This page features brief excerpts of stories published by the mainstream
        media and, less frequently, blogs, alternative media, and even obviously
        biased sources. The excerpts are taken directly from the websites cited in
        each source note. Quotation marks are not used.
    
    
    
        
        
                                        June 18, 2004
            
            
            
            Ian Buruma, in the New Yorker (June 14-21, 2004): In the course of a distinguished academic career at the University of London and at Princeton, Bernard Lewis has never been afraid to dip his scholarly hands in the muck of current affairs. A mentor to Henry (Scoop) Jackson in the early nineteen-seventies, and a friend to several Israeli Prime Ministers, Lewis has been especia
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 18, 2004
            
            
            
              Ludovic Hunter-Tilney, in the Financial Times (London) (June 12, 2004): Antony Beevor has taken a break from military history to publish his first biography, The Mystery of Olga Chekhova. "It was an absolute holiday to write - a family story that conveys a huge sweep of history but doesn't have the cumulative horrors of Stalingrad and Berlin," he says, referring to his previous books about the siege of Stalingrad and fall of Hitler. "Frankly, at the end of Ber
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 18, 2004
            
            
            
              Jacob Heilbrunn,  an editorial writer for the Los Angeles Times, in the 
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
(June 14, 2004): It's no secret that the Bush administration has a fetish for secrecy. Whether it's keeping the records of Vice President Dick Cheney's energy task force concealed or denying the 9-11 commission key documents, the administration regularly displays disdain for open government.
  But does that contempt extend even to the office of the national ar
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 17, 2004
            
            
            
            
Jeff Guinn, in 
  fortwayne.com (June 16, 2004):Anyone who doesn't believe we lost one of our finest historians when 82-year-old 
  William Manchester died June 1 should check out the 34-page preamble in 1988's 
  "Winston Spencer Churchill, Alone: 1932-1940," the second volume of 
  Manchester's justly lauded "Last Lion" series on the life of the world 
  leader. 
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 13, 2004
            
            
            
            HNN blogger Tom Bruscino (June 8, 2004): With Memorial Day and the 60th Anniversary of D-Day over the last two weekends, attention has once again turned toward military history. The rush of book reviews of World War II has once again brought to the fore an issue that deserves closer scrutiny: the ongoing and offhand evisceration of the work of Stephen Ambrose by some professional book review
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 13, 2004
            
            
            
            Derek Catsam, reviewing a blog posting by Andrew Sullivan: 
Once again Andrew Sullivan shows his occasional tendencies toward intellectual sloppiness. To use his own self important phrase, let's"fisk" this piece (with a heading titled"Always Wrong" that should give you a hint of what foll
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 5, 2004
            
            
            
             Dale McCartney, in Left Hook (May 2004): On Thursday the 25th of March, the first of the 4-day annual meeting of the Organization of American Historians, Howard Zinn was honoured with an evening spot as a plenary speaker. He spoke on “The Uses of History,” clearly a topic that he is uniquely positioned to discuss. There is an irony in a professional association of historians inviting a speaker who has
         
     
    
        
        
                                        June 3, 2004
            
            
            
             
Steven Zeitchik, in the WSJ 
  (June 3, 2004):When William Manchester died earlier this week at age 82, the literary community 
  mourned the death of a great biographer. Best known for his controversial portrayal 
  of the Kennedys, he had later in his career earned fame for a different subject. 
  In the first two volumes of "The Last Lion," his acclaimed series 
  on Wins
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 27, 2004
            
            
            
             
Steve Russ, Eleanor Robson, Rona Epstein, and David Epstein in the London 
  Independent (May 24, 2004):AS THE first Manager of the Mathematics Research Centre at Warwick University, 
  from 1967, David Fowler played an important part in establishing, through the 
  research symposia organised at the centre, the outstanding international reputation 
  that Warwick now enjoys in many branches of mathematics. As a distinguished 
  scholar of the history of mathematics he h
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 25, 2004
            
            
            
            
Ernie Suggs, in the Atlanta 
  Journal-Constitution (May 23, 2004):Few people alive know the intricacies surrounding the work and process that 
  led to the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision as well as John Hope Franklin. 
And it is not because he is one of America's foremost historians, who penned 
  the classic reader "From Slavery to Freedom."It was because h
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 22, 2004
            
            
            
             
John Crace, in the Gardian (May 18, 2004):The room looks exactly as you might expect. Books of campaigns are piled floor 
  to ceiling and there are battered helmets, rusty shell cases, rolled-up maps 
  and regimental memorabilia occupying every spare surface. It seems perfectly 
  to sum up the part-scholar, part-man of action in the field that makes up the 
  somewhat old-fashioned on-screen persona of military historian Richard Holmes. 
  Which makes it a shoo-in pho
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 21, 2004
            
            
            
            
Philip Kennicott, in the Washington Post (May 13, 2004):It's only 8:30 a.m. on the East Coast, so some of the angry Americans dialing 
  into the glass-walled C-SPAN studio with the perfect view of the Capitol are 
  very early risers. In the "Washington Journal" hot seat, for 45 minutes, 
  is Rashid Khalidi, director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia University 
  and author of a new book about colonialism, memory and U.S. policy in the Middle 
 
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 18, 2004
            
            
            
            Sam Hodges, in the Charlotte Observer (May 18, 2004): After Fidel Castro took control of Cuba, thousands of middle- and upper-class parents in that country sent their children to the United States. The mass migration became known as Operation 
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 14, 2004
            
            
            
             
Glenn Garvin, author of Everybody Had His Own Gringo: The CIA and the Contras, in Reason 
  magazine, in the course of an article prompted by the book, In Denial, to which Eric Foner (below) responded (April 2004):In 1983 the Indiana University historian Robert F. Byrnes collected essays 
  from 35 experts on the Soviet Union -- the cream of American academia -- in 
  a book titled After Brezhn
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 14, 2004
            
            
            
             
Omar Ford, in the Beaufort 
  Gazette (May 14, 2004):Beaufort High School is a decidedly different school than it was during the 
  1970s, recalls Glenda Gilmore a professor at Yale.
  Gilmore was a budding history teacher at Beaufort High when the Supreme Court's 
  1954 Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kan., decision was finally impacting 
  Beaufort in 1970. Li
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 14, 2004
            
            
            
             
Avi Shlaim, in the course of an 
  interview in the Palestine Chroncile (May 14, 2004):You were born in Baghdad. Do you have any memories of living in Iraq? I was born in 1945, and my family left Iraq in 1950. I was 5 years old, and 
  hadnt started going to school so I never learned to read and write Arabic. 
  I have only disjointed memories of life in Iraq. My fath
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 14, 2004
            
            
            
             
Jonathan Calt Harris, in frontpagemag.com 
  (May 14, 2004):Hatem Bazian, a senior lecturer at Berkeley in Islamic Studies, recently went 
  on television and was put on the defensive by Bill OReilly. The subject 
  was comments Bazian had made at a left-wing rally in San Francisco on April 
  10, 2004, calling for an intifada in the United States. As reported by LittleGre
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 13, 2004
            
            
            
            Elizabeth Wasserman, in the Atlantic (April 29, 2004):In the foreword to an Arabic edition of one of Bernard Lewis's recent books, published by the Muslim Brotherhood, the translator included a few words of ambiguous praise for the author. Lewis was, he wrote,"one of two things: a candid friend or an honorable enemy," but certainly not one to dodge the truth. 
  In 
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 11, 2004
            
            
            
            Jon Wiener, in the LAT (May 2, 2004): Go ahead, try. Name the archivist of the United States. 
  It's a pretty fair bet you failed. The archivist, former Kansas Gov. John Carlin, oversees the nation's most important documents: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights. The position has traditionally been one of the lower-profile jobs in the fed
         
     
    
        
        
                                        May 8, 2004
            
            
            
            From the Boston Globe (May 6, 2004):A QUOTATION from Douglas Brinkley in Alex 
  Beam's column "Historian's 'duty': PR for Kerry?" (April 29) leaves 
  the impression that Brinkley has been misleading about interviews he conducted 
  with John Kerry's crewmates. For the record, the introduction to the excerpts 
  from Brinkley's "Tour of Duty," published in The Atlantic and approved 
  by Brink