University of Chicago Presider: Celestino Fernandez, University of Arizona Urban Involution and Social Stratification in Mexico. Bryan

Roberts, University of Texas-Austin; Agustin Escobar, Cen- tro de lnvestigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social del Occidente

Gender and International Migration: A Comparison of Women's Employment in Garment and Electronics Industries in South- ern California and the US.-Mexico Border. Maria Patricia Fernandez Kelly, Johns Hopkins University

Adaptations to IRCA in Mexico: Preliminary Impressions. Sergio Diaz-Briquets, Commission for the Study of International Migration and Cooperative Economic Development

Discussion: Robert L. Bach, Slate University of New York-Bing- hamton

233. Didactic Seminar. Methods of Conversational Analysis

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

(to 6:20 p.m.) Ticket required for admission Emanuel A. Schegloff, University of California-Los Angeles

234. Professional Workshop. Going on the Business or Government Job Market

Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Larry E. Suter, National Center for Education Statistics Ron Manderscheid, National Institute of Mental Health Yolanda Wesely, New York City Partnership Mary M. Kritr, Cornell University David Prensky, N.W. Ayer Advertising

235. Teaching Wohhop. Teaching Marriage and the Family

Mason, 6th Floor

Ginger Macheski, Valdosta State College Kay Michael Troost, North Carolina State University

236. Sociology of Childhood and Youth: A Research Agenda on Adolescent Issues

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Kathryn M. Borman, University of Cincinnati

Adolescents' Attitudes Toward Maternal Employment: Familial and Non-Familial Determinants. Marjorie E. Starrels, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania

Variation in Mother-Daughter Agreement on Family Functioning and Psychological Adjustment in Adolescent Females. Ro- berta L. Paikoff, Educational Testing Service; Steven Carlton- Ford, University of Cincinnati; J. Brooks-Gunn, Russell Sage Foundation

The Nature and Correlates of Early Adolescent Work Experience. Jeylan Mortimer and Michael Finch, University of Minnesota; Timothy J. Owens, Indiana University-Indianapolis; Michael Shanahan and Michael Kemper, University of Minnesota

From "Dweeb to "Normal": Identity Change During Adoles- cence. David A. Kinney, Indiana University

Discussion: Barbara Schneider, National Opinion Research Center

237. Education and Society: Labor Market Outcomes, Mobil- ity Patterns, and Education

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Kenneth W. Jackson, Texas Southern University Presider: Brenda Moore, State University of New York-Buffalo How Did I Get Here? Agents, Events, and Kin in the Mobility

Accounts of Elite Young Business Professionals. Jane E. Salk, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Educational Systems and Labor Market Outcomes. Jrrtta Allmen- dinger, Max Planck lnstititute for Human Development and Education; Annemette Sorensen, Harvard University

Crisis in U.S. Education? Implications for a Political Economy Analysis. Carol Axtell Ray and Roslyn Arlin Michelson, Uni- versity of North Carolina-Charlotte

Career Mobility of American College and University Professors. Norman Washburn, Rutgers University-Newark

Discussion: Bruce R. Hare, State University of New York-Stony Brook

238. Political Sociology: Theories and Studies of Revolution

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizers: David Sciulli, University of Delaware; William Brus- tein, University of Minnesota

Presider: John Markoff, University of Pittsburgh Dependency and Rebellion: A Cross-National Analysis. Teny

Boswell, Emory University; William J. Dixon, University of Arizona

Theories of Revolution and the Case of Iran. John Foran, Univer- sity of California-Santa Barbara

Revolutions as Elite Transformations. G. Lowell Field, University of Connecticut John Higley, University of Texas-Austin; Michael G. Burton, Loyola College-Maryland

Saturday, 2:30 p.m. On the Outcomes of Revolutions: Some Preliminary Considera-

tions. Ekkart Zimmerman, Universitat der Bundeswehr Mun- chen

Development and Democratic Transition in South Korea: A Prop- osal of Theoretical Models and Hypotheses. Kyoung-Ryung Seong, Stanford University

Discussion: John Markoff, University of Pittsburgh

239. Teaching Sociology: Innovations in Teaching Research Methods and Statistics to Undergraduates

Powell, 6th Floor

Organizer: Edgar W. Mills, Springfield College Presider: Nancy Ogle, Springfield College Improving Undergraduate Sociology Research Courses: An Exam-

ple of Students Evaluating Racism in Their Own Academic Community. Arlene McCormack, University of Lowell

Teaching Social Reaerch: A Calvinist Pedagogy. William Rau, Illinois State University

Student Paper Competitions: A Means to Two Kinds of Outcomes. James A. Mathisen and Ivan J. Fahs, Wheaton College

What's Funny About Statistics? A Technique for Reducing Stu- dent Anxiety. Steven Schacht, Colorado State University; Brad J. Stewart, College of Saint Thomas

Discussion: Richard J. Harris, University of Texas-San Antonio

240. Contemporary Sociological 1 heory II: Rationalization, Differentiation, and Change

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Paul Colomy, University of Denver Presider: Duane Champagne, University of California-Los Angeles Rationalization, Differentiation, and Universalism: Weber, Par-

sons, and Habermas on Modernity. Mark A. Shields, Georgia Institute of Technology

The Analytic Complexity of "Primitive" Societies: Toward a Multid- imensional Analysis of Social Order and Social Change. Duane Champagne, University of California-Los Angeles

Decivilising Processes: Theoretical Significance and Some Lines for Research. Stephen Mennell, University of Exeter

Evolutionism Without Developmentalism: Two Models of Explana- tion in Theories of Social Evolution. Stephen K. Sanderson, Indiana University of Pennsylvania

Discussion: Frank Lechner, Emory University

241. Section on Comparative Historical Sociology. T imeand Historical-Comparative Sociology

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Barbara Lasleff, University of Minnesota Time and Historical Sociology. Ron Arninzade, University of

Minnesota Time. Karen Fields, University of Rochester Bringing Time into the Research Design. Patrick Horan, Univer-

sity of Georgia

242. Section on Environment and Technology. Attitudes, Impacts, and Involvement: Resources, Policy, and the Public

Cypress, 4th Floor

Presider: Riley E. Dunlap, Washington State University North Sea Oil and Scotland's Youth: Attitudes Toward Commun-

ity, Family, and the Oil Industry. Carole L. Seyfrit, Mississippi State University

The Gender Gap and Nuclear Power: Altitudes in a Politicized Environment Lawrence Solomon and Barbara Risman, North Carolina State University

Perceived and "Real" Risk: Perceived or Real Impacts? Barbara A. Payne, Arlington, Massachusetts; R. Gary Williams, Ar- gonne National Laboratory

The Effects of Public Involvement on Natural Resource Planning and Decision Making. Furjen Denq and Harry R. Potter, Purdue University

Discussion: Robert Lee, University of Washingbn

243. Section on W l c a l Sociology. Refereed Roundtables.

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Phil Brown, Brown University 1. Psychiatric Epidemiology: Presider: George Dowdall, Saint Joseph's University Economic Antecedents of Mental Hospitalization: A Nineteenth

Century Time-Series Test. George Dowdall, Saint Joseph's University; Wayne A. Morra, Beaver College

Six-Month Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders in Southern Blacks. Baqar A. Hussaini and J. Gary Linn, Tennessee State University

Individual and Agency Effects on the Disposition of Psychiatric Referrals. Yoko Baba, Millsaps College

2. Epidemiology: Presider: Susan L. Phillips, University of California-San Francisco Biopsychosocial Model of the Causes of Low Bitlh Weight. Susan

L. Phillips, University of California-San Francisco Why Do Self-Evaluations of Health Status Predict Morlality? Ellen

L. Idler, Rutgers University; Stanislas Kasl, Yale University 3. Stress, Coping, and Social Support: Presider: Michael Hughes, Virginia Polytechnic Institute Explaining the Negative Relationship Between Social Integration

and Mental Health: The Case of Living Alone. Michael Hughes, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Walter Gove, Vander- bilt University

Social Support, Stress, and Psychological Distress Among Older Black and White Adults. Patricia M. Ulbrich and George J. Warheit, University of Miami

4. Self-Help: Presider: Thomasina Borkman, George Mason University Multiple Perspectives of Health Professionals, Self-Helpers, and

New Patients. Thomasina Borkman, George Mason University Participatory Research and Community-Based Organization in

AIDS Prevention. Johannes P. Van Vugt, University of California-lwine

5. Cancelled 6. Illness Behavior and Wellness Behavior: Presider: James M. Robbins, McGill University Physical and Psychological Attributions of Common Somatic

Symptoms: Development of the Symptom Interpretation Questionnaire. James M. Robbins, Laurence J. Kirmayer, and Sherri Tepper, McGill University

Exercise and Mental Health: An Update. Diane Hayes, State Uni- versity of New York-Buffalo

Organizer: William R. Freudenburg, University of Wisconsin- Madison

{continued on next page)

Saturday, 2:30 p.mm Session 243, continued 7. Health Care Organizations: Presider: Virginia Aldige Hiday, North Carolina State University Psychiatric Emergencies in the General Hospital Emergency

Room. Virginia Aldige Hiday, North Carolina State University; Joseph P. Morrissey, University of Notth Carolina

Comparison of Evolution of Different Health Care Organizational Types. Blair Gifford, University of Chicago

HMO-Hospital Relationships: The Applicability of Economic, Exchange, and Resource Dependence Models. Ellen M. Morrison, University of California-San Francisco

8. Work and Health: Presider: Nancy L. Marshall, Wellesley College Women, Job Stress, and Social Support. Nancy L. Marshall,

Wellesley College Worksite Characteristics Predict Blood Pressure Differences in

Large Screened Working Populations. Yvette R. Schlussel, Peter L. Schnall, Mark Zimbler, Katherine Warren, and Tho- mas G. Pickering, Comell Medical Center

9. Social Roles and Health: Presider: Jennie J. Kronenfeld, University of South Carolina Well Roles: An Approach to Incorporating Role Theory Into Medi-

cal Sociology. Jennie J. Kronenfeld and Deborah C. Glik, University of South Carolina

Gender, Social Roles, and Health. Chloe Bird and Allen Fremont, University of IllinoisChampaignl Urbana

10. The Health Work Force: Presider: Kathleen Montgomery, University of California-Los

Angeles Cohort Differences in the Decision by Physicians to Enter Medical

Management: The Effect of Social and Economic Changes in the Health Care System. Kathleen Montgomery, University of California-Los Angeles

Alcohol-Related Problems of Future Physicians: Vulnerabilities at Medical School Entrance. Judith A. Richman and Joseph A. Flaherty, University of IllinoisChicago

The Practice of Chiropractic: A Profession in Need of Adjustment? Karen Carroll Mundy, Lee College

1 1. Families and Health: Presider: Paul Benson, University of Massachusetts-Boston Burden and Coping Among Families of the Mentally Ill. Paul

Benson, University of Massachusetts-Boston Altruism, Stress, and Coping: The Organ Donation Experience.

Helen Levine Batten, Brandeis Universitv Out of the Mouths of Babes: Diffusion of Health Messages from

Children to Parents. Richard Levinson and Elaine Flagg, Emory University; Stuart Fors, University of Georgia

12. Aging and Health: Presider: Karl Pillemer, University of New Hampshire Extent and Correlates of Patient Maltreatment in Nursing Homes.

Karl Pillemer, University of New Hampshire Distinguishing Over-Utilization from Heavy Utilization of Health

Care by the Aged. Holly Gwen Prigerson, Stanford University 13. Mental Health Policy, Diagnosis, and Services: Presider: Gayle Gubman, New Jersey Division of Mental Health

and Hospitals The Mentally Ill Chemical Abuser and the Definition of Social

Problems. Gayle Gubman, New Jersey Division of Mental Health and Hospitals

Institutional Theories of the Self in a Deinstitutionalized Mental Health System. Helen Rosenberg, Oakton Community Col- lege; Dan A. Lewis and Marisa Alicea, Northwestern Univer- sity

Psychiatric Diagnosis: Weak Measurement for a Strong Profes- sion. John Mirowsky, University of Illinois-Champaignlurbana

14. Meet the New Editor of Journal of Health end Social Behavior: Discussion of Research Interests and Publication Possibilities for

the Journal of Health and Social Behavior. Mary Fennell, Pennsylvania State University

15. Frontiers for Research in Health Insurance-Medical Sociol- ogy Graduate Representatives' Roundtable. Judith K. Barr, The New York Business Group on Health; Donald Light, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and Rutgers University

244. Section on hfethodology. Session

Sausalito, 4th f l w r

Organizers: Katuo Yamaguchi, University of California-Los An- geles; Michael Sobel, University of Arizona

Presider: Michael Sobel, University of Arizona Tests for Independence and Models of Associalion for Bivariate

Data with Random Censoring. Michael G. Akritas and Clif- ford C. Clogg, Pennsylvania State University

A Modified GMDH Method for Sociological Research. Tim F. Liao, University of North Carolina

The Earning Function in Sociological Studies of Earning Inequal- ity: The Issues of Functional Form and Hours Worked. Trond Petersen, University of California-Berkeley

Estimation of Structural Equation Models in the Presence of Sam- ple Selection Bias. David €. Myers; Decision Resource Cor- poration; Ronald Schoenberg, National Institute of Health

Discussion: Gerhard Arminger, Bergische Universitat Wuppertal

245. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Refereed Dia- logues: Causes and Consequences of Institutional Dls- crlmination

Imperial 6, Ballroom Level

(lo 330 p.m.) Organizer: Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California-Los Angeles 1. The Role of Stereotypes in Racial and Ethnic Group Formation: Presider and Discussion: Jose A. Cobas, Arizona State University Trends in Racial and Ethnic Stereotyping. Leonard Gordon, Ariz-

ona Stale University Diierent, Deviant, Dark and Macho, Seclusive and Working

Class: Anchors to an Ethnic Hierarchy in Holland. Louk Hagendoorn, University of Nijmegen, Netherlands; Joseph Hraba, Iowa State University

2. Family Values: Ethnic Families in a Multicultural Environment: Presider: Tony Platt, California State University-Sacramento Family Values, Delinquency, and the Mexican Family in the United

States. JoEllen M. Murata, University of Rochester Moral Development in Briiish and American White and Minortty

Women: The Care Orientation. Anthony J. Cortese, Southern Methodist University

Discussion: S. Parvez Wakil, University of Saskatchewan 3. Similarities and Differences in Labor Market Success: Presider: Harry H. L. Kitano, University of California-10s Angeles The Black Experience: Attributing the Causes of Labor Market

Success. Clifford L. Broman, Michigan State University

Saturday, 2:30 p.m. Black and Whib Class Differences in Commitment to Work.

Deborah Sherman, University of Illinois-Chicago Discussion: Doris Fine, University of California-Berkeley 4. Resource Mobilization for Social Change: Political Activity

Within Ethnic Social Movements: Presider: Paula J. Dubeck, University of Cincinnati The Quest for Environmental Equity: Mobilizing the Black Com-

munity for Social Change. Robert D. Bullard, University of California-Berkeley; Beverly Hendrix Wright, Wake Forest University

The Civil Rights Movement, Black Nationalism, and the Jackson Campaign. Charles McKelvey, Presbyterian College

Discussion: Yorgos A. Kourvetaris, Northern lllinois University 5. Asian Immigrant Women in the United States and Canada: Race, Class, and Gender and the Lived Experience of South

Asian Immigrant Women in Atlantic Canada. Helen Ralston, Saint Mary's University, Nova Scotia

The Effects of Immigration on Hmong Women in Lacrosse, Wis- consin. Farah Gilanshah, University of Minnesota-Morris

Discussion: Karen Hossfeld, San Francisco State University 6. The Fruits of Domination: Economic Benefits From Exercise of

Political Powec Presiders: Beth Huttman and Terry Jones, California State

University-Hayward Economic Discrimination Against Arabs and the Income of Jewish

Workers. Yinon Cohen, Tel Aviv University Ethnicity and Socioeconomic Gains. Robert Masao Jiobu, Ohio

State University Discussion: Loretta J. Williams, Unitarian Universalist Association 7. Middleman Entrepreneurs: Koreans in the United States: Presider and Discussion: Mehdi Bororgmehr, University of Cali-

fornia-Los Angeles Toward a Sociological Understanding of Koreans in Small Busi-

ness in the United States. Byoung Mohk Choi, University of Hawaii-Manoa

Korean Immigrant Businesses in Chicago. in-Jin Yoon, University of Chicago

8. Ethnic Identity and Structural Assimilation: Comparative Views of Closed and Open Societies:

Presider and Discussion: Joseph W. Scott, University of Washing- ton

Ethnic Minorities in the Soviet Union: The Unfinished Revolution. Shirley Kolack, University of Lowell

Ethnic Enclosure or Ethnic Competition: An Evaluation of Two Ethnic Identification Hypotheses. Sean-Shong Hwang, Uni- versity of Alabama-Birmingham

9. New Immigrants: The Experience of Resettlement Presider and Discussion: Vilma Ortiz, University of California-Los

Angeles Refugee Resettlement Steve Gold, Whinier College Three New lmmigrant Groups in New York City: Dominicans,

Haitians, and Cambodians. Mary E. Lutz, Community Coun- cil of Greater New York

10. Evolving Identities: South africa and the United States: White Solidarity-Black Majority: Race as an Ethnicity Among

White South Africans. GerhardSchutte, University of Wiscon- sin-Parkside

From Black to African American: Race and Ethnicity in the U.S. Bob Blauner, University of California-Berkeley

3:30 D.m. Meetings Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities Business Meeting (to 420

p.m.)-Imperial B, Ballroom Level

4:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Medical Sociology Business Meeting and Presenta-

tion of the Leo G. Reeder Distinguished Medical Sociologist Award to Samuel W. Bloom, City University of New York Graduate Center and Mt Sinai Medical School (Introduced by George Reader, Cornell Medical College)-Continental Ballroom 6, Ballroom Level

4:30 p.m. Other Groups AIDS Quarterly Workshop-Lombard, 6th Floor Alpha Kappa Delta-Belmont, 4th Floor

4:30 p.m. Sessions

246. Thematic Session. From Interpretation to Structure

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Donna Eder, Indiana University From Interpretation to Structure: The Constructivist Perspec-

tive. Karin Knorr-Cetina, University of Bielefeld Strategies into Structures: When Culture Becomes Structure

and When It Doesn't. Ann Swidler, University of California- Berkeley

Discussion: Aaron Cicourel, University of California-San Diego

247. Didactic Seminar. The Revival of German Sociological Theory Tiburon, 4th Floor

Ticket required for admission Richard Muench, University of Dusseldorf

248. Professional Workshop. Recent Developments in Soviet Sociology and Collaborative Research Using Compar- ative Data (co-sponsored by the ASA Committee on World Sociology) Yosemite A, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Randall J. Olsen, The Ohio State University Presider: Mikk Titma, Institute of History, Tallin, Estonia Mikk Titma, Institute of History, Tallin, Estonia Awidis Matulyonis, Institute of Philosophy, Sociology and Law,

Vilnius, Lithuania William Bielby, University of California-Santa Barbara

249. Informal Discussion Roundtables. Issues in the Disci- pline Imperial A, Ballroom Level

1. Uses of Forensic Sociology. Walter Abbott, University of Kentucky-Lexington

[continued on next page)

Saturday, 4:30 p.m. Session 249, continued 2. Systems Approaches to the Micro-Macro Link. Kenneth D.

Bailey, University of California-Los Angeles; Carl Slawski, California State University-Long Beach

3. Teaching Introductory Statistics: What Works? 1 L. Brink, Col- lege of Notre Dame

4. Career Patterns of Graduates with Bachelor's Degrees in Soci- ology. Jeffrey Chin, Le Moyne College

5. Fourth Sector Industry and Self Abuse: An Extension of the Theory of Social Structure and Conceptual Styles. Rosalie Cohen, Temple University

6. The Part-Timer Connection: Micro-Macro Forces and Ule Sur- plus Army of Academic Labor. M. S. Crowdes, National University-San Diego

7. Increasing and Improving Writing Assignments in Sociology Courses: Suggestions, Issues, and Problems. Kathleen Mc- Kinney and Robert Wazienski, Illinois State University

8. Discourse and the Micro-Macro Connection. Katherine O'Don- nell, Hartwick College

9. Organizing a Research Center: Accommodating Colleagues, Clients, and Community. Brian F. Pendleton, University of Akron; Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College

10. The Sociology of Technological Disasters: From Social Research to Expert Witness. J. Steven Picou, University of South Alabama-Mobile; Duane A. Gill, Mississippi State University

1 1. Interactions and Social Relationships Between Animals and Humans. Clinton Sanders, University of Connecticut

1 2. Psychoanalysis and Sociology. Neil J. Smelser, University of California-Berkeley

13. The Interconnection of Medical Sociology and Bioethics. Gre- gory L. Weiss, Roanoke College

14. The Manuscript Review Process: Issues in Continuity and Change. Ced L. Willis, University of North Carolina-Wilming- ton

250. Popular Culture: New Quantitative Work

Continental Parlor 7-8, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: John R. Hall, University of California-

Davis Concentration and Diversity in the Popular Music Industry, 1948-

1986. Robert Burnett, University of Gothenburg; Robert Philip Weber, Harvard University

From Marketto Hierarchy: Industrial Change and the Employment Relation in Television Production. William T. Bielby and Denise D. Bielby, University of California-Santa Barbara

A Note on the Renegotiation of Hegemony: Cultural Crisis and Changing Images of Blacks in Children's Picture Books, 1 938-1 986. Elizabeth Grauerhok, Purdue University; Ber- nice A. Pescosolido, Indiana University.

War and Misremembrance: Nigerian Civil War Fiction as Making History. Wendy Griswold, University of Chicago

251. Empirical Contributions to Economic Sociology

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level Organizer: Fred Block, University of Pennsylvania Presider: Alexander Hicks, Emory University Work, Worth, and Justice in a Socialist Mixed Economy. David

Stark, University of Wisconsin

Money as a Gift: Exploring the Social Meaning of Money. Viviana Zelizer, Princeton University

Peasants Protest: The Claims of Lord, Church, and State in the Cahiers de Doleances. John Markoff, University of Pitts- burgh

lnvestrnenl Behavior Among the Wealth in a Changing Socity. Richard E. Ratcliff and Suzanne 6. Maurer, Syracuse University

Discussion: Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College and City University of New York Graduate Center

252. Life-Course Preparation for the Later Years Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Matilda White Riley, National Institute on Aging

Mind, Self, and the Aging Society: Beyond Technical Rationality. David L. Featherman and Nadine Marks, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Memories of Family Closeness in Childhood and the Loneliness Experience of Older People. Kimberly R. Swisher, Doyle Paul Johnson, and Larry C. Mullins, University of South Florida

The Might of the Living Dead: Socialization After Death. Paul M. Baker, University of Victoria

Age, Social Factors, and Abstraction: A Cross-Seclional Study of Adult Intellectual Development. Jason S. Lee, Northern Illi- nois University

Discussion: George Bohrnstedt, American Institutes for Research

253. Organizations: Interorganizational Dynamics

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level Organizer and Presider: Miller McPherson, Cornell University The Role of Density Delay in the Evolution of Organizational

Populations: A Model and Five Empirical Tests. Glenn R. Carroll, University of California-Berkeley; Michael f . Hannan, Cornell University

From Service Provision to Institutional Advocacy: The Shifting Legitimacy of Organizational Forms. Debra Minkoff, Haward University.

New Firm Growth: A Geometric Model for Predicting Development Trajectories. Paul D. Reynolds and Edilberto F. Monte- mayor, University of Minnesota

Organizational Responses to Environmental Change: Ethnic Newspapers at the Turn of the Century. Elizabeth West and Susan Olzak, Cornell University

254. Poverty

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level Organizer: Bruce 6. Williams, University of Mississippi Presider: Danyl Tukufu, Memphis State University Patterns and Determinants of Employment in the Welfare Popula-

tion. Mark R. Rank, Washington University-St. Louis Race and Poverty in the Rural South: Racial Composition and

Economic Development. Michael Timberlake, Bonnie Thorn- ton Dill, and Darryl Tukufu, Memphis State University; Bruce B. Williams, University of Mississippi

All God's Children Ain't Got Shoes: A Comparison of West Virginia and the Urban "Underclass." Lynda Ann Ewen, WestVirginia Institute of Technology

Saturday, 4:30 p.m. Toward an Alternative to the "Underclass" Theory of Poverty.

Ralph C. Gomes and Walda Katz Fishman, Howard University Discussion: Robert Aponte, lndiana University

255. Sociology of Risk II Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Eugene Rosa, Washington Stale University Presider: R. Scott Frey, Kansas State University Long-Term Global Risks and the International Distribution of

Costs: Modelling the Greenhouse Effect Elizabeth Nichols, University of California-Berkeley; Richard Zelenka, Univer- sity of San Francisco

The Effects of lnformation Processing on the Availability of Organ- izational lnformation About Potential Dangers. Sim 6. Sitkin, University of Texas; Michal Tamuz, Rutgers University

Risk Acceptance: The Case of Resource Recovery Facilities. Seymour Warkov and Ronit Shemtov, University of Connecti- cut

A Novel Approach to Reducing Uncertainty: The Group Delphi. Thomas Webler, Clark University

Discussion: Thomas Dietz, George Mason University

256. Issues of Gender in the Analysis of Soclal Movements

Mason, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Rebecca E. Klatch, University of Califor- nia8anta Cruz

EnIGendering Social Protest: A Women-Centered Perspective. Rhoda Lois Blumberg and Guida West, Rutgers University

Who Takes Out the Garbage? Social Reproduction as a Neg- lected Dimension of Social Movement Theory. Randy Stoeck- er, University of Toledo

Feminist Nationalism and Gender Relations in the Militant Philip- pine Labor Movement. Lois A. West, University of California- Berkeley

Social Movement Culture and Collective ldentity in Lesbian Femi- nist Communities. Nancy E. Whittier and Verta Taylor, Ohio State University

Discussion: Beth E. Schneider, University of California-Santa Barbara

257. Social Structure and Personality

Powell, 6th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Mutran, University of Norlh Carolina-Chapel Hill

Commitment: Sorting Out the Conceptual and Empirical Confu- sion. Donald C. Reitxes, Georgia State University; Peter J. Burke, Washington State University

Structural Barriers, Normative Alternatives, and the Premed Per- sistence Gap: Why Fewer Women Become Physicians. Robert Fiorentine, University of California-Los Angeles: Ste- phen Cole, State University of New York-Stony Brook

The Effect of Post-High School Social Context on Self-Esteem. Timothy J. Owens, Indiana University-Indianapolis

Socialization to Dying: An Examination of Geriatric Death Accep- tance and Decision Making for Terminal Care. Holly Gwen Prigerson and Alex Inkeles, Stanford University

Discussion: Michael Schwalbe, Norlh Carolina State University

258. Section on Methodology. Controversies in the Analysis of Sociological Data

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Richard Berk, University of California- Los Angeles

Statistical Models and Shoe Leather. David Freedman, University of California-Berkeley

Discussion: Jan DeLeeuw, University of California-Los Angeles: William M. Mason, University of Michigan

259. Section on Racial and Ethnic Minorities. Refereed Dia- logues: Causes and Consequences of Institutional Discrimination

Imperial 6, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Rodolfo Alvarez, University of California-Los Angeles 1. Black Enclaves in White Neighborhoods: The Place of Race in Causal Models of Neighborhood Income

Change. David J. Hartmann, Southwest Missouri State University

Social Integration of Low-Income Black Adults in White Middle- Class Suburbs. J. E. Rosenbaum, S. J. Popkin, and K. McCurdy, Northwestern University

2. Latino Enclaves in Ethnic Neighborhoods: Presider: Mareyjoyce Green, Cleveland State University Latinos and Ethnic Conflict in Suburbia: The Case of Monterey

Park. Jose Zapata Calderon, University of California-Los Angeles

Evolving Relations Between Established Racial/Ethnic Groups and Latina Newcomers: Ethnographic Findings in an Apart- ment Neighborhood. Jacqueline Maria Surroca Hagan, Uni- versity of Houston

Discussion:Juan L Gonzales, California State University-Hayward 3. Political Domination Through Racial and Ethnic Cleavages: The Impetus for Realignment in the South: Class and Race in

Texas Politics. Chandler Davidson, Rice University State Policies and Resource Mobilization: The Movement of the

Disadvantaged. Rita Jalali, Stanford University Discussion: Florence 8. Bonner, State University of New York-

Albany 4. Religious Commitment: Determinants and Consequences

Among Blacks and Chicanos: A Socio-Religious History of Chicanos and the Catholic Church.

Gilbert R. Cadena, University of California-Berkeley Region, Religious Commitment, and Life Satisfaction Among

Black Americans. Christopher G. Ellison, Duke University; David A. Gay, Louisiana State University

Black Religion and Support for Civil Rights: An Update and Reas- sessment. Cardell K. Jacobson, Brigham Young University

Discussion: Donald R. Ploch, University of Tennessee 5. U.S. Census: Political Manipulation of Racial and Ethnic

Identity? The U.S. Census and Ethnic Enumeration: Playing the Numbers

Game. Yen Le Espiritu, University of California-Los Angeles Racial Identification of Households and Members of the House-

hold: The Impact of U.S. Census Procedures. Larry Hajime Shinagawa, U.S. Bureau of Census

The Intergenerational Transmission of Race Identity in the 1980 U.S. Census. Mary C. Waters and Valerie Leiter, Harvard University

Discussion: Walter R. Allen, University of California-Los Angeles

(continued on next page)

Saturday, 4:30 pmml Session 259, continued 6. Dialectics of Racist, Patriarchal Capitalism, and Systems of

Oppression: Presider and Discussion: Richard H. Ogles, University of Colo-

rado-Denver World System Processes in Racial and Ethnic Group Formation.

Martha E. Gimenez, University of Colorado-Boulder; Mary Romero, University of California-Berkeley

Brown Racism and the Formation of a World System of Racial Stratification. Robert E. Washington, Bryn Mawr College

Discussion: Shyrel Smith Hosseini, University of Colorado- Denver; Hermon George, Jr., University of Northern Colorado

7. Emergence of a Minority Business Class: Cross-Cultural Compariions:

Presider: Carol W. Telesky, California Federal Savings and Loan Association

Urban Structure and Minority Entrepreneurship: Self-Employment Differences Behween Black and Asian Americans. Robert L. Boyd, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

Dynamics Behind the Formation of a Business Class: Tucson's Hispanic Business Elite. David L. Torres, University of Arizona

Ethnic Enterprise in Canada: An Analysis of East Indians in Small Business. Martin N. Marger, Michigan State University

8. Predictors of Socially Significant Action Among Mexican Americans:

Predictors of Chicano Activism of the 1970s: The Interdepend- ence of Family and Other Influences. Homer D.C. Garcia, Pitzer College

Predictors of Retirement Among the Mexican Origin Population. Barbara A. Zsembik, University of Michigan; Audrey Singer, University of Texas-Austin

Perceived Discrimination Among Foreign-born U.S. Latinos. Eve Fielder, University of California-Los Angeles

Discussion: Linda Ferguson, Memphis Slale UniversQ 9. Toward a Theory of How Bureaucracies Impact on Race Rela-

tions: Personal Perceptions and Collective Attitudes Toward Skin Color, Race, Class, and Gender:

Presider: Sharon Collins, University of Illinois-Chicago Staff Responses to a Pilot Survey on the Significance of Skin

Color. Ruth L. Fuller, Sally B. Geis, and Mark Groth, Univer- sity of Colorado-Denver

Untangling Racial. Gender, and Social Class Influences in Medi- cal Decision-Making: A Factorial Design. John 6. McKinley and Deborah Potter, New England Research Institute

Public Platitudes and Hidden Tensions: Racial Climates at Pre- dominantly White Liberal Arts Colleges. Katherine E. McClel- land and Carol J. Auster, Franklin and Marshall College

Discussion: Norma Williams, Texas A&M University 10. Varieties of Ethnic Adaptation to Three Communities in the

United States: Presider: Marta Lopez-Garza, University of California-Los Angeles Recent Mayan Ethnogenesis in Houston: A Community of Origin

Perspective. Nestor P. Rodriguez, University of Houston Opening the Gates: The Emergent Social Adaptations of Eligible

Legalized Aliens in a Border Community. Judith Ann Warner, Laredo State University

Language Patterns Among Chicago Hispanics. Ray Hutchison, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay

Discussion: Fernando Parra, California State Polytechnic Univer- sity-Pomona

6:30 p.m. Receptions Section on Medical Sociology Reception-Continental Ballroom

6, Ballroom Level Section on Sociology of Aging Reception-Diablo, 4th Floor Section on Theoretical Sociology Reception-Sonoma, 4th Floor Section on Undergraduate Education Reception-Shasta, 4th

Floor

6:30 p.m. Other Groups California Sociological Association (lo 7:30 p.m.)-Continental

Parlor 1 Sociologists Lesbian and Gay Caucus panel: Professional Survi-

val as a Gay or Lesbian Sociologist-Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

7:30 p.m. Other Groups Chairs of California State University Departments of Sociology (to

8:20 p.m.)-Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

8:30 p.m. Sessions

260. Plenary Session. Annual Business Meeting of the American Sociological Association

Continental B a l l m 5, Ba!lroom Level Presider: Joan Huber, ASA President Report of the President. Joan Huber, Ohio State University Report of the Secretaty, Michael Aiken, University of Pennsyl-

vania Report of the Executive Officer. William V. D'Antonio, Ameri-

can Sociological Association Members' Resolutions Installation of 1 990 President William Julius Wilson

Sunday, August 13 8:30 a.m. Meetings Committee on Committees (to 620 p.m.)-Lassen, 4th Floor Committee on New Dues Structure-Belrnont, 4th Floor Section on Theoretical Sociology Business Meeting (to 9:30

a.m.)-Imperial A, Ballroom Level

8:30 a.m. Other Groups Honors Program (to 12:20 p.m.)-Tiburon, 4th Floor

Sundau, 8:30 am- 8:30 a.m. Sessions 261. Theoretical Contributions to Economic Sociology

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Fred Block, University of Pennsylvania Economic Sociology and the Concept of Class. Margaret Somers,

University of Michigan 1 he Problem of Order in Hobbesian and Lockean Theory. Mark

Gould, Haverford College Markets and Moral Theory: The Chicago School of Economics

Reexamined. Alan Wolfe, Queens College Competition and Markets: An Institutional Theory. Mitchel Y. Abo-

lafia, Cornell University; Nicole Woolsey Biggart, Univer- sity of California-Davis

Discussion: Robert Wood, Rutgers University-Camden

262. Envlronmen tal Sociology

Continental Parlor 7, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: A.R Gillis, University of Toronto Temporal and Seasonal Usage of Indoor Common Space Within

Residential Complexes. William Michelson, University of Toronto

The Spatial Distribution of Social Ties and Psychological Strain Among Residents of Public Housing. Carl R. Keane, University of Western Ontario

National and lnternational Factors in Community Change: Corn- modity Prices and the Collapse of the Coast. Robert Gram- ling, University of Southwestern Louisiana; William R. Freu- denburg, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Discussion: A.R. Gillis, University of Toronto

263. Comparative Labor Markets

Continental Parlor 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Michael D. Woodard, University of Missouri-Columbia

Female Labor Force Participation in China: An Ecological Analy- sis of Data from the 1982 Census. Richard Barrett and Wil- liam Bridges, University of Illinois-Chicago; Moshe Semy- onov, Tel Aviv University: Sheng-lin Wang, University of Illinois-Chicago

Underemployment and the Structure of Local Opportunities: Experiences of Blacks and Whites in Local Labor Market Areas. Leann M. Tigges and Deborah M. Tootle, University of Georgia

Local Labor Markets and Ascription-Based Differences in Earn- ings: Israel. Noah L ewin-Epstein, Tel Aviv University

The Wages of Aging: Time-Related Determinants of Earnings in the Southern Textile Context. Jeffery Leiter, North Carolina State University

Discussion: Roderick Harrison, Harvard University

264. New Approaches in Quantitative Analysis

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Jae-On Kim, University of Iowa Presider: Richard T. Campbell, University of Illinois-Chicago Some Models for the Analysis of Asymmetric Association in

Square Contingency Tables with Ordered Calegories. Kazuo Yamaguchi, University of California-Los Angeles

Estimating the Reliability of Aggregate-Level Variables Based on Individual-Level Characteristics. Robert M. O'Brien, Univer- sity of Oregon

The Mokken Scale Analysts in Survey Research: The Assess- ment of the Unidimensionality of Dichotomous Items by Means of a Non-Parametric Item Response Theory Model. Johannes Kingma and Elisabeth TenVergert, University of Utah

Discussion: Richard T. Campbell, University of Illinois-Chicago

265. Comparative Patterns of lnternational Migration

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Mary M. Kritz, Cornell University Comparative Perspectives on Transnational Migration and Inter-

national Security: The Intersection of Two Expanding Uni- verses. Barbara Schmitter Heisler, Gettysburg College; Mar- tin 0. Heisler, University of Maryland

Guestworkers and Citizenship: Old Issues, New Challenges. Yasemin Soysal, Stanford University

Inter-Ethnic Relations and Education Systems as Push Factors: Migration from Southeast Asia to Australia. Gerard Sullivan and Subbiah Gunasekaran, Institute of Southeast Asian Stu- dies, Singapore

Ethnicity and Class in the Predisposition to Emigrate from Israel. David Mittelberg, University of Haifa

Discussion: Sergio Diaz-Briquets, Commission for the Study of International Migration

266. Issues in Social Movements I Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Rebecca E. Klatch, University of California-Santa Cruz

Presider: Stephen Cornell, Harvard University The Unemployed Workers Movement of the 1 930s: A Reexamina-

tion of the Piven and Cloward Thesis. Steve Valocchi, Trinity College

Why Do Strikes Turn Violent? New Evidence from Ontario. Don S. Grant and Michael Wallace, Ohio State University

Ethnic Conflicts and the New Immigrants, 1965-1985. Susan Olzak and Elizabeth West, Cornell University

Class Effects in the Political Socialization of Collective Action Participants. Ronnelle Paulsen, University of Arizona

Discussion: Stephen E. Cornelll Harvard University

267. Section on Medical Soclology. Sociological Theory and Medical Sociology Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Gary L. Albrecht, University of Illinois- Chicago

Institutional Theory and Medical Care Research. W. Richard Scott, Stanford University

Integrating Different Levels of Analysis in a Theory of Hospital Work. Anselm Strauss, University of California-San Fran- cisco: Juliet M. Corbin, San Jose State University and Uni- versity of California-San Francisco

The Theory of Professional Dominance Reconsidered. Donald W. Light, University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey and Rutgers University; Frederic W. Hafferty, University of Minne- sota-Duluth

(continued on next page)

Sunday, 8:30 amD Session 267, continued Theoretical Foundations for the Study of Stress. Howard B.

Kaplan, Texas A&M University

268. Section on Political Economy of the World System. Class Formation in Developing Countries Marln, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Diane E. Davis, New School for Social Research

Class Structure in the Contemporary Arab World. Samih Farsoun, American University

Working Class Formation in East Asian Development. Frederick Devo, State University of New York-Brockport

Gender, Capitalist Social Relations, and Capitalist Development in Korea. Kyung-Sup Chang and Sang-In Jun, Brown University

Upper Class Divisions and the Development of the Stale's Polili- cal Bases: Bolivia, 1900-1 952. Carmenza Gallo, New School for Social Research

Bourgeois Social Movements in Peru and Venezuela. David Becker, Dartmouth College

Discussion: Andre Gunder Frank, University of Amsterdam; Ale- jandro Portes, Johns Hopkins University

269. Section on Sociology of Aging. Family Structures and the Aging Individual Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Norval D. Glenn, University of Texas- Austin

Intergenerational Exchanges and Development: A Transaction Cost Framework. Judith Treas, University of California-twine

Retirement Among Dual Worker Families. John C. Henretta, Uni- versity of Florida; Angela M. O'Rand, Duke University

Gender Differences in the Effects of Spouse Characteristics on Retirement Decisions and Adaptations. Linda Liska Belgrave and Marie R. Haug, Case Western Research University

The Effects of Poverty and Disability on the Family Structures on Aging Individuals. Alden Speare, Jr., and Michael RendaM, Brown University

270. Section on Sociology of Culture. Aesthetics and Sociology Belvedere, 4th Floor

Organizer: Gary Alan Fine, University of Minnesota Presider: Ann Swidler, University of California-Berkeley Against Sociological Imperialism: The Limits of Sociology in the

Aesthetic Sphere. Janet WolR University of Leeds Aesthetic Constraints: The Culture of Production in Restaurant

Kitchens. Gary Akn Fine, University of Minnesota The Aesthetics of TV News: Postmodernism and the USA Today

TV Show. Barry Glassner, University of Connecticut Postmodernism and the Aestheticization of Everyday Life. Mike

Featherstone, Teesside Polytechnic The Aesthetics of Modern Life: Simmel's Interpretation. David

Frisby, University of Glasgow

271. Section on Undergraduate Education. F?efenred Round- table Dlscusslons-Undergraduate Education in Soci- ology: Enrichment, Experience, Exposure imperial B, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community Col- lege; A1 Chabot, Macomb Community College; Norman Dolch, Louisiana State University-Shreveport; Dean Dorn, California State University; Joy Reeves, Stephen F. Austin State University

Presiders: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College; Dean Dorn, California State University

1 : Teaching Social Statistics with Simulated Data. Fred S. Halley,

State University of New York-Brockport Software in Classroom: What Works and What Doesn't? Norman

Dolch, Louisiana State University-Shreveport 2. Overcoming the Hazards of Debunking: Strategies for Confront-

ing Student Resistance to Inlroductory Sociology. Lauren J. Pivnick, Northeastern University

3. Useful Resources for Teaching a Class in Sociology of Busi- ness. William L. Smith, Loras College

4. Work, Liberal Arts and Purposeful Living: A Bridge Building Course Across a Cultural Chasm. Vincent Bolduc, Saint Michael's College

5. Basic Statistical Analysis: A Laboratory Learning Module. Janet McDonald and Michael W. Gillespie, University of Alberta

6. Trading Places: Teaching with Students at the Center and Professors at the Periphery of the Principles Course. Lynn Atwater and Philip Kayal, Seton Hall University

7. Doing Significant Research with Undergraduates. Gregory L. Weiss, Roanoke College

8. Occupational Hazards: Unexpected Confrontations with Prob- lem Students. Camille Wright Miller, HoHins College; Gloria Hamilton, Indiana University/Purdue University-Columbus; Leslie Starr Heimov, American University Law School

9. Cooperative Learning in Undergraduate Sociology Courses. Jack Harkins, College of DuPage; Barbara S. Hey1 and Wil- liam C. Rau, Illinois State University

10. Impact of Computer Assisted Instruction on Acquiring Socio- logical Knowledge. Henry Olsen, City University of New York-Medger Evers College

9:30 a.m. Sessions 272. Section on Theoretical Sociology. Informal Round-

table Presentations

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

(to 10:20 a.m.) Organizer: Melvin W. Barber, Florida A&M University 1. lntellecluals and Politics in European Societies: .

Critical Sociology in Eastern Europe. Michael Kennedy, Univer- sity of Michigan

Creating Organic Intellectuals: The Politics of the New Left in Italy. Ted Perlmutter, New York University

De-Politicization in West Germany. Jeffrey Herf, University of Chicago

2. Social Control and Legitimacy: The Contribution of Accountabil- ity Mechanisms. Lenahan O'Connell, Carson Newman Col- lege; Michael Betz, University of Tennessee; Jon Shepard, University of Kentucky

3. Structural Codes and Sociological Theory. Gary A. Kreps, College of William and Mary

4. Emile Durkheim and Carl Jung: The Macro-Micro Conneclion. Susan F. Greenwood, University of Maine

5. Cancelled. 6. Moral Postures in Sociological Theory. Anthony L. Haynor,

New School for Social Research and State University of New York-Purchase

7. Sociological Determinants of Freudian Theory. Edith Kurzweil, Rutgers University

8. Gadarner's Hermeneutics: The Place of Tact in Theoretical Discourse. Keith Doubt, Nor-

theast Missouri State University 9. The Stock Market Crash of 1987 and Durkheim's Concept of

Economic Anomie: Shifting the Focus of Anomie Research from Crime to Business. Suepan G. Mestrovic, Texas A&M University; Geoffrey P. Alpert, University of South Carolina

10. Religious Themes from Weber: The Stratification of Heaven and Earth: An Analysis of Structural

Reversal. Murray Milner, Jr., University of Virginia The Three Hypotheses in the "Protestant Ethic" Essay: The

Framework of Weber's Research. Jacek Ganowicz, Syra- cuse University

1 1. Modes of Action: Narrative Frames: Garfinkel, Giddens, Goffman. Mary Rogers,

University of West Florida Is There a Grammar of Motives?: The Cognitive Structure of the

Folk Theory of Action. Worth C. Summers, California State University-Sacramento

12. Gorbachev and the Soviet Intelligentsia. Dmitri N. Shalin, Southern Illinois University-Carbondale

13. Reflexivity in Sociology: Reflexive Sociology: A Comparison of the Theories of Pierre

Bourdieu and Alvin Gouldner. David Swartz, Wesleyan University

Actions, Accounts and Contexts: A Defense of the lnlerpretive Method. Colin Campbell, University of York

14. Miscellaneous Theoretical Themes: Contradictions of Maximization Theories and an Affective Slructu-

ralist Alternative. Michael Hammond and Susan Murray, University of Toronto

Theoretical Modeling through Expert Systems. Grant Blank, Uni- versity of Chicago

Council Subcommittee on the ASA Honors Program-Whiney, 4th Floor

Section on Sociology of Aging Council Meeting (to 1 1 :30 a.m.)- Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

10:30 a.m. Sessions 273. The Sociology of Hlspanlc-Americans

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Silvia Pedraza-Bailey, University of Michigan

Poverty among Hispanics in the U.S. Vilma Ortiz, University of California-Los Angeles

Elhnicity, Gender, and Poverty: A Comparative Analysis of Cuban, Mexican, and Puerto Rican Women. Christine E. Bose, State University of New York-Albany

Interregional Migration Patterns of Mexican Americans: The Core, Periphery, and Frontier. Rogelio Saenz, Texas A&M Univer- sity

Are Chicanos Assimilating? Jorge Chapa, University of Texas- Austin

The Post-Industrial Service Economy and its Impact on Hispan- ics. Roger Waldinger, City College of New York; Thomas R. Bailey, Columbia University

The Emerging Voice of the Working Class: The Cuban-American Labor Movement in Miami, Florida. Guillermo J. Grenier, Florida International University

Discussion: Alejandro Portes, Johns Hopkins University

274. Methodology to Address Substantive Issues

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Jae-On Kim, University of Iowa Conventional Wisdom on Measurement: A Structural Equation

Perspective. Kenneth Bden and Richard Lennox, University of North Carolina

How Many Factors? The Meaning of Correlated Errors in the Evaluation of Measurement Models. Blair Wheaton, Univer- sity of Toronto

Longitudinal Approach to Clique Detection: Reanalysis of New- comb's Fraternity Data. Keiko Nakao, University of Southern California; A. Kimbell Romney, University of California-lrvine

Scaling the Intergenerational Continuity of Occupation: Is Occu- pational Inheritance Ascriptive After All? Steve Rytina, Har- vard University

275. Professions

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Willie Pearson, Jr., Wake Forest University Presider: Philip J. Perricone, Wake Forest University A Comparative Study of Occupational Stress Among Black and

White U.S. College and University Faculty. Earl Smith, Washington State University

Men, Women and Ule Culture of Engineering. J. Gregg Robinson, Grossmont College; Judith S. Mcllwee, University of Califor- nia-San Diego

Professionalism in Science and the American Chemical Society. Terrence Russell and Robert K. Neuman, American Chemi- cal Society

Professions, Partitocrazia and the Italian Stale. Etliot A. Krause, Northwestern University

Highly Educated Women as Managers: Women Administrators in Higher Education. Anne Statham, University of Wisconsin- Parkside

Discussion: John R. Earle, Wake Forest University

276. Socialist Societies

Continental Parlor 8, Ballmom Level

Organizer and Presider: David Stark, University of Wisconsin

(continued on next page)

Sunday, 10:30 a.m. Session 276, continued Social Mobility in Urban China and America. Peter M. Blau,

University of North Carolina; Danqing Ruan, Columbia Uni- versity

Peasant Entrepreneurs in China's Emerging Market Economy: An Institutional Analysis. Victor Nee, Cornell University

Economic Coordination and the Labor Process in Hungary: Some Empirical Consequences. Robert Jenkins, Yale University

The Hungarian Second Economy: Hardship or Opportunity? Akos Rona-Tas, University of California-San Diego

Discussion: Anthony Oberschall, University of North Carolina

277. Socialization

Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: Linda Grant, University of Georgia 1 he Dynamics of Young Men's Career Aspirations. Jerry A. Jac-

obs, University of Pennsylvania; Katherine McClelland, Franklin and Marshall College; David Karen, Bryn Mawr College

Peer Influence, College Aspirations, and the Life Cycle. Jere Cohen, University of Maryland-Baltimore County

Role Diffusion and Role Reversal: Structural Aberrations in Divorced Families and Consequences for Children's Func- tioning. Janet R. Johnston, Centerfor the Family in Transition and Stanford University

To Tell or Not to Tell: Patterns of Self-Disclosure to Mothers and Fathers Reported by Gay and Lesbian Youth. Andrew M. Boxer, Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center; Judith A. Cook and Gilbert Herdt, University of Chicago

Discussion: James Dowd, University of Georgia

278. The Welfare State: The American Case In Historical Perspect lve

Continental Parlor 7, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Joane Nagel, University of Kansas Social Assistance versus Social lnsurance in the Early American

Welfare State: Implications for Women. Ann Shola Orloff, University of Wisconsin

The State, Industry, and Capitalism: The Case of the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933. Victor Burke, University of Michigan

Class Power and the Control of Knowledge: Policy Reform Groups and the Social Security Act. Barbara G. Brents, Uni- versity of Nevada-bs Vegas

Resource Mobilization and Social Spending Policies: The Case of the Townsend Movement, 1935-1 950. Edwin Amenta and Yvonne Zylan, New York University

Race, Class, and Gender in the American Welfare Stale: Nixon's Failed Family Assistance Plan. Jill Quadagno, Florida State University

Discussion: Sheryl R. Tynes, Trinity University

279. Section on Medical Sociology. Issues in Third World Health and Health Care

Continental Ballroom 4, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Eugene B. Gallagher, University of Kentucky

The Social Position and Internal Organization of the Medical Profession in the 1 hird World: The Case of Singapore. Stella R. Quah, National University of Singapore

The Emergence of Medical lnsurance Policy in a Developing Country: The Case of Korea. Sungnam Cho, University of Hawaii

Altering the Structure of Medical Discourse-Primary Care in Cuba. Howard Waitzkin, University of California-Iwine; Theron Britt, University of Utah

Modern Health Services and Health Care Behavior: A Survey in Kathmandu, Nepal. Janardan Subedi, Miami University

Women and Work in Rural Taiwan: Building a Contextual Model Linking Employment and Health. Rita S. Gallin, Michigan State University

Discussion: Ray Elling, University of Connecticut Health Center

280. Section on Political Economy of the World System. World Systems Theory 15 Years On: What Have We Learned?

Marin, 4th Floor

Organizer and Presider: John Wakon, University of California- Davis

Introduction: Current Issues in World-Systems Theory. Walter Goldfrank, University of California-Sank Cruz

Levels in the World System: Where Does Regulation Occur? Harriet Friedmann, University of Toronto

State and World System. Fred Block, University of Pennsylvania Restructuring the Pre-Modern World System. Janet Abu-Lughod,

New School for Social Research World-Systems Analysis: The Second Phase. lmmanuel Waller-

stein, State University of New York-Binghamton

281. Section on Sociology of Culture. Macro-Micro Linkages in the Sociology of Culture

Belvedere, 4th Floor

Organizer: Gary Alan Fine, University of Minnesota Presider: Robert Alford, City University of New York-Graduate

Center The New Macro-Sociology and the Old. Jeffrey Herf, University of

Chicago Social Classes: A Matter of Taste? Hermann Strasser, University

of Duisburg Musing and Tuning in to Everyday Life. Catherine T. Harris, Wake

Forest University; Clemens Sandresky, Salem College Mysticism and Cultural Reorientation. Angela A. Aidala, Rutgers

University Norbert Elias's Contribution to the Study of Culture. Stephen

Mennell, University of Exeter; Mike Featherstone, Teesside Polytechnic

282. Section on Theoretical Sociology. Social Theory Beyond the Academy: Intellectuals and Politics I

Continental Ballroom 5, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Charles Lemert, Wesleyan University Ideology and Ocularcentrism: Is There Anything Behind the Mir-

ror's Tain? Martin Jay, University of California-Berkeley The Requisites of Democracy. Jeffrey C. Alexander, University of

California-Los Angeles Social Theory and Intellectual Vitality: Learning from Feminism.

Roslyn W. Bologh, City University of New York-Graduate Center

In Search of Relevance: State and Party vs. the Collective Intellec- tual. Richard Flacks, University of California-~anta Barbara

283. Section on Undergraduate Education. 1 he Introductory Course: Toward the Spirit of Sociology

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizer: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community College Presider: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association The Essential Wisdom of Sociology. Earl Babbie, Chapman

College The Creation of Believers, Ambassadors and Prophets. Jeanne

Ballantine, Wright State University Critical Thinking in lntroductory Sociology: A Field Trip Assess-

ment Model. A1 Chabot, Macomb Community College The ABC's of Introductory Sociology. Beth 8. Hess, County Col-

lege of Morris Thinking Sociologically. Caroline Hodges Persell, New York

University Discussion: Carla B. Howery, American Sociological Association

Section on Sociology of Aging Business Meeting (to 1220 p.m.)- Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

12:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Undergraduate Education Business Meeting (to 1 :30

p.m.)-Sausalito, 4th Floor

12:30 p.m. Sessions 284. Cross-National Research in Mobility and Gender Strati-

fication

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Orlando Patterson, Harvard University Comparative Study of lntragenerational Mobility in the United

Stales, Norway, and West Germany. Jutta Allmendinger, Max Planck Institute for Human Development and Educations

Towards an Understanding of Cross-National Variations in Occu- pational Mobility. Raymond Sin-Kwok Wong, University of Wisconsin

The Effect of Spatial Segregation on Sex Stratification in Preindus- trial Societies. Daphne Spain, University of Virginia

Women's Acquisition of the Franchise: An Event History Analysis. Francisco 0. Ramirez and Yasemin Soysal, Stanford Univer- sity

Discussion: Annemette Sorensen, Harvard University

285. Theory and Research on Disasters

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Gary A. Kreps, College of William and Mary

Implementation of Microcomputer Technology by State and Local Emergency Management Agencies. Thomas E. Drabek, Uni- versity of Denver

The Role of Typologies in Interpreting Models of Disaster Warning Compliance. Ronald W. Perry, Arizona State University

What is a Disaster? An Ecological Approach to Resolving the Definitional Debate. J. Stephen Kroll-Smith and Stephen R. Couch, Pennsylvania State University

Systemic and Individual Determinants of Community Recovery After Disaster: The Predictivity of a Dialectical Theory of Social Action. /no Rossi, St John's University

Discussion: E.L. Quarantelli, University of Delaware

286. Social Histories of Conflict and Confrontation: Issues and Perspectives

Continental Parlor 9, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Ewa Morawska, Institute for Advanced Study

The State and Ethnic Conflict in India, 1850-1 980. Alfred Darnell and Sunita Parikh, University of Chicago

Old Corruption or Reform? The Battle over Administrative Ration- alization in England, 1660-1 722. Thomas Ertman, Harvard University

Courts or Trade: Social Confict and the Emergency of Plea Bar- gaining in the American Courts, 1830-1920. Mary Vogel, State University of New York-Stony Brook

Religious Organizational Conflict in Global Context: Mennonites in Eastern Pennsylvania, i 870-1 985. Fred Kniss, University of Chicago

287. Issues in Social Movements II Cypress, 4th Floor

Organizer: Rebecca E. Klatch, University of California-Santa Cruz

Presider: Michael Macy, Brandeis University The State, Economy, and Organized Environmentalism: An Histor-

ical Analysis of the Emergence and Characteristics of the American Environmental Movement within a Critical Political Economy Framework. Neghin Modavi, University of Hawaii

Animal Rights and Anti-Nuclear Protest: Condensing Symbols and the Critique of Instrumental Reason. James M. Jasper, New York University

Organization and Community in Women's Movements: An Histor- ical Overview. Steven M. Buechler, Mankato State University

The New Temperance Movement. David J. Pittman, Washington University

Discussion: Michael Macy, Brandeis University

288. Section on Political Economy of the World System. Roundtables

Imperial 6, Ballroom Level

(to 1 :30 p.m.) Organizer: Paul M. Lubeck, University of California-Santa Cruz 1. Deep Ecology and the World System. Albert Bergesen, Univer-

sity of Arizona 2. Transnational Information Resources and Technological De-

pendency. Sara Schoonmaker, Hamilton College 3. New Models of Peace and Development. Heather-Jo Hammer,

University of Hawaii 4. Long Waves of Trading. Kathleen Schwartzmen, University of

Arizona 5. Labor Unrest in the Semi-Periphery. Roberto P. Koneniewicz,

State University of New York-Binghamton

(continued on next page)

Sunday, l2:30 p.m. Session 288, continued 6. Sbne Age California as a World-System. Chris Chase-Dunn,

Johns Hopkins University 7. Internal Peripheries and Regional Uneven Development.

Michael Timberlake, Memphis State University 8. Gender, Informalization and Global Restructuring. Cynthia

Truelove, University of Wisconsin-Madison 9. Household Continuity, Resistance and Change within the Glo-

bal Economy. Diane Wolfe, University of Washinglon; Joan Smith, State University of New York-Binghamton

10. Export-Oriented Industrialization: Competitive Patterns among Footware Manufacturers in the Semiperiphery. Miguel Kor- zeniewicz, Duke University

11. Debt, Adjustment, and Restructuring: Africa in Comparative Perspective. K.P. Moseley, University of Connecticut

12. Is There a Global Culture? Philip Kasinitz, Williams College; Daniel Poor, City University of New York-Graduate School and University Center

13. Revolutionary Movements and Counter-Insurgency States in Central America. Susanne Jonas, University of California- Santa Cruz

14. Distributional Conflict, Politics and International Competitive- ness. Philip O'Connell, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

15. Transition to "What": Limits of Reform in Socialist Societies. Tom Gold, University of California-Berkeley; Mark Selden, State University of New York-Binghamton

289. Section on Aging. Roundtable Presentations

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

Organizers: Eileen Crimmins, University of Southern California; Melissa Hardy, Florida State University

1. Intergenerational lssues in Aging: Intergenerational Households, Jill Grigsby, Pomona College lntrafamilial Wealth Flows and Support of Elderly Americans.

Janet Barber, Florida Department of Health and Rehabilita- tive Setvices

2. Constructing Transition Histories in Life Course Research: Careers and Aging in Later Life. Eliza Pavalko, University of North

Carolina Marital History as Process. Donald Stull, University of Akron 3. Policy lssues in Nursing Home Care: lnslitutionalization and Aging: Effects of Government Policy and

Professionals on the Aging and Nursing Home lnduslries. Victoria Alexander, Stanford University

Agents of Quality Care in Nursing Homes. Ralph D. Cherry, Purdue University

4. Work and Retirement: Older Womens' Employment Patterns: 1 940-1 980. teann Tigges,

University of Georgia Retirement and Old Age in Six Countries: A Cross-National Anal-

ysis of Subjective Dimensions. Chikako Usui, Tulane Univer- sity

The Future of Retirement. Melissa Hardy, Florida State University 5. Caregiving and the Elderly: The Transition to the Caregiving Role: A Panel Study of Helpers ol

Elderfy People. Eleanor Palo Stoller, State University of New York-Plattsburgh: Karen Pugliesi, Northern Arizona University

Family Caregiving to the Elderly-Effects on Adult Children's Mar- + ital Relationships. J. Jill Suitor, Fordham University; Karl Pil- lemer, University of New Hampshire

6. The Elderly as a Minority Group: Changes in Attitudes Toward Aging and the Elderly, 1974-1 981. Masako Ishii-Kuntz, Uni- versity of California-Riverside; Karen Seccombe, University of Florida

7. lssues in the Political Economy of Aging: Conservatism and Policy Toward the Aged in the U.S., 1978-

1989. Kenneth Branco, Boston College; Lawrence Powell, Purdue University; John Williamson, Boston College

Social Security Reform: The Need for a Responsive Correlated Approach. Terri Maciolek, Glassboro State College

8. The Relevance of Chronic Illness in the Everyday Lives of Elderly Women. Linda Uska Belgrave, Case Western Reserve University

9. Can We Use the General Social Survey for Longiludinal Research in Aging? Charles Russell

10. Oral Histories in Teaching Gerontology. Georgeanna Tryban, Indiana State University; Bradley Fisher, Southwest Missouri State University

1 1. Yanks vs. Brits: American Compared with f nglish Retirement Homes. Charles Hawkins, Central Washington University

12. Learning the Meaning of Caregiver Burden and Social Sup- port. Jaber Gubrium, University of Florida

13. Case Studies in Ordinary Aging. John R. Kelly, University of Illinois; Sharon R. Kaufman, University of California-San Francisco

14. The Social Context of Self Transformation in Alzheimer's Disease. Dale Jaffe and Christopher Wellin, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

290. Section on Sociology of Culture. The Sociology of Dreams

Continental Parlor 7, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Gary Alan Fine, University of Minnesota The New Dreamwork Movement as Science and Ideology. G.

William Domhoft, University of California-Santa Crut Portent or Confession: Authoritative Readings of a Dream Text.

Robin Wagner-Pacifici, Swarthmore College; Harold J. Ber- shady, University of Pennsylvania

Sex, Sacredness and Structure: Contributions from Freud, Durk- heim, and Levi-Strauss to the Analysis of Collective Dreams. Heinz-Gunter Vester, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univers'ht Mun- chen

The Reality of Dreaming. Eugene Rochberg-Halton, Notre Dame University

Siblings' Dreams and Fantasies Aboul Their Disabled Sisters and Brothers. Delores Wunder, Wienberg University

291. Section on Theoretical Sociology. Differences, Levels, and Boundaries: lssues in Contemporary Theory

Continental Parlor 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Elizabeth Long, Rice University Feminism, Conservatism, and "Deceptive Distinctions" in Gender

and Race. Janet Zdlinger Giele, Brandeis University Transforming the Interaction Order. Paul Colomy and J. David

Brown, University of Denver Pierce, Mean and the internal Conversation. Norbert Wiley, Uni-

versity of Illinois George Herbert Mead and Wissenssoziologie: A Reexamination.

E. Doyle McCarlhy, Fordham University

Sunday, 1:30 p.mm 1:30 p.m. Meetings Section on Political Economy of the World System (to 2:20 p.m.)-

Imperial B, Ballroom Level

1 :30 D.m. Sessions 292. Section on Undergraduate Education. Award Presenta-

tion

Sausalito, 4th Floor (to 220 p.m.) Organizers: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community Col-

lege; Al Chabot, Macomb Community College; Norman Dolch, Louisiana State University-Shreveport; Dean Dorn, California State University; Joy Reeves, Stephen F. Austin State University

Presider: Caroline Hodges Persell, Chair, Section on Undergrad- uate Education

1988 Hans 0. Mauksch Presentation: Sociologisls' Discourse on Students: An Impressionistic Analysis.

Dean Dorn, California State University-Sacramento 1989 Hans 0. Mauksch Award

1989-90 Council (to 6:20 p.m.)-Yosemite 8, Ballroom Level Section on Sociology of Culture Business Meeting (to 230 p.m.]-

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

2:30 p.m. Sessions 293. Minority Labor Markets

Continental Parlor 3, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Jose A. Cobas, Arizona State University Applying for Working Class Jobs in the 1 980s. DavidL. Torres and

Samm MacMurdo, University of Arizona Industrial Change and Racial Differences in Joblessness in the

Central City. Thomas S. Moore, University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee; Aaron Laramore, Lawrence University

Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Effects of Ethnic Market Size and Isolated Labor Pool. M.D.R. Evans, Australian National University

The Ethnic Economy: Cubans and Chinese Reconsidered. Su- zanne Model, University of Massachuselts-AmhersI

Demand Factors in Entrepreneurship. lvan Light and Carolyn Rosenstein, University of California-Los Angeles

294. States, Legal Culture, and Social Change

Continental Parlor 7, Ballroom Level

Organizer: Terence C. Halliday, American Bar Foundalion and University of Chicago

Presider: To be announced Authoritarian States, Judicial Resistance and Legal Theory: Nazi

Germany, Argentina, and Brazil. Mark J. Osiel, Harvard University

Legal Change and organizational Governance: The Expansion of State Legal Culture. Lauren Edelman, University of Wisconsin

Criminal Law, State, and Society: Reactions b Crises and Soci- olegal Change. Joachim J. Savelsberg, Kriminologisches Forschunginstitut Niedersachsen, West Germany

American Pluralism, Equality, Religion, and the State. Gloria Beck- ley and Paul Burstein, University of Washington

Discussion: Derek Sayer, University of Alberta

295. Political Economy of the World System

Continental Parlor 1, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Harriet Friedmann, University of Toronto Margins of 1 heory and Theory of Margins: Underexplored Territo-

ries of the World System. Cynthia Buckley, Niluferlsvan, and Akos Rona-Tas, University of Michigan

Trade Dependence in the World-System. Ronan Van Rossem, Columbia University

The World-Historical Origins of the Agrarian Question: The Case of Iran. Farshad A. Araghi, University of Georgia

Dominant Classes and State-Making in a Peripheral Area: Argen- iina After Independence. Karl Monsma, University of Michigan

Discussion: Philip McMichael, Cornell University

296. Section on Sociology of Aging. Educational Opportuni- ties and the Aging Individual

Continental Parlor 2, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Charles E. Bidwell, University of Chicago Education, Social Participation, and Social Policy. Macrina K.

Abenoja, University of Hawaii The Sociology of Educational Late Blooming. Jack Levin, Nor-

theastern University; William C. Levin, Bridgewater State College

Health Education andthe Rural Elderly. Philip Olson, University of Missouri-Kansas City

Employment and Educational Experiences After High School. Aaron M. Pallas and Gary Natriello, Columbia University; Edward McDill, Johns Hopkins University

Discussion: Niall Bolger, University of Michigan

297. Section on Theoretical Sociology. Social Theory Beyond the Academy: Intellectuals and Politics II

Continental Parlor 8, Ballroom Level

Organizer and Presider: Charles Lemert, Wesleyan University Intellectuals, Knowledge, and Power. lvan Szelenyi, University of

California-Los Angeles The Hole in the Paper Tiger. Dorothy E. Smith, Ontario Institute for

Studies of Education Political Intellectuals in the Third World: The Caribbean Case.

Alex Dupuy, Wesleyan University From Sartre to Saint Simon: French tntellecluals. George Ross,

Brandeis University Discussion: Jerome Karabel, University of California-Berkeley

298. Section on Undergraduate Educatlon. Undergraduate Educatlon in Sociology: Innovation and Insights

Sausalito, 4th Floor

Organizers: Stephen F. Steele, Anne Arundel Community Col- lege; A1 Chabot, Macomb Community College; Norman Dolch, Louisiana State University-Shreveport; Dean Dorn, California State University; Joy Reeves, Stephen F. Austin State University

(continued on next page)

Sunday, 2:30 p.m- Session 298, continued Presider: Norm Dolch, Louisiana State University-Shreveport Critical 1 hinking in Introductory Sociology Classes: A Program of

Implementation and Evaluation. Norma J. Shepelak and Anita Curry-Jackson, Wright State University

Using Humor to Analyze Behavior and Teach Sociology. Joseph E. Faulkner, Pennsylvania State University

What Should Introductory Sociology Students be Taught About Sociological Practice? Josephine A. Ruggiero, Providence College; Louise C. Weston, Environmental Strategies, Inc.

Explaining the Effects of Class Attendance on Undergraduate Academic Performance. Charles S. Warren and Tim F. Liao, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

3:30 p.m. Sessions 299. Section on Sociology of Culture. Refereed Round tables

Imperial A, Ballroom Level

(to 4:20 p.m+) Organizer: Gary Alan Fine, University of Minnesola 1. Women and Culture: Reimagining Older Womanhood: An Analysis of Popular Late-Life

American Films of the 1930s and 1970s/80s. Andrea Walsh, Radcliie College

Takarazuka, The Mound of Treasures: A Study of an All-Female Theater in Japan. Takeshi Ken Matsuda, University of Mas- sachusetts

"Before and Afters": Television's Treatment of the Boom in Cos- metic Surgery. Diana Dull, University of California-Santa . Cruz

Terms of Enmeshment: Mothers and Daughters in Popular Cul- ture. Suzanna Walters, City Universityof New York-Graduate Center

2. Culture and Place: Tied to the Land: The Interaction of Popular and Folk Elements in

Regionally Based Music. George H. Lewis, University of the Pacific

Beyond the Concrete: The Cultural Dimensions of a Freeway Revolt. Hannah Kully, University of California-Los Angeles

National Character and Literary Prize Winners: A Comparison of Canada and the United States. Sarah M. Corse, Stanford University

Industry, Audience, Text. Lisa M. Heilbronn 3. Family Culture: The Social Misconstruction of the American Family. Paul Koois-

tra, Furman University Violent Families and the Rhetoric of Harmony. Leslie J. Miller,

University of Calgary 4. The Social Construction of Cultural Problems: Claims-Making, Quasi-Theories, and the Social Construction of

the Rock and Roll Menace. Stephen L. Markwn, University of Hartford

Commotion and Routine: Claims-Making at Local Television Sta- tions. Joanne LaBonte, Northwestern University

5, Culture and Identity: Returning Home: An Empirical Investigation of Cross-Cultural

Re-Entry. Sarah Brabant and C. Eddie Palmer, University of Southwestern Louisiana

Paradoxical Aspects of Job Interviewing. Lewis Freeman, Colum- bia University

Surveillance: Japan's Sustaining Principle. Todd Holden, Tohoku University

6. Problems in the Study of Art:

Explaining Skewed Distributions of Cultural Activity: The Case of Repertory Organization in Concert Music. Samuel Gilmore, University of California-twine

A Sum of Singular Effects: Notes on the Exhibition of Video Art. Suellen Butler, Dublin, OH

7. Studies in the Moral Order: Moral Order in America. Robert Bell, Georgetown University Dreams of Freedom and Commitment: Interviews with Young

Professionals. Arlene Stein, University of California-Berkeley 8. Studies of Group Cultures: The Culture in a Therapeutic Community: An Alternative Reality in

a Refracted Symbolic University. Juniper Wiley, University of California-Los Angeles

The Cultureof the Racetrack. Carole Case, Universityof Connecti- cut

Comedy Within a Comedy: The Social Functions of Humor in a Community Theater Group. Sandra L. Boyd, University of Southern California

9. Sociology of Dance: Simmel and Power in a Dyadic Relationship: Illustrations from a

Dance Work. Valerie Malhotra Bentz, Texas Woman's University '

The Sociology of Dance: Creativity as Organizational Behavior. Randy Martin. State University of New York-Purchase

10. Modernity and Politics: Culture as Class Symbolization or Mass Reification: A Critique of

Bourdieu's Distinction. David Gartman, University of South Alabama

Revisiting a Gramscian Dilemma: Problems and Possibilities in Bourdieu's Analysis of Culture and Politics. Paul Lichterman, University of California-Berkeley

1 1. Sociology and Literature: Social Transformation and Cultural Transformation: Victorian

Women Novelists. Gaye Tuchman, City University of New York Graduate Center

12. Macro-Micro Concerns in the Sociology of Culture: The Winds of Change: Toward a "Unit" Approach to Culture. John

D. O'Brien, Kent State University and University of Akron Notes on Naturalizing Culture. lwona Irwin-Zarecka, Wilfrid Laur-

ier University You Have Your Lenin, We Have Our Lennon: The Westernization

of Eastern European Youth Culture. Gabriel Bar-Haim, Uni- versite Concordia

13. Hegemony and Social Control of Culture: Rethinking Hegemony: Advertising Trends in h e 1980s. Stephen

Papson, St Lawrence University 14. Culture and Socialization: High-Culture Orientation and the Attitudes and Values of College

Students. John Ryan, Clemson University; Larry DeBord, University of Mississippi

Education and Artists: Changing Palterns in the Training of Pain- ters. Victoria D, Alexander and Sarah M. Corse, Stanford University

15. Consumer Culture and Commodification. Scott Lash, Univer- sity of Lancaster: Richard A. Peterson, VanderbiA University

77 Monday, 8:30 a,ml

Monday, August 14 8:30 a.m. Meetings 1989-90 Council (to 5:30 p.m.)-Yosemite B, Ballroom Level

Members of the 1989 Council Officers of the Association

Joan Huber, President, Ohio State University William Julius Wilson, President-Elect, University of Glen H. Elder, Jr., Vice-president, University of North Chicago

Carolina, Chapel Hill Edna Bonacich, Vice President-Elect, University of Cali- Michael Alken, Secretary, University of Pennsylvania fornia, Riverside Herbert J. Gans, Past President, Columbia University Beth B. Hess, Secretary-Elect, County College of Morris, Richard J. Hill, Past Vice-president, University of Oregon New Jersey

William V. D'Antonio, Executive Offcer

Elected-at-Large

Robert R. Alford, City University of New York Graduate Troy Duster, University of California, Berkeley Center Richard H. Hall, State University of New York, Albany

lvar Berg, University of Pennsylvania Joseph S. Hlmes, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Judith R. Blau, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Joanne Miller, City University of New York Richard T. Campbell, University of Illinois, Chicago Jill Quadagno, Florida State University Randall Collins, University of California, Riverside Nancy B. Tuma, Stanford University Lois DeFleur, University of Missouri, Columbia

Members of the 1990 Council Officers of the Association

William Julius Wilson, President, University of Chicago Stanley Lieberson, President-Elect, Harvard University Edna Bonacich, Vice-president, University of California, and University of California, Berkeley

Riverside Barbara Reskin, Vice President-Elect, University of Illi- Beth 6. Hess, Secretary, County College of Morris, NJ nois, Urbana Joan Huber, Past President, Ohio State University William V. D'Antonio, Executive Officer Glen H. Elder, Jr., Past Vice-President, University of North

Carolina, Chapel Hill

Elected-at-Large

Robert R. Alford, City University of New York Graduate Randall Collins, University of California, Riverside Center Lois DeFleur, University of Missouri, Columbia

Wendy Baldwin, National Institute of Child Health and Troy Duster, University of California, Berkeley Human Development, NIH Jill Quadagno, Florida State University

lvar Berg, University of Pennsylvania Richard W. Scott, Stanford University James E. Blackwell, University of Massachusetts, Boston Nancy 6. Tuma, Stanford University Richard T. Campbell, University of Illinois, Chicago Franklin D. Wilson, University of Wisconsin, Madison

1989 Committees and Representatives of the American Sociological Association

Constitutional Committees

COMMITTEE ON COMMITTEES

Standing Committees (CL=Council Liaison)

Chaic Jennie J. Kronenfeld ASAlAAAS LIAISON COMMriTEE Rhoda Lois Blumberg, Doris R. Entwisle, Evelyn N. Glenn, Wendy Chair: John ,,, Kasarda Griswold, Sara S. McLanahan, Ruth Ma Milkman, S. M. Miller, Mark Abrahamson, James Samuel W. Bloom, Charles E, Patricia A. Roos, Rachel A. Rosenfeld, Joseph W. Scott Bidwell, Eugene P. Ericksen, Nancy Howell, Phyllis Moen, Willie

COMMIlTEE ON THE EXECUTIVE OFFICE AND BUDGET Pearson, Jr., James J. Zuiches

Chair: Michael Aiken COMMITTEE FOR THE AWARD FOR A DlSTlNGUlSHED Reynolds Farley, Herbert J. Gans, Beth B. Hess, Joan Huber, W. Richard Scott, Marta Tienda, William Julius Wilson Chair: Garv A. Fine

COMMITTEE ON MEMBERSHIP Chair: Judith Levy Michael Aiken, Earl Babbie, H. Paul Chalfant, Janet Hankin, Beth 6. Hess, Donald P. Irish, Joyce A. lutcovich, Kathleen Piker King, Lorna Lueker, f rudie Milner, Joy Reeves, Terrence Russell, Stephen F. Steele

COMMllTEE ON NOMINATIONS Chaic Glen H. Elder, Jr. Patricia Hill Collins, Paula England, Kalrina W. Johnson, Judith Lorber, Karen Oppenheim Mason, Robert Perrucci, Roberta Simmons, Lynn Smith-Lovin, Cookie White Stephan, Michael Useem, Linda J. Waite, Julia Wrigley

1989 PROGRAM COMMllTEE Chair: Joan Huber Michael Aiken, Jeffrey C. Alexander, Donna J. Eder, Glen H. Elder, Jr., John 1. Hagan, Elizabeth Long, Victor G. Nee, Samuel H. Preston, Beth E. Schneider, A. Wade Smith

1990 PROGRAM COMMITTEE Chair: William Julius Wilson Michael Aiken, Jeffrey Alexander, Margaret Andersen, Edna Bonacich, Wendy Griswold, Beth 6. Hess, Dennis P. Hogan, Michael Hout, Walter W. Powell, Theda Skocpol, A. Wade Smith

COMMITTEE ON PUBLICATIONS Chair: Caroline H. Persell Michael Aiken, Clifford C. Clogg, Karen S. Cook, Robefl Dentler, Paul J. DiMaggio, William H. Form, Mary Frank Fox, Eugene B. Gallagher, Maureen Hallinan, Joan Huber, David Mechanic, Jeylan T. Mortimer, Howard Schuman, Ida Harper Simpson, Teresa A. Sullivan, Theodore C. Wagenaar, Philip Wexler, Norbert Wiley, Mary K. Zirnmerrnan

Janet S. ~hafetz, Elizabeth S. Higginbotham, Lyn H. Lofland, Helena Lopata, Walter W. Powell, Charles R. Tittle, John Useem, Wayne J. Villemez

COMMITTEE ON AWARDS POLICY Chaic William J. Chamliss E. Elaine Burgess, Joseph S. Himes (CL), Janet G. Hunt, Nancy B. Tuma

CAREER OF DISTINGUISHED SCHOLARSHIP AWARD SELECTION COMMllTEE Chaic Ralph H. Turner Phillip F. Bonacich, Esther Ngan-ling Chow, Reynolds Farley, David L. Featherman, Joseph J. Galaskiewicz, Lewis M. Killian, Karen 0. Mason, Judith Treas, Irving M. Zeitlin

COMMllTEE ON CERTIFICATION IN DEMOGRAPHY Chaic Dudley L. Poston Wendy H. Baldwin, Gordon F. DeJong, Robert Schoen, Linda J. Waite

COMMllTEE ON CERTIFICATION IN LAW AND SOCIAL CONTROL Chair: John P. Clark Peggy C. Giordano, Pamela Richards, Mark C. Stafford, Patricia E. White

COMMITFEE ON CERTIFICATION IN MEDICAL SOClOLOGY Chair: Judith K. Barr Gail Lee Cafferata, Rosalind Dworkin, Clyde R. Pope, Fredric D. Wolinsky

COMMITTEE ON CERTIFICATION IN ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS Chair: Joseph P. Morrissey Mary L. Fennell, Richard H. Hall, Arne L. Kalleberg

COMMIHEE ON CERTIFICATION IN SOCIAL POLICY AND EVALUATION RESEARCH Chair; James D. Wright M. Elizabeth Darrough, Stephen A. Hart, Harry Perlstadt

COMMITTEE ON CERTIFICATION IN SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Chair: Gordon J. DiRenzo Carmi Schooler, Joseph C. Ventimiglia

COMMITTEE ON DISSERTATION AWARDS Chair: Alan M. Sica Lewis A. Coser, Anne Foner, Ronald Kessler, Joseph Schwartz, Bruce B. Williams

DISTINGUISHED CAREER AWARD FOR THE PRACTICE OF SOCIOLOGY Chaic Katrina W. Johnson Manuel De La Puente, Carrol L. Ester, Joyce A. Ladner, Ronald W. Manderscheid, Linda J. Waite

DISTINGUISHED CONTRIBUTIONS TO TEACHING AWARD SELECT ION COMMllTEE Chair: Theodore C. Wagenaar Delores P. Aldridge, Paul J. Baker, Michael S. Bassis, Elton F. Jackson, William P. Kuvlesky, Scott G. McNall, Sharon M. McPherron, Alan R. Sadovnik

DUBOIS-JOHNSON-FRAZIER AWARD SELECTION COY MITTEE Chair: Ronald L. Taylor Lawrence Bobo, Russell K. Endo, James A. Geschwender, Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Carole C. Marks, Judith Rollins, Marylee C. Taylor

COMMITTEE ON EMPLOYMENT Chaic Thomas Lyson Joyce Rothschild, Julia Wrigley

COMMITTEE ON FREEDOM OF RESEARCH AND TE4CHING Co-Chairs: Catherine W. Berheide and Richard J. Gelles Edna Bonacich, Rose M. Brewer, Carol A. Brown, Francesca M. Cancian, Wolf V. Heydebrand, Richard J. Hill, Joan Huber, Paul T. Murray, Karen K. Petersen, Rita J. Simon

JESSIE BERNARD AWARD SELECTION COMMrrrEE Chair: Lorraine Mayfield-Brown Paul Burstein, Noel A. Cazenave, Bonnie Thornton Dill, Nona Y Glazer, Phyllis Moen, Joan W. Moore, Diana H. Scully

COMMITTEE ON MASTER'S LEVEL CERTIFICATION PROGRAM Chair: Herbert L. Costner Ronald Czaja, George Farkas, John Peter Fernandez, Michael Malec, David 8. McMillen, Allen Orenstein, Russell K. Schutt, C. Matthew Snipp, David Wellman

COMMITTEE ON THE MINORITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM Chair: Walter L. Davis Ann Hill Beuf, Richard T. Campbell (CL), Lynn Weber Cannon, Cecile E. Harrison, Deborah Karyn King, Ross L. Matsueda, Silvia Pedraza-Bailey, Clara E Rodriguez, Susan R. Takata

COMMflTEE ON NATIONAL STATISTICS Chair: William T. Trent Cheryl Leggon, Charles B. Nam, A. Wade Smith, C. Matthew Snipp, Daphne G. Spain

OVERSIGHT CERTIFICATION COMMllTEE Chair: John P. Clark Judith K. Barr, Herbert L. Costner, Gordon J. DiRenzo, Richard H. Hall (CL), Joseph P. Morrissey, Dudley Poston, James D. Wright

COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL ETHICS Chair: Barbara Walters Altizer J. Michael Armer, John P. Fernandez, Kathleen Gerson, Darnell F. Hawkins, Susan E. Martin, Joanne Miller (CL), Eileen Geil Moran, Mary Lou Wylie

COMMflTEE ON PUBLIC INFORMATION Chair: Suzanne K. Steinmetz Judith R. Blau (CL), Muriel G. Cantor, Fredrick Koenig, Richard D. Moran, Chandra Mukerji, Laurel Walum Richardson. Michael S. Schudson, Rosalyn W. Weinman

COMMITTEE ON REGULATION OF RESEARCH Chair: William T. Liu Robert R. Alford (CL), Sylvia Clavan, Mary Frank Fox, Linda M. Grant, Dennis P. Hogan, Gary D. Sandefur

COMMllTEE ON SECTIONS Chair: Walda Katz Fishman Jeanne H. Ballantine (Chair, Section Board), Joseph W. Elder, Charles C. Lemert, Joanne Miller (CL)

COMMITEEON SOCIETY AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES Chair: R. Greg Emerton Barbara M. Altman, Mary Jo Deegan, Frederic W. Hafferty, Yeheskel Hasenfeld, Richard K. Scotch, Thomas E. Smith

COMMllTEE ON SOCIOLOGICAL PRACTICE Chaic Jeffrey G. Reitz Judith K. Barr, lvar Berg (CL), Elizabeth J. Clark, Stanley S. Clawar, Joseph F. DeMartini, Jan M. Fritz (Ex Officio, Past Section Chair), Albert E. Gollin, Corinne E. Kirchner, Peyton R. Mason, Novella Perrin

COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF HOMOSEXUALS IN SOCIOLOGY Chair: Nancy S. Shaw Judith R. Blau (CL), John H. Gagnon, Martin P. Levine, Pepper J. Schwartz, Shirley Scritchfield, Martin S. Weinberg

COMMllTEE ON THE STATUS OF RACIAL AND ETHNIC MlNORl'rlES IN SOCIOLOGY Chaic John H. Stanfield Rhoda Lois Blurnberg, Florence B. Bonner, Duane W. Cham- pagne, Julius Debro, Troy Duster (CL), Roberto M. Fernandez, Mareyjoyce Green, Martin Sanchez-Jankowski, C. Matthew Snipp

COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN IN SOCIOLOGY Chair: Gwendolyn L. Lewis Margaret Andersen, Leonard Beeghley, Lois B. DeFleur (CL), Helen R. Ebaugh, K. Sue Jewell, Dentse A. Segura

COMMITTEE ON TEACHING Chair: Albert E. Chabot Earl R. Babbie, J. Michael Brooks (Field Coordinator), Richard T. Campbell (CL), Robert Davis, Dean Dorn (Ex Officio), Lauri L. Perman (Ex Officio, Section Rep), William C. Rau, Peter J. Stein, Theodore Wagenaar (Ex Officio), Vinetta G. Win

COMMITTEE ON WORLD SOCIOLOGY Chaic Craig J. Calhoun Janet L. Abu-Loghod, Judith Buber Agassi, Sarah C. Brabant, Lucie Cheng, Randell Collins (CL), Gary Gereffi, Pamela A. Roby, David C. Stark, Vera L. Zolberg

Ad Hoc Committees

ANNUAL MEETING CHILD CARE REVIEW COMMllTEE Chaic Beth B. Hess Richard T. Campbell, Carla Howery, Joanne Miller, Jen Suter

COMMITTEE FOR RESEARCH ON THE PROFESSION Chaic Joseph Conaty William V. D'Antonio. Rita Kirshstein, Terrence Russell

ELECTRONIC SOCIOLOGICAL NETWORK COMMllTEE Chair: Don Ploch Joan McCord, Russell K. Schutt

EVALUATION COMMllTEE ON THE CERTIFICATION PROGRAM Chaic Roberl R. Alford Richard H. Hall, Richard J. Hill

EVALUATION COMMllTEE ON THE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM Chaic Richard H. Hall lvar Berg, Katrina Johnson, Marvin Olsen, Arthur Shostak, Ronnie Steinberg

COMMllTEE ON FEDERAL STANDARDS FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF SOCIOLOGISTS Chaic Howard lams Frank Fratoe, Judith D. Miller, Manuel de la Puente, Sara Rix, Karen A. Schwab, Larry E. Suter

COMMITTEE ON THE MINORITV PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM Chair: Charles V. Willie Margaret L. Andersen, James E. Blackwell, Charles M. Bonjean, Marion T. Coleman, Y. H. Lo, Lionel A. Maldonado (MFP Director), Caroie C. Marks, Cora Marrett, Lloyd H. Rogler, William H. Sewell, Howard F. Taylor

COMMllTEE ON PROFESSIONAL STAFF APPOINTMENTS Chair: Reynolds Farley Coralie Farlee, Melvin L. Kohn

COMMITTEE ON REPRESENTATIVENESS IN ASA GOVERNANCE Chaic Richard J. Hill Lois B. DeFleur, Troy Duster, Glen H. Elder, Jr., Albert E. Gollin

TASK FORCE ON PARTICIPATION Co-Chairs: Ann S. Sundgren and Lynne E. Lonnquist

Council Subcommittees

COMMllTEE ON ANNUAL MEFTING SESSION FORMAT Chaic Richard T. Campbell Lois 6. DeFleur, Jill S. Quadagno

COMMITTEE ON EXCHANGES WlTH FOREIGN SOClOLoGlsrS Chair: Glen H. Elder, Jr. Louis Goodman, Melvin L. Kohn

COMMITTEE ON PROBLEMS OF THE DISCIPLINE Chaic Richard H. Hall Robert Althauser (NSSF), Phyllis Moen (NSF), Randall Collins, Glen H. Elder, Jr., Herbert J. Gans, Jill S. Quadagno

COMMllTEE ON WARREN WEAVER FELLOWS PROGRAM Chaic Jill Quadagno Troy Duster, Glen H. Elder, Jr., William Julius Wilson

COMMITTEE TO WRITE A GRANT PROPOSAL FOR TEACHER-SCHOLAR SABBATICALS Chair John F. Schnabel Paul J. Baker, Hubert M. Blalock, Hans 0. Mauksch, Ann S. Sundgren, Theodore C. Wagenaar

Official Representatives

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE Section K: John D. Kasarda Section Q: Charles E. Bidwell Section U: Eugene P. Ericksen

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SLAVIC STUDIES Louise I. Shelley

AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LEARNED STUDIES Kai T. Erikson

COMMITTEE ON PROBLEMS OF DRUG DEPENDENCE (to be named)

COUNCIL OF PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS ON FEDERAL STATISTICS Diana M. Pearce, Robert Parke

INTERNATIONAL SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIAflON Melvin L. Kohn, Bennetta Jules-Rosette (alternate)

JOURNAL OF CONSUMER RESEARCH POUCY BOARD Clint Sanders

SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL Richard E. Berk

1989 Membership Area Representatives ALABAMA, ARKANSAS, LOUISIANA, MISSISSIPPI, TENNESSEE Donna Darden, Department of Sociology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701

ALASKA, HAWAII, IDAHO, MONTANA, NEVADA, OREGON, WASHINGTON, WYOMING Gary D. Hampe, Box 3293, University Station, Department of Sociology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071

ARIZONA, COLORADO, NEW MEXICO, UTAH John R. Brouillette, Department of Sociology, Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, CO 80523

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA Laura E. Nathan, Department of Social Sciences, Mills College, 5000 MacArthur, Oakland CA 9461 7

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA-Area A Roberta Lessor, Department of Sociology, Chapman College, Orange, CA 92666

MASSACHUSElTS Walter F. Carroll, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater, MA 02324

MICHIGAN Robert J. Thaler, Department of Sociology, Brown Hall, Saginaw Valley State College, University Center, MI 4871 0

MINNESOTA, NORTH AND SOOT H DAKOTA, WISCONSIN Frederic W. Hafferty, Department of Behavioral Science, School of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN 5581 2

NEW YORKIMEtRO AREA A Ruth Rubinstein, 280 9th Avenue, New York, NY 10001

NEW YORKIMETRO AREA B Harold Takooshian, Social Science Division, Fordham University, New York, NY 10023

NEW YORKIUPSTATE Beth Vanfossen, 303 San Gabriel Drive, Rochester, NY 1461 0

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA-Area B NORTH CAROLINA, SOUTH CAROLINA Laura E. Nathan, Department of Social Sciences, Mills College, Chris Sieverdes, Department of Sociology, Clemson University, 5000 MacArthur, Oakland CA 9461 7 Clemson, SC 29646

CONNECTlCUT, MAINE, NEW HAMPSHIRE, RHODE ISLAND, OHIO VERMONT Margaret Brooks Terry, Depariment of Sociology, Balwin Wallace Stephen Marks, Department of Sociology, University of Maine, College, Berea, OH 44017 Orono, ME 04469

OKLAHOMA, T EXAS DELAWARE, NEW JERSEY J. Steven Picou, Chair, Department of Sociology and Anthro- Razelle Frankl, 536 Moreno Road, Wynnewood, PA 19096 pology, University of South Alabama, BMSB#8, Mobile, AL36688

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PENNSYLVANIA Donald L. Redfoot, American Association of Retired Persons, Roger T. Wolcott, Sociology Department, Wesminister College, 1909 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20049 New Wilmington, PA 161 72

FLORIDA, GEORGIA VIRGINIA, WEST VIRGINIA Barbara Karcher, 410 Arbor Trail, Marietta, GA 30067 Greg Weiss, Department of Sociology, Roanoke Collegee, Salem,

VA 241 53 ILLINOIS Emily Dunn Dale, Deparlment of Sociology, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, FL 61 701

INDIANA, KENTUCKY James G. Hougland, Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40506-0027

IOWA, KANSAS, MISSOURI, NEBRASKA David Brinkerhoff, Department of Sociology, University of Neb- raska, Lincoln, NE 68588-0324

MARYLAND Curt Raney, Department of Sociology, St. Maly's College, St. Mary's City, MD 20666

State Licensing Monitors ALABAMA: William D. Lawson, Chair, Department of Sociology and Social Work, Alabama State University, Montgomery, AL 361 95

ARIZONA: Florence Karlstrom, Department of Sociology, Box 15300, Northern Arizona Stale University, Flagstaff, AZ 8601 1

ARKANSAS: Joan S. Miller, Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts, University of Arkansas, 33rd and University, Little Rock, AR 72201

CALIFORNIA: Lucy W. Sells, Vice President for Legislation, California Women in Higher Education, 1181 Euclid Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94708

NORTH CAROLINA: Nelson Reid, Department of Sociology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27650

NORTH DAKOTA: Thomas McDonald, Department of Sociology &Anthropology, North Dakota State University, Fargo, NO 581 05

OHIO: Jay L. Gibson, 563 Howell Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45220

OKLAHOMA: Howard A. Kuht, Department of Sociology, Okla- homa City University, Northwest 23rd at North Blackwelder, Oklahoma City, OK 731 06

SOUTH CAROLINA; Charles W. Tucker, Deparlment of Socio- logy, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208

CONNECTICUT: Judith 8. Gordon, Gerontology Program, 300 SOUTH DAKOTA: Jerry Rosonke, Faculty of Social and Natural Orange Avenue, University of New Haven, West Haven, CT06516 Science, Northern State College, Aberdeen, SD 57401

DELAWARE: Gordon J. DiRenzo, Department of Sociology, TENNESSEE: Richard K. Thomas, Baptist Memorial Health Care University of Delaware, Newark, DE 1971 6 Systems Inc., 898 Madison Avenue, Memphis, TN 381 46

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Glenn H. Carlson; Kennedy, Carlson &Warren, P.C., Suite 209,2600VirginiaAvenue NW, Washington, DC 20037

FLORIDA: Michael Capece, Suite 403, 1321 U.S. 19th South, Clearwater, FL 33546

ILLINOIS: William M. Cross, Department of Sociology, Illinois College, Jacksonville, IL 62650

IOWA: R. Dean Wright, Department of Sociology, Drake Univer- sity, Des Moines, 10 5031 1

LOUISIANA: Robert 8. Gramling, Department of Sociology 8 Anthropology, University of Southwestern Louisiana, PO Box 401 98, Lafayette, LA 70504

MASSACHUSETTS: Richard P. Devine, 143 Ricketson Street, New Bedford, MA 02744

MAINE: P. David Vachon, 7A Lewis Street, Portland ME 02744

MICHIGAN: Ann G. Olmsted, Office of Medical Education Re- search and Development, Michigan State University, Fee Hall, East Lansing, MI 48824

MINNESOTA: Roy Cook, Department of Sociology, Mankato State University, Mankato, MN 56001

NEBRASKA: John Cullen, Department of Management College of Business Administration, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68588

TEXAS: Clifford M. Black, Department of Sociology and Anthro- pology, North Texas State University, Denton, TX 76203

VERMONT: R.S. Steffenhagen, Department of Sociology, Univer- sity of Vermont, 31 South Prospect Street, Burlington, VT 05405

VIRGINIA: Barbara W. Berry, PO Box 12758, Norfolk, VA 23502

WASHINGTON: Larry A. Jones, 1621 4th Avenue, North, Seattle, WA 981 09

WISCONSIN: Robert Bendiksen, Department of Sociology, Uni- versity of Wisconsin, Lacrosse, WI 54601

NEW YORK: Joseph V. Scelsa, 1806 Hering Avenue, Bronx, NY 10461

Editors of ASA Publications American Sociological Review: William H. Form (1987-89), Deparlment of Sociology, The Ohio Stale University, 300 Bricker Hall, 1 90 North Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 4321 0; Editor Designate: Gerald Marwell (1 990-92), Department of Sociology, Universityof Wisconsin, I 180 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706

Contemporary Sociology: Ida Harper Simpson (1 987-91 ), De- partment of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27706

Footnotes: William V . D'Anlonio (1982-91), American Socio- logical Association, 1722 N Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036

Journal of Health & Social Behavior: Eugene Gallagher (1 985- 89), Department of Behavioral Science, University of Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington, KY 40536-0086; Editor Designate: Mary Fennell (1 990-92), Department of Sociology/lnstitute for Policy Research and Evaluation, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802

Rose Monograph Series: Teresa A. Sullivan (1 988-go), Depart- ment of Sociology, University of Texas, Burdine Hall 436, Austin, TX 7871 2

Sociological Practice Review: Robert A. Dentler (1 989-92), 11 Childs Road, Lexington. MA 021 73

Sociological Methodology: Clifford C. Clogg (1 986-90), Depart- ment of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park,

Sociological Theory: Norbert Wiley (1 986-89), Department of Sociology, 326 Lincoln Hall, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61 801; Editor Designate: Alan M. Sica (1 990-92), Depatvnent of Sociology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045

Sociology of Education: Philip Wexler (1987-91), Graduate School of Education, 309 Lattimore Hall, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14627

Teachlng Sociology: Theodore C. Wagenaar (1 986-90), Depart- ment of Sociology, Miami University, 345 Hoyt, Oxford, OH 45056; Editor Designate: Dean S. Dorn (1 991 -93), Department of Socio- logy, California State University, 6000 Jay Street, Sacramento, CA 9581 9

SociaiPsychology Quarterly: Karen S. Cook (1 988-911, Depart- ment of Sociology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 981 95

1989 Section Officers ASIA & ASIAN AMERICA Chair: Susan R. Takata Chair-Elect: William L. Parish Secretary-Treasurer: Morrison Wong

COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Chair: Lewis M. Killian Chair-Elect: Carol M. Mueller Secretary-Treasurer: Clarence Y. H. Lo

COMMUNITY AND URBAN SOClOLOGY Chaic Gerald D. Sultles Chair-Elect: Claude S. Fischer Secretary-Treasurec Harvey M. Choldin

COMPARATIVE AND HISTORICAL SOCIOLOGY Chair: Jill S. Quadagno Chair-Elect: Barbara Laslett Secretary-Treasurec Said Amir Arjomand

CRIME, LAW, AND DEVIANCE Co-Chairs: Herman Schwendinger, Neal Shover Chair-Elect: Joan McCord Secretary-Treasurer Marvin Krohn

ENVIRONMENT AND TECHNOLOGY Chair Frederick Bmel Chair-Elect: William R. Freudenburg Secretary-Treasurec J. Stanley Black

MARXIST SOCIOLOGY Chaic Martin J. Murray Chair-Elect: Rhonda F. Levine Secretary-Treasurer: Donald A. Clelland

MEDEAL SOCIOLOGY Chair Peter F. Conrad Chair-Elect: Marie Haug Secretary-Treasurer: Jennie J. Kronenfeld Secretary-Treasurer-Elect: Fredric Wolinsky

METHODOLOGY Chair: Richard A. Berk Secretary-Treasurec Ronald L. Breiger

MICROCOMPUTING Acting Chaic Ronald E. Anderson

ORGANIZATIONS & OCCUPATIONS Chair: lvar Berg Chair-Elect: Arne L. Kalleberg Secretary-Treasurec Paul J. DiMaggio

POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE WORLD-SYSTEM Chair: John-T. Walton Chair-Elect: Harriet Friedmann Secretary-Treasurer: Joan Smith

POLITICAL SOCIOLOGY Chair: Richard Ftacks Chair-Elect: Susan Eckstein Secretary-Treasurec Richard E. Ratcliff

RACtAL & ETHNIC MINORITIES Chair: Mareyjoyce Green Chair-Elect: Rodolfo Alvarez Secretary-Treasurer Deborah K. King

SCIENCE, KNOWLEDGE AND TECHNOLOGY Acting Chair: Henry Etzkowitz

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Chair: Jeylan T. Mortimer Chair-Elect: Karen S. Cook Secretary-Treasurec Murray Webster, Jr.

SOCIOLOGICAL PRACTICE Chair: Elizabeth J. Clark Chair-Elect: Arthur B. Shostak Secretary-Treasurec Terrence R. Russell

SOCIOLOGY OF AGING Chair: Judith K. Treas Chair-Elect: Matilda White Riley Secretary-Treasurec Ronald P. Abeles

SOCIOLOGY OF CULTURE Chair: Vera L. Zolberg Chair-Elect: Gary Alan Fine Secretary-Treasurec Judith H. Balfe

SOCIOLOGY OF EDUCATION Chair: Dan C. Lortie Chair-Elect: Richard 6. Rubinson Secretary-Treasurer: Maureen Hallinan

SOCIOLOGY OF EMOTIONS Chair: Arlie Russell Hochschild Chair-Elect: Thomas J. Scheff Secretary-Treasurec Carolyn S. Ellis

SOCIOLOGY OF PEACE AND WAR Chair: Kai T. Erikson Chair-Elect: John Lofland Secretary-Treasurec Mary Anna Colwell

SOCIOLOGY OF POPULATION Chair: Larry H. Long Chair-Elect: Ronald R. Rindfuss Secretary-Treasurer: Margaret Marini

SOCIOLOGY OF THE FAMILY Chair: Alice S. Rossi Chair-Elect: Andrew J. Cherlin Secretary-Treasurer: Marilyn Ihinger-Tallman

THEORETICAL SOClOLOGY Chair: Charles C. Lemert Chair-Elect: George Riber Secretary-Treasurer: Gisela J. Hinkle

UNDEFlGRADUATE EDUCATION Chair: Caroline H. Persell Chair-Elect: Stephen Steele Secretary-Treasurer Lauri L. Perman

SOCIOLOGY OF SEX & GENDER Chair: Margaret L. Andersen Chair-Elect: Christine Bose Secretary-Treasurer: Joan Z. Spade

1989 Regular Session Organizers (Numbers in italics refer to Session numbers; see Body of Program for details)

Atwater, Lynn, Human Sexuality (30) BaHe, Judith Huggins, Sociology of the Atls (1 78) Block, Fred, Empirical Contributions to Economic Sociology (251); Theoretical

Contributions to Economic Sociology (261) Bonnell, Victorla E., National Development (5) Booth, Alan, Parent-ChiM Relations (33); Family Transitions (87) Borman, Kathryn M., Research and Policy lssues in the Sociology of Childhood

and Youth (205); Sociology of Childhood and Youth: A Research Agenda on Adolescent lssues (236)

Brown, Dlane R., Sociology of Black Americans(217); (wlth Yu, f lma), Race, Eihnicity and Health (89)

Chodorow, Nancy J.. Feminist Theory (1 95) Clark, Candace, Research in the Sociology of Emotions (96); Cross-Disciplinary

Contributions to Sociology of Emotions Theory (1 10) cobas, Jose A., Minority Labor Markets (293) Cohen. Jean L., Current Issues in Marxist Analysis (1 79) CoJomy, Paul, Contemporary Sociological Theory I: Micro-Macro Linkages

(225); Contemporary Sociological Theory 11: Rationalization, Differentiation, and Change (240)

Crimmins, Eileen M., Disability (45) Dill, Bonnie Thornton, Race, Class and Gender (129); Race, Class and Gender

11 (157) Erickson, Bonnie H., Social Psychology: Social Structure and Personal

Response (743); Social Psychology: Consensus and Discord (208) Fisher, Sue, Social Interaction (36) Foschl, Martha, Small Group Processes: Interaction, Status, and Affect (6);

Small Group Processes: Power, Exchange, and Equity (35) Fwmler, Marcel. History of Sociology (154); History of Sociology 11 /I671 Fox, Mary Frank, Science: The Social Context (99) Frledrnan, Samuel R., AIDS (125) Frledmann, Harriet, Political Economy of the World System (295) GarHnkel, Harold (wlth Herttage, ~ohn. a d ~immerhan, Don H.), Ethnome-

thodobay: Stnrctures of Practical Action (19); Ethnomethodolwv: Studies in -- ~echni&l Knowledge and Technical praxis (86)

Oartner, Rosemary, Interpersonal Violence (759) Geisler, Chaw, Rural Coping Strategies in Times of Rural Crisis (98) Gillis, AR, Environmental Sociology (262) Glenn. Evelyn Nakeno, The Sociology of Asian Americans (73) Goldfa&, Jettrey C., Sociology of Curture: Institutions and Constraints (151);

Sociology of Culture: Theoretical Problematics (218) Gould, ark, Comparative Historical .Sociology: State and Economy (727);

Comparative Historicai Sociolocr~: The Autonomy of Svstem Levels 11401 - . . . Grant, ~ i d a , Socialization (277)-- Grzelkowskl, Kathryn P., Sociological Practice: FromTheoryto Utilization(60) Gubrium, Jaber F., Biography, Narrative, and Society (150) Hall, John R., Popular Culture: New Q u a l i i e Work (168); Popular Culture:

New Quantitative Work 12501 Haillday, Terence c., states, iegal C*e, and Social Change (294) Hallinan, Msureen, lnbmacy and Friendship (207) Heritage. John (with~arfinkel, Harold, adtirnmmnan.~on H.), Ethorne-

thodolwy: Structures of Practical Action 1191; Ethnomethodolwv: Studies in -. ~echnical Knowledge and Technical praxis (86)

Hernandez, Donald J., Population (97) Horwitz, Robert, Sociology of Mass Communications (31) lannaccone, Leumnce R., Rational Choice T hewy as Applied lo Religion (co-

sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of ReligionJ (21) Jackson, Kenneth W., Education and Society: lssues in Secondary Education

(22); Education and Society: Labor Market Outcomes. Mobility Patterns, and Education (237)

Jiobu, Robert M., Sport and Leisure (9j Katz, James E., The Social Impact of Computers and Telecommunications(57) Kim, Jae-On, New Approaches in Quantitative Analysis (264); Methodology to

Address Substantive Areas (274) Klatch, Rebecca E., Social Movements of the 1960s (223); lssues of Gender in

the Analysis of Social Movements (256); lssues in Sodial Movements l(266); lssues in Social Movements 11 (287)

Kreps, Gary A., Theory and fle&arch on Disasters (285) Krllz, Mary M., Immigration: Gender and Labor Force lssues (88); Comparative

Patterns of International Migration (265) Kruttschnitt, Candace, Quantitative Studies of Deviance (29); Qualiiive Stu-

dies of Deviance (58)

taufor, Robsrt, War and Its Effects (23) Light, Ivan, Urban Sociology (227) Maynarcl, Douglas W., Sociolinguistics (8); Conversation Analysis (206) YcPhenwn, Miller, Organizations: Intra-Organizational Processes and Prob-

lems (1 13); Organizations: Organizations and Control (222); Organizations: Interorganizational Dynamics (253)

Milkman, Ruth, Gender in the Workplace (2 10); Work and the Workplace (228) Mills, Edgar W., Teaching Sociology: The Undergraduate Sociology Program

and Its Effects (226/: Teaching Sociology: Innovations in Teaching Research Methods and Statistics to Undergraduates (239)

Moen, Phyllis, Dual Earner Couples (219) Morawska, Ewa, Social Histories of Working People: lssues and Perspectives

(182); Social Histories of Conflict and Confrontation: lssues and Perspeclives (286)

Mutran, Elizabeth, Social Structure and Personality (257) Nagel, Joane, The Welfare State: Comparative and Policy Perspectives (61);

The Welfare State: The American Case in Historical Perspective (2781 Oliver, Metvin L., Social Networks (152) Parcel, Toby L., Stratification: Organizations and Careers (10); Stratification:

Measurement and Conceptualization of National/lnternational Economies (158); Stratification: Wealth and Inequality (224)

Patterson, Orlando, Cross-National Research in International Development (194); Cross-National Research in Mobility and Gender Stratification (284)

Pearson, Wlllb, Jr.. Women in Male Dominated Professionsll8OJ: Professions

Pedraza-Bailey, Silvia. The Sociology of Hispanic-Americans (273) Plummer. Ken, Lesbianism and Male Hornosexualilv (1 111 ~ e i n h a ~ ; ~hulamit, Qualitative MeUlctdology: ~ e w ~ppoctunilies Explored

(156); Qualitative Methodology: Old problems Revisited (220) Reitzes. Dietrlch C. (with Reitzas. Donald C.1. Communitv 11391

Reynolds, Paul, Advances in Evaluation Research (4) Riley, Matlida Whlte. Older People's Social Networks 1221k Lie-Course Prep- . ..

aiation for the ate; Years (25'2) Robertson, Roland, Sociology of Religion: Culure, Religion. Morality and Edu-

cation (co-sponsored by the Association for the Sociology of Religion) (46); Sociology of Re1igion:Globalization. Discipline and Religion (co-sponsored by the Association for me Sociology of Religion) (59)

Rosa, Eugene, Sociology of Risk l(181); Sociology of Risk 11 (255) Sampson. Robert J., Multilevel Approaches to Criminological Research (20);

Advancing Criminological Theory (126) Sclulli, David, Political Sociology: Comparative(34); Poliical Sociology: Ameri-

can ( I 14k Political Sociology: Theories and Studies of Revolution (238) Smith, A. Wacle, Public Opinion I: Social lssues(75); Public Opinion 11: Methodo-

logical lssues (128) Spangler, Eve, The Sociology of Occupations (32) Spitze, GJenna, Life Course (1 12) Stark, David, Socialist Societies (276) Stehr. Nico, Social Impacts of Science and Technology (170) Stodcard, Jean, Gender (153) Sutton, John R., Soc~al Control: Conceptual and Theoretical lssues (7); Social

Control: Empirical Analyses (47) Thompson, Maxine, School Processes (209) Thornton, Arland, Divorce (95) Tickamyer, Ann R.. Marriage (74) T umer, Bryan S., Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity (100); Theories of

Modernity and Pcwnodernity 11 (144) Udry, J. Richard, Sociology and Biological Processes (56) van den Berg, Axel, The Decline of Mamism? (28) Voydanofl, Patrkia, Househid Division of Labor (155) Weitz, Rose, No Easy Answers: Prenatal Sex Diagnosis, in vitro Fertilization,

and Abortion (1 69) Williams, Bruce B., Poverty (254) Woodard, Michael D., Toward Understanding Labor Markets (141); Compara-

tive Labor Markets /263) Yu, Elena, Sources of Stress and Psychological Well Being(142);(with Brown,

Dlane R.), Race. Ethnicily and Health (89) Zimmerman, Don H. (withGamnkel, Harold,and Heritage, Jdm), Ethnome-

thodoloay: Structures of Practical Action (191; Ethnomethodoloa~: Studies in -. ~echni&l Knowledge and Techn~cal praxis (86)

Which is the best choice for your course?

The full 23-chapter Robertson textbook that students read beyond their assignments?

Ian Robertson

SOCIOLOGY THIRD EDITION 1987

Or the slim 15-chapter Robertson paperback with all the essentials but less detail?

Ian Robertson

SOCIETY A Brief Introduction FIRST EDITION 1989

Whichever book you choose, Ian Robertson's fresh insights and vivid examples will capture your studentS interests, stimulate their learning, and make them think.

Worth Publishers, Inc. 33 Irving Place, New York, New York 10003

BOOTH #211 86

Topic Index

7 h l W * ........................................................................... + ~ l ~ l W m 1 ~ . 1 ~ . 1 M m =235BSEmE%2 Disaskm ........................................................................................................................ 255 E c a l ~ ! ~ .............................................................................................................. imp 227 Enuironrnerrl a d T d m k q y ......................................................................... €@ . 981.197.212.242. 25% 262. 285 Natural .................................................................................. imp 197~ 212~ 242. 255 Risk . 'Sae ioW bf.. .................................................................................. ., ............... 175.1Ekl. 255. 285 UrbEmSociolo9y ............................................................................... . . ~ . 1 ~ . 1 ~ ~ 1 ~ ~ 1 7 ~ . 1 ~ . ~ . ~ ~ . ~ 2

m-m ~ ~ i ~ e b E l e r r k p ............................................................................................. 57.Rm3,13~. lm Elhrmgwphy ...................................................................................................... + . . s + . + ~ . a i . ~ l ~ ~ v c ~ u a t i f ~ ~ ~ ~ ................................................................................................. 4.7&W.119. I W Melhabalw ................................................................... ~ . ~ 1 ~ 1 ~ 1 ~ ~ 4 . ~ & ~ ~ . ~ . 2 5 & ~ , Z 4 Visual h i o @ y . .................................................................................................................. 25

SoeldChang4#rdSdmlPmcemm e S h ! K e a ~ i o n { L i f e C k - u ~ .......................... 14.99.W.~.6.97.1M.112.148.156174.1~3,2115,l1,225,256.252W.2~288.298 Am .............................. . . . . . . . . . . ~ . . . . . . . . . ~ . . . = - . - . ~ . . . . + ~ . ~ ~ ~ ~ m ~ ~ ~ ~ + m ~ m ~ m ~ m . . - . - ~ ~ . m - . + ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . 15lplB7.17R, 2?8 ... CUM ............. 21.37.a.im. icm. i ia 144, ~ w . 1 5 i . i ~ . I~B, I T B . ~ ~ . i 9 i . m zii.i-15,a8,m ~~1.m. 258, m m i . r n 2 . ~9 D e ~ w e n v W m W y i W m M Qysl%m ................... + ... + ..................... .15,61. 115,194.ZZ3.232.2dQ. 2M,P79.?BO . 788.295

................................................................ Dewanw:Sxial C o r n 7.20.P4.4~.~ .7~.?~.T01.116.126I59.172193 Hi f lmdwbQy ................................ 5 .1 i .127 . l~ .1~ .1~ . lg7 .1~ .1BB.196 .27r .~ . r41 .2~7 .Zs l i266 .27# .286 .2a7 .295

................................................................................................ K r w ~ ~ g e ~ ~ d e o l w 1 3 2 17D . 270 ........................................................................ Manlsr ~ m t o l a g y 3.23.56.77.31. IOP 11?.171.179.1ls9.262se.2~5

.......................... 8 6 ~ l ~ t l Mmrnentg:C6J(Bdw 0ekanm +. ........................ 3.11.31.62, 11171391Tg,1B9.223.256.2fiR.2H7 Sac a1 SlraMitatian ............. 10.22.40.53.73.7?. W.,.ga lW.133.143.lb5.id7. 1% lBg,lW.,8.202.i2d.237. %I. W. 2RB,273,276,2e.r. 793

M ~ h ~ DidatWSsrnmar$ ....................................................................... 4 1 . ~ . 1 0 7 . 1 ~ 1 ~ . 1 ~ . 1 ~ . 1 9 1 . ~ . ~ . 247 In fwna lQ ix im im RndlaMsb .................................................................... 1% U.85.149.177. 1%. mI.216. 249 PImary SasAonrr ..................................................................................................... 67. f m. f m. m PrcjfesGm-al Wnrks+ ...................................................... 1.1~.42.54.71.~.1119.123,137,184,1E.l~~.~.24#

. Specia Sessiohs .......................................................................................... . I 5 dU, 135. f 6Z t 90. 232 StudeMSessians ........................................................................................................... M. Wlflh TeachiwWarkrcbpg ................................................................................... Z F 1 7 . 4 ~ 5 5 . ~ . M . l 6 5 . 1 7 6 . B 5 Thmamc Scsslans ........................................................... 3.14.34.53.&3.&Z. 106.121 . i~ . l&l+ ~ 7 4 . 1m. 201. 231. 246

Index of Organizers (Numbers refer to Session numbers; see body of program)

Adams. Bert N .................. 187 Albrecht Gary L ................. 267 Alexander. Jeffrey C ............... 189 Alvarez. RodoHo ...... 200.215.245. 259 Andersen. Margaret L ........ 13.27.38.

48.65. 79 Atwater. Lynn .................... 30

Balfe. Judith Huggins .............. 178 Barber. Melvin W ................. 272 Beeson. Diane .................. 230 Berk. Richard ................... 258 Bidwell. Charles E ................ 296 Block. Fred ................. 251. 261 Bonnell. Victoria .................. - 5 Booth. Alan ................... 33. 87 Borrnan. Kathryn M ........... 205.236 Breton. Raymond ................ 162 Brown. David L ................... 69 Brown. Diane R ............... 89. 217 Brown. Phil ..................... 243 Brustein. William .............. 11. 238

Chabot. A1 .............. 277.292. 298 Chodorow. Nancy J ............... 195 Clark. Candace ............... 96.1 10 Clawson. Mary Ann ............... 21 1 Cobas. Jose A ................... 293 Cohen. JeanL .................. 179 Colomy. Paul ............... 225. 240 Conrad. Peter ................... 213 Cornfield. Daniel B ................ 160 Crimmins. Eileen .............. 45. 289 Davis. Diane E .................. 268 Dill. Bonnie Thornton .......... 129. 157 DiMaggio. Pauf J ................. 131 DiTornaso. Nancy ................ 172 Dolch. Norman ........... 271.292. 298 Dorn. Dean .............. 271.292. 298 Eder. Donna .................... 246 Elder . Glen H. Jr ................. 201 Ellis. Carolyn ..................... 63 Erickson. Bonnie H ........... 143.208 Erikson. Kai ..................... 51 Etzkowitz. Henry .......... 132.146. 185 Fine. Gary Alan ....... 270.281.290. 299 Fisher . Sue ...................... 36 Flacks . Richard ................ 52. 62 Foschi. Martha ................. 6. 35 Fournier. Marcel ................. 154 Fowlkes. Martha R ................ 148 Fox. Mary Frank .................. 99 Freudenburg. William R ..... 197.212. 242 Friedman. Samuel R .............. 125 Friedmann. Harriet ................ 295 Gallagher. Eugene B .............. 279 Galliher. John F .............. 101. 116 Garfinkel. Harold ............... 19. 86

Gartner. Rosemary ............... 159 Gecas. Viklor .................... 81 Geisler . Charles C ................. 98

. ................. Gibson. J William 37 Gillis. A . R ..................... 262 Glenn. Evelyn Nakano ............. -73 Glenn. Norval D ................. 269 Goldfarb. Jeffrey C ............ 151. 218 Gould. Mark ................ 127. 140 Grant, Linda ................... -277 Griffin. Larry J ................... 196 Grimes . Mike .................. - 1 17 Gnelkowski. Kathryn P ............. 60 Gubrium. Jaber F ................ 150 . ............. Guterbock Thomas M 184

Hagan . John .................... 174 Hall. John R ................ 168. 250 Halliday. Terence C ........... 1 1 1. 294 Hallinan. Maureen T .............. 207 Hardy. Melissa .................. 289 Harper. Douglas A ................ -25 Harvey. Debra ................... -80 Heritage. John ................ 19. 86 Hernandez. Donald J ............... 97 Hoffman. Lily M ................... 24 Hogan . Dennis P .................. 49 Horwitz . Robert ................... 31 lannaccone. Laurence R ............ 21 Inverarity. James ................. -76 Jackson. Kenneth W ........... 22.237 Jiobu. Robert M ................... -9 Kalleberg. Arne L ................ 145 Katz. James E .................... 57 Killian. Lewis M .............. 130. 183 Kim. Jae-On ................ 264. 274 Klatch. Rebecca E ..... 223.256.266. 287 Kreps. Gary A ................... 285 Krilz. Mary M ................ 88. 265 Kruttschnitt. Candace ............ 29. 58 Lachmann. Richard ............... 229 Laslett, Barbara .................. 241 Laufer. Robert .................... 23 Lemen Charles ............. 282. 297 Light, Ivan ...................... 227 Liu. William ...................... 90 Logan. JohnR .................. 171 Long. Elizabeth .............. 231. 291 Long. Larry ................ .lZ. 26. 64 Lortie. Dan C ............ 133.147. 186 Lubeck. Paul M .................. 288

. Marsden Peter V ................ 199 Mason. William M ................ 121 Maynard. Douglas W ............ 8. 206 McPherson. Miller ......... 1 13.222. 253 .................. Meiksins. Peter -77 Milkman. Ruth ............... 2f 0. 228

Miller. Karen A .................. 104 Mills. Edgar W ............... 226. 239 Milner. Trudie ................ 66. 105 Moen. Phyllis ................... 219 Morawska. Ewa .............. 182. 286 Morris. Aldon ................... 138

................. Mottimer. Jeylan T 93 Murray. Martin J .............. 91. 102 Mutran. Elizabeth ................. 257 Myles. John ..................... 40 Nagel. Joane ................ 61. 278 Nee. Victor .................. 82. 190 Oliver. Melvin L .................. 152 Parcel. Toby L ............ 10.158. 224 Parish. William L .............. 15. 115 Patterson. Orlando ........... 194. 284 Pearson. Willie. Jr ............ 180. 275 Pedraza-Bailey. Silvia ............. 273 Petersen. Trond ................. 214 Pinard. Maurice .................. 162 Plummer. Ken ................... 1 1 1 Preston. Samuel H ................ 14 Reeves. Joy ............ .271.292. 298 Reinharz . Shulamit ........... 156. 220 Reitzes. Dietrich C ................ 139 Rebes . Donald C ................ 139 Reynolds . Paul D ................... 4 Riley. Matilda White ......... 93.221. 252 Robertson. Roland .............. 46. 59 Rosa, Eugene ............... 181. 255 Sampson. Robert J ............ 20. 126 Schneider. Beth E ......... 135.173. 188 Sciulli. David .............. 34. 114. 238 Scotch. Richard K ................ -24 Shostak. Arthur B .......... .78.94. 119 Smlh. A . Wade ............ 75.106. 128 Sobel. Michael .................. 244 Sonquist. John A .............. 92.103 Spangler. Eve .................... 32 Spike. Glenna D ................. 112 Stark. David ................... -276 Steele. Stephen F ..... 271.283.292. 298 Stehr. Nico ..................... 170 Stockard. Jean .............. 153.1 80 Stryker. Sheldon ................. 118 Sulton.JohnR ................. 7.47 Thoits. Peggy A .................. 198

............... Thompson. Maxine 209 .................. Thornton. Arland 95 ................. Tickarnyer. Ann R 74 . Tienda Marta ................... 232 . Turner Bryan S .............. 100. 144

Udry. J . Richard .................. 56

[continued on next page)

van den Berg. Axel ................ 28 Vannoy. Dana ........... 18.44.85.149.

1 77,193,204.21 6.249 ............... Voydanoff. Patricia 155

Walton. John ................... -280 Web. Rose .................... 169 Whalley. Peter ................... 77 Williams. Bruce B ............... -254 Wiseman. Jacqueline P ............. 50 .......... Woodard. Michael D 141. 263

........... Yarnaguchi. Kazuo 214. 244 ................ Yu.ElenaS.H 89. 142

.............. Z echetmayr. Monika 117 Zimrnerman. Don H ............. 19. 86