About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: Don Lancaster, Barry Wellman, Leonard Jeffries, Richard Bunger Evans, Joseph Force Crater, Robert C. Smith, F. Wilbur Gingrich, Peyton C. March, James McKeen Cattell, Howard Benedict, Brian Hutchison, Dominique Lapierre, Ralph Cooper Hutchison, Joel Silver, Nathaniel B. Smithers, George Decker, Michael H. Moskow, Robert Pastor, D. Bennett Mazur, Wallace McCamant, Robert J. Sinclair, William L. Alden, Winston L. Prouty, M. K. Asante, Wayne Dumont, Chris Hutchison, Charles A. Wikoff, John W. Griggs, William Harkness, Brent Glass, William Alexander Parsons Martin, George P. Hays, William F. Durand, Samuel L. Bodine, W. Hunt Dumont, Sarkis Acopian, Frank Reed Horton, Russell Benjamin Harrison, Mike Gazella, Scott Vincent, Neil David Levin, Charles Bergstresser, Nils Yngve Wessell, C. Harmon Brown, Wesley Lance, Robin Wiessmann, William Huntington Kirkpatrick, Craig Dally, Haydn Proctor, Joseph Rallo, Martin Jezer, Ross Gay, Doug Reichley, William Henry Green, Edgar Jadwin, Isaiah D. Clawson, Joseph Berg Esenwein, Alfred LeConey, Earl Gregg Swem, Frank Truscott, Edwin Atlee Barber, Frank Schwab, James Madison Porter III, William R. Van Aken, Arthur Granville Dewalt, John Anderson Fry, William Sebring Kirkpatrick, Robert B. Heilman, Darlyne Bailey, Harry Hess Reichard, James Isaac Good, James Cameron Mackenzie, Harry Arista Mackey, Eric Kimmel, Jay Weiss, John D. Clarke, Joel A. Pisano, Jeff Mutis, Joseph S. Illick, Michael S. Schmidt, Ty Helfrich, Harrison Woodhull Crosby. Excerpt: Barry Wellman, FRSC (born 1942) directs NetLab as the S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto. His areas of research are community sociology, the Internet, human-computer interaction and social structure, as manifested in social networks in communities and organizations. His overarching interest is in the paradigm shift ...