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Ohio University Distinguished Professor of History Charles Alexander, a noted baseball
historian and author, will deliver the keynote address at the annual Cooperstown Symposium
on Baseball and American Culture on Wednesday, June 5, in Cooperstown, N.Y.
Alexander, who has spent more than 40 years as a history professor, has been teaching
university courses on baseball and sports history for more than 20 years. He was recently
recognized in the 2002 edition of Who's Who in America, and his latest book, Breaking the
Slump: Baseball in the Depression Era, has just been published by Columbia University Press.
He has written other baseball-related books, including Our Game: An American Baseball
History and biographies about Ty Cobb, John McGraw and Rogers Hornsby. Alexander prides
himself on being a historian who uses baseball as a backdrop. Since 1995, more than 3,000
Ohio University students have learned about baseball and American history in Alexander's
classes, "American Baseball to 1930" and "American Baseball Since 1930."
The symposium, which is co-sponsored by the State University of New York at Oneonta and
the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, examines the impact of baseball on American
culture. In addition to Alexander's speech, 24 scholarly papers on baseball and American
culture will be presented with all sessions being held at the National Baseball Hall of Fame
and Museum.
This spring, Alexander has been teaching at the University of Missouri at Rolla as the
Maxwell C. Weiner Distinguished Professor of Humanities. The Cass County, Texas, native,
earned his bachelor's degree from Lamar University and his master's and doctoral degrees from
the University of Texas. |