I expect some members of HES could easily make some nominations for this prize!! Ross *************************************************************** NOTICE: THE PUBLIC HISTORIAN's annual prize contest for the best use and/or worst misuse of history in. U.S. public policymaking in 1995 is approaching the end of the competition for this epochal year. (For the winners in 1994 and the rules of the contest, see THE PUBLIC HISTORIAN, Spring 1995 issue.) The editors solicit nominations from all historians (and others) who have been struck by the wisdom, or the foolishness, of history- uses to justify, explain, or formulate public policy at any level of U.S. government in 1995. Please send documentation illuminating the policy setting and the use of history in a given situation. The 1995 contest closes on 15 December. We hope for a bipartisan basket of nominations, so that President Clinton will not necessarily dominate the scene, as he (and Hillary Rodham Clinton) did in 1994. Hasn't New used, or misused, history? To your dis/pleasure? NOMINATIONS AND INQUIRIES SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO: Otis L. Graham, Jr., Editor or Lindsey Reed, Managing Editor THE PUBLIC HISTORIAN University of California, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara, CA 93106 e-mail: [log in to unmask] [log in to unmask] ********************************************************************