- published: 24 Jun 2010
- views: 1041
- author: Rutgers
3:37
Nancy Sinkoff - The Life and Work of Lucy S. Dawidowicz
Nancy discusses of studies of Lucy S. Dawidowicz....
published: 24 Jun 2010
author: Rutgers
Nancy Sinkoff - The Life and Work of Lucy S. Dawidowicz
Nancy Sinkoff - The Life and Work of Lucy S. Dawidowicz
Nancy discusses of studies of Lucy S. Dawidowicz.- published: 24 Jun 2010
- views: 1041
- author: Rutgers
1:26
History Book Review: From that Place and Time: A Memoir, 1938-1947 by Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Nancy S...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of From that Place and Time: A Memoir, 1...
published: 22 Oct 2012
author: HistoryBookReviews
History Book Review: From that Place and Time: A Memoir, 1938-1947 by Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Nancy S...
History Book Review: From that Place and Time: A Memoir, 1938-1947 by Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Nancy S...
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of From that Place and Time: A Memoir, 1938-1947 by Lucy S. Dawidowicz, Nancy Sinkoff.- published: 22 Oct 2012
- views: 6
- author: HistoryBookReviews
3:30
My Brothers Keeper (My Brothers Keeper Part 1)
http://www.zaneeducation.com - My Brothers Keeper is Part 1 of My Brothers Keeper - a 20th...
published: 26 Sep 2012
author: Zane Education
My Brothers Keeper (My Brothers Keeper Part 1)
My Brothers Keeper (My Brothers Keeper Part 1)
http://www.zaneeducation.com - My Brothers Keeper is Part 1 of My Brothers Keeper - a 20th century world history title. Learn - through evocative art by Isra...- published: 26 Sep 2012
- views: 68
- author: Zane Education
4:43
Filthy student gets owned by Norman Finkelstein
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activi...
published: 16 Nov 2013
Filthy student gets owned by Norman Finkelstein
Filthy student gets owned by Norman Finkelstein
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activist, professor and author. His primary fields of research are the Israeli--Palestinian conflict and the politics of the Holocaust, an interest motivated by the experiences of his parents who were Jewish Holocaust survivors. He is a graduate of Binghamton University and received his Ph.D in Political Science from Princeton University. He has held faculty positions at Brooklyn College, Rutgers University, Hunter College, New York University, and, most recently, DePaul University, where he was an assistant professor from 2001 to 2007. In 2007, after a highly publicized row between Finkelstein and a notable opponent of his, Alan Dershowitz, Finkelstein's tenure bid at DePaul was denied. Finkelstein was placed on administrative leave for the 2007--2008 academic year, and on September 5, 2007, he announced his resignation after coming to a settlement with the university on generally undisclosed terms. An official statement from DePaul strongly defended the decision to deny Finkelstein tenure, stated that outside influence played no role in the decision. In Finkelstein's doctoral thesis, he examined the claims made in Joan Peters's From Time Immemorial, a best-selling book at the time. Peters's "history and defense" of Israel deals with the demographic history of Palestine. Demographic studies had tended to assert that the Arab population of Ottoman-controlled Palestine, a 94% majority at the turn of the century, had dwindled towards parity due to massive Zionist immigration. Peters radically challenged this picture by arguing that a substantial part of the Palestinian people were descended from immigrants from other Arab countries from the early 19th century onwards. It followed, for Peters and many of her readers, that the picture of a native Palestinian population overwhelmed by Jewish immigration was little more than propaganda, and that in actuality two almost simultaneous waves of immigration met in what had been a relatively unpopulated land. From Time Immemorial had been effusively praised in mainstream United States media sources by figures as varied as Barbara Tuchman, Theodore H. White, Elie Wiesel, and Lucy Dawidowicz. Saul Bellow, for one, wrote in a jacket endorsement that: "Millions of people the world over, smothered by false history and propaganda, will be grateful for this clear account of the origins of the Palestinians." Finkelstein asserted that the book was nothing more than what he now calls a "monumental hoax". He later opined that, while Peters's book received widespread interest and approval in the United States, a scholarly demonstration of its fraudulence and unreliability aroused little attention: "By the end of 1984, From Time Immemorial had...received some two hundred [favorable] notices ... in the United States. The only 'false' notes in this crescendoing chorus of praise were the Journal of Palestine Studies, which ran a highly critical review by Bill Farrell; the small Chicago-based newsweekly In These Times, which published a condensed version of this writer's findings; and Alexander Cockburn, who devoted a series of columns in The Nation exposing the hoax. ... The periodicals in which From Time Immemorial had already been favorably reviewed refused to run any critical correspondence (e.g. The New Republic, The Atlantic Monthly, Commentary). Periodicals that had yet to review the book rejected a manuscript on the subject as of little or no consequence (e.g. The Village Voice, Dissent, The New York Review of Books). Not a single national newspaper or columnist contacted found newsworthy that a best-selling, effusively praised 'study' of the Middle East conflict was a threadbare hoax." Noam Chomsky later reminisced: "I warned him, if you follow this, you're going to get in trouble—because you're going to expose the American intellectual community as a gang of frauds, and they are not going to like it, and they're going to destroy you." In 1986, the New York Review of Books published Yehoshua Porath's review and an exchange with critics of the review in which he criticized the assumptions and evidence on which Peters's thesis relied, thus lending independent support from an expert in Palestinian demographics to Finkelstein's doctoral critique.- published: 16 Nov 2013
- views: 10
2:17
Nancy & Lucy
Ranchera en Arbol de vida chino en el dia de las madres....
published: 15 May 2012
author: Bigpapi6465
Nancy & Lucy
Nancy & Lucy
Ranchera en Arbol de vida chino en el dia de las madres.- published: 15 May 2012
- views: 114
- author: Bigpapi6465
9:46
Norman Finkelstein Hezbollah, the Honour of Lebanon
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activi...
published: 16 Nov 2013
Norman Finkelstein Hezbollah, the Honour of Lebanon
Norman Finkelstein Hezbollah, the Honour of Lebanon
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activist, professor and author. His primary fields of research are the Israeli--Palestinian conflict and the politics of the Holocaust, an interest motivated by the experiences of his parents who were Jewish Holocaust survivors. He is a graduate of Binghamton University and received his Ph.D in Political Science from Princeton University. He has held faculty positions at Brooklyn College, Rutgers University, Hunter College, New York University, and, most recently, DePaul University, where he was an assistant professor from 2001 to 2007. In 2007, after a highly publicized row between Finkelstein and a notable opponent of his, Alan Dershowitz, Finkelstein's tenure bid at DePaul was denied. Finkelstein was placed on administrative leave for the 2007--2008 academic year, and on September 5, 2007, he announced his resignation after coming to a settlement with the university on generally undisclosed terms. An official statement from DePaul strongly defended the decision to deny Finkelstein tenure, stated that outside influence played no role in the decision. In Finkelstein's doctoral thesis, he examined the claims made in Joan Peters's From Time Immemorial, a best-selling book at the time. Peters's "history and defense" of Israel deals with the demographic history of Palestine. Demographic studies had tended to assert that the Arab population of Ottoman-controlled Palestine, a 94% majority at the turn of the century, had dwindled towards parity due to massive Zionist immigration. Peters radically challenged this picture by arguing that a substantial part of the Palestinian people were descended from immigrants from other Arab countries from the early 19th century onwards. It followed, for Peters and many of her readers, that the picture of a native Palestinian population overwhelmed by Jewish immigration was little more than propaganda, and that in actuality two almost simultaneous waves of immigration met in what had been a relatively unpopulated land. From Time Immemorial had been effusively praised in mainstream United States media sources by figures as varied as Barbara Tuchman, Theodore H. White, Elie Wiesel, and Lucy Dawidowicz. Saul Bellow, for one, wrote in a jacket endorsement that: "Millions of people the world over, smothered by false history and propaganda, will be grateful for this clear account of the origins of the Palestinians." Finkelstein asserted that the book was nothing more than what he now calls a "monumental hoax". He later opined that, while Peters's book received widespread interest and approval in the United States, a scholarly demonstration of its fraudulence and unreliability aroused little attention: "By the end of 1984, From Time Immemorial had...received some two hundred [favorable] notices ... in the United States. The only 'false' notes in this crescendoing chorus of praise were the Journal of Palestine Studies, which ran a highly critical review by Bill Farrell; the small Chicago-based newsweekly In These Times, which published a condensed version of this writer's findings; and Alexander Cockburn, who devoted a series of columns in The Nation exposing the hoax. ... The periodicals in which From Time Immemorial had already been favorably reviewed refused to run any critical correspondence (e.g. The New Republic, The Atlantic Monthly, Commentary). Periodicals that had yet to review the book rejected a manuscript on the subject as of little or no consequence (e.g. The Village Voice, Dissent, The New York Review of Books). Not a single national newspaper or columnist contacted found newsworthy that a best-selling, effusively praised 'study' of the Middle East conflict was a threadbare hoax." Noam Chomsky later reminisced: "I warned him, if you follow this, you're going to get in trouble—because you're going to expose the American intellectual community as a gang of frauds, and they are not going to like it, and they're going to destroy you." In 1986, the New York Review of Books published Yehoshua Porath's review and an exchange with critics of the review in which he criticized the assumptions and evidence on which Peters's thesis relied, thus lending independent support from an expert in Palestinian demographics to Finkelstein's doctoral critique.- published: 16 Nov 2013
- views: 4
9:07
Norman Finkelstein to Jewish journalist in Denmark You are spouting Israeli propaganda
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activi...
published: 16 Nov 2013
Norman Finkelstein to Jewish journalist in Denmark You are spouting Israeli propaganda
Norman Finkelstein to Jewish journalist in Denmark You are spouting Israeli propaganda
Norman Gary Finkelstein (born December 8, 1953) is an American political scientist, activist, professor and author. His primary fields of research are the Israeli--Palestinian conflict and the politics of the Holocaust, an interest motivated by the experiences of his parents who were Jewish Holocaust survivors. He is a graduate of Binghamton University and received his Ph.D in Political Science from Princeton University. He has held faculty positions at Brooklyn College, Rutgers University, Hunter College, New York University, and, most recently, DePaul University, where he was an assistant professor from 2001 to 2007. In 2007, after a highly publicized row between Finkelstein and a notable opponent of his, Alan Dershowitz, Finkelstein's tenure bid at DePaul was denied. Finkelstein was placed on administrative leave for the 2007--2008 academic year, and on September 5, 2007, he announced his resignation after coming to a settlement with the university on generally undisclosed terms. An official statement from DePaul strongly defended the decision to deny Finkelstein tenure, stated that outside influence played no role in the decision. In Finkelstein's doctoral thesis, he examined the claims made in Joan Peters's From Time Immemorial, a best-selling book at the time. Peters's "history and defense" of Israel deals with the demographic history of Palestine. Demographic studies had tended to assert that the Arab population of Ottoman-controlled Palestine, a 94% majority at the turn of the century, had dwindled towards parity due to massive Zionist immigration. Peters radically challenged this picture by arguing that a substantial part of the Palestinian people were descended from immigrants from other Arab countries from the early 19th century onwards. It followed, for Peters and many of her readers, that the picture of a native Palestinian population overwhelmed by Jewish immigration was little more than propaganda, and that in actuality two almost simultaneous waves of immigration met in what had been a relatively unpopulated land. From Time Immemorial had been effusively praised in mainstream United States media sources by figures as varied as Barbara Tuchman, Theodore H. White, Elie Wiesel, and Lucy Dawidowicz. Saul Bellow, for one, wrote in a jacket endorsement that: "Millions of people the world over, smothered by false history and propaganda, will be grateful for this clear account of the origins of the Palestinians." Finkelstein asserted that the book was nothing more than what he now calls a "monumental hoax". He later opined that, while Peters's book received widespread interest and approval in the United States, a scholarly demonstration of its fraudulence and unreliability aroused little attention: "By the end of 1984, From Time Immemorial had...received some two hundred [favorable] notices ... in the United States. The only 'false' notes in this crescendoing chorus of praise were the Journal of Palestine Studies, which ran a highly critical review by Bill Farrell; the small Chicago-based newsweekly In These Times, which published a condensed version of this writer's findings; and Alexander Cockburn, who devoted a series of columns in The Nation exposing the hoax. ... The periodicals in which From Time Immemorial had already been favorably reviewed refused to run any critical correspondence (e.g. The New Republic, The Atlantic Monthly, Commentary). Periodicals that had yet to review the book rejected a manuscript on the subject as of little or no consequence (e.g. The Village Voice, Dissent, The New York Review of Books). Not a single national newspaper or columnist contacted found newsworthy that a best-selling, effusively praised 'study' of the Middle East conflict was a threadbare hoax." Noam Chomsky later reminisced: "I warned him, if you follow this, you're going to get in trouble—because you're going to expose the American intellectual community as a gang of frauds, and they are not going to like it, and they're going to destroy you." In 1986, the New York Review of Books published Yehoshua Porath's review and an exchange with critics of the review in which he criticized the assumptions and evidence on which Peters's thesis relied, thus lending independent support from an expert in Palestinian demographics to Finkelstein's doctoral critique.- published: 16 Nov 2013
- views: 7
3:58
Dr. Ulrich Kremer - Application Networking for Smartphones
Dr. Ulrich Kremer of Rutgers University discusses the ways in which he and his students fi...
published: 03 Aug 2010
author: Rutgers
Dr. Ulrich Kremer - Application Networking for Smartphones
Dr. Ulrich Kremer - Application Networking for Smartphones
Dr. Ulrich Kremer of Rutgers University discusses the ways in which he and his students find practical applications for existing programming languages and wh...- published: 03 Aug 2010
- views: 1225
- author: Rutgers
3:11
Book Review - "The Wealth Cure: Putting Money In Its Place" by Hill Harper
http://newhopefinancialsolutions.com Book Review - "The Wealth Cure: Putting Money In Its ...
published: 15 Jun 2013
author: Bk Maynard
Book Review - "The Wealth Cure: Putting Money In Its Place" by Hill Harper
Book Review - "The Wealth Cure: Putting Money In Its Place" by Hill Harper
http://newhopefinancialsolutions.com Book Review - "The Wealth Cure: Putting Money In Its Place" by Hill Harper This New York Times Best Selling Author takes...- published: 15 Jun 2013
- views: 7
- author: Bk Maynard
Youtube results:
1:37
History Book Review When Broken Glass Floats Growing Up Under the Khmer Rouge by Chanrithy Him
uploaded with File Uploader (z-o-o-m.eu)...
published: 07 Dec 2013
History Book Review When Broken Glass Floats Growing Up Under the Khmer Rouge by Chanrithy Him
History Book Review When Broken Glass Floats Growing Up Under the Khmer Rouge by Chanrithy Him
uploaded with File Uploader (z-o-o-m.eu)- published: 07 Dec 2013
- views: 0
1:09
History Book Review: Schweitzer: A Biography by Professor George Marshall, Mr. David Poling
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of Schweitzer: A Biography by Professor ...
published: 27 Jul 2012
author: HistoryBookMixCom
History Book Review: Schweitzer: A Biography by Professor George Marshall, Mr. David Poling
History Book Review: Schweitzer: A Biography by Professor George Marshall, Mr. David Poling
http://www.HistoryBookMix.com This is the summary of Schweitzer: A Biography by Professor George Marshall, Mr. David Poling.- published: 27 Jul 2012
- views: 12
- author: HistoryBookMixCom