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25 new of 89 responses total.
lsee
response 49 of 89: Mark Unseen   Feb 11 04:33 UTC 1995

will do--thanks
groble
response 50 of 89: Mark Unseen   Mar 24 06:41 UTC 1995

   re:Babar musing:  Edward Said would *love* your observation.  John M
   MacKenzie would love it more.  What's the publication date on those books?
   It could tell you a lot about it.  The author may or may not have been 
   pro- or anti-imperialist, but imperialism still shapes the views that
   emerge in a book, even a children's book (MacKenzie would posit:  
   *especially* in a children's book!)

volt
response 51 of 89: Mark Unseen   Apr 17 03:52 UTC 1995

I sugest for anyone interested in the imperial roman empire the book 
"The First Man In Rome" it is a master piece of literature.
rcurl
response 52 of 89: Mark Unseen   Apr 17 06:07 UTC 1995

I would add a recommendation of Gibbons' _Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire_, even if from an earlier scholarship. 
bischof
response 53 of 89: Mark Unseen   May 6 19:26 UTC 1995

I'm currently working on my master's in German literature, but my
thesis has a lot to do with how accurately some documentary works
portray historical events (more specifically, what the Church did
or did not do during the Third Reich).  Sound like an interesting topic
to anyone?
mwarner
response 54 of 89: Mark Unseen   May 7 01:41 UTC 1995

Specifically that topic:  Yes it sounds interesting.  Also interesting
is the insight you may have into the different influences on the way
history is recorded in general gained through your work.  I think there
will always be a significant difference between a compressed, or
comprehensive, history and the facts as gained through detailed study of a
certain event or set of circumstances.  I've learned that a final "truth"
or ultimate telling of a history is an illusory goal, but the insights
gained in the consideration of the fine details of history are well worth
their pursuit.   
baldar
response 55 of 89: Mark Unseen   May 19 17:15 UTC 1995

For anyone interested in Imperial Rome, but does not want something too heavy,
try _I, Claudius_, or _Claudius the God_ by Robert Graves.  They are both
fiction, but they are well researched, and the give a good impression of what
the times were like.
kerouac
response 56 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 21 21:57 UTC 1995

  Is anyone interested in this conf anymore? I was a history major in
school as well and I think the number of historical topics, such as
the debate over the atomic bomb, belie the current condition of this
conf.   I'd love to see this conf become active again.  Maybe it
just needs a jump-start!
rcurl
response 57 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 21 22:01 UTC 1995

OK. Go ahead, and plug it in and throw the switch!
remmers
response 58 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 22 12:39 UTC 1995

  Right--the way to revive a slow conference is to start entering
  stuff in it.

rcurl
response 59 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 22 20:40 UTC 1995

Like this: someday it will be history.
anne
response 60 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 06:55 UTC 1995

Kerouac- what area of history did you study?  (I'm thinking that
there was one area that interested you more then others...)

kerouac
response 61 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 25 16:11 UTC 1995

  My particular area was contemporary american history.  I did my
senior thesis on certain elements of the watergate scandal.  What
area did you think interested me?
srw
response 62 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 26 02:58 UTC 1995

My mind recognizes Watergate as history, but my heart wants to think of
"history" as that which happened before I was born, like the
Battle of Bull Run.
anne
response 63 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 27 17:38 UTC 1995

Kerouac- I guess I had better explain myself a little clearer.  I was 
trying to say that because history is such a huge subject- people
generally study one area in particular.  I wasn't saying that I had an
area in mind tha tI thought you studied. :)

sreedhar
response 64 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jan 15 21:11 UTC 1998

exit
mrmat
response 65 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 03:46 UTC 1998

Hi to anyone still interested in this conference. I'm interested in 
Military History in general, like the Civil War, WWI, WW2. Political history
is also interesting, past Presidential Elections.
Here's something new, what do people think of the recently released video of
the Zapruder film?  Has anyone seen it yet?  Would you buy it? Should everyone
have a copy in their video collection? 
anne
response 66 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 27 18:27 UTC 1998

I'm interested in history (hell, I have a BA in it) but I'm not into
Military history. :( IU'm more into social. (We're talking Medieval
and Renassaince Europe)

mrmat
response 67 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 00:44 UTC 1998

Oh, I'm interested in other general history as well, though I focus alot on
the Western civilization side. I had what they called a "concentration" in
history, besides my BA in Journalism. Not quite a minor in the field.
I'm currently re-reading William L. Shirer's *The Collapse of the Third
Republic*, his chronical of the social, political and military factors that
led to the quick fall of the French to the Nazis in 1940.
anne
response 68 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 15:06 UTC 1998

Hmm, sounds interesting.  As I said, I tend to go back a few hundred
years, or more. ;)
happyboy
response 69 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 19:00 UTC 1998

any body 'sides me ever read any 
john prebble?  i'm looking for
a cupple of his books...
mrmat
response 70 of 89: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 00:50 UTC 1998

Yeah, I've got to go back and check out some older periods, I've been focusing
too much on the 19th and 20th centuries lately.
birdy
response 71 of 89: Mark Unseen   Sep 8 13:04 UTC 2000

Whoa...dead conf.  =)
rcurl
response 72 of 89: Mark Unseen   Sep 8 16:54 UTC 2000

Well, it IS the HISTORY conference, like in, "It's History".
jerrybriardy
response 73 of 89: Mark Unseen   Aug 7 05:57 UTC 2005

This is a pretty old conference so I don't know if anyone is still reading
it. I am working on my bachelors in computer science and have always loved
history. The community college I went to is in Omaha, Nebraska. It is the
former army fort Fort Omaha. It is from t his fort that the soldiers that went
to relieve Custer after the little big horn left. The old stables are now the
school automotive repair lab. I had programming classes in the old
headquarters building. I used to think about that a lot when we were studying
C++. President Grant and General Sherman both stayed there at one point in
time. General Crook was in charge back then.

The trial of Chief Standing Bear took place in Omaha and it is there that they
imprisoned him and his followers. If you recall, this is the trial where
Native Americans gained status as American citizens.

At one point the base was the main American balloon observation post. During
the Second World War it was a prison camp for Italians.

Anyway, it is a very interesting place that has a history museum on site as
well as historical markers all over the campus. It was a great place to go
to school. It is one of the most beautiful campuses I have ever seen too.

Well, that is it for now I guess. For a guy like me that loves computers and
loves history, this is a great place.
P.S. They say the old campus is haunted. I have heard that on certain nights
you can see soldiers in World War I uniforms marching on the north side of
the campus. They also say the old officers barracks is extremely haunted and
even in the daytime you can hear voices and footsteps when there are no people
there. I did some work study in these buildings and it did seem pretty weird.

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