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ON THE COVER: “A Distinct Honor”
President Bush awards the National Humanities Medal to
the Hoover Institution and to nine distinguished Americans for their
contributions to the humanities.
President George W. Bush and Laura Bush present the National Humanities Medal to Hoover Institution Director John Raisian, who stands with Claudia Morgan and Hoover fellow Edward P. Lazear, chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers.
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The National Humanities Medal recognizes those who
have deepened the nation’s understanding of the humanities, broadened
citizens’ engagement with the humanities, or helped preserve and
expand our access to important resources in the humanities.
In November 2006, President George W. Bush awarded the
medal to the Hoover Institution. Nine distinguished Americans also were
recognized.
“This is a distinct honor for the Hoover
Institution and Stanford University,” Hoover Institution Senior
Fellow and Director John Raisian said as he accepted the award at the White
House. “We have been honored recently with the awards that were
bestowed on Hoover fellows Thomas Sowell and Shelby Steele. To have the
medal awarded by the president to the Hoover Institution, as an
institution, is a wonderful tribute and a huge source of pride for all of
us.”
The National Endowment for the Humanities, which
bestows the medal, highlighted the Institution’s central role in
documenting the tumultuous twentieth century, beginning with its foundation
by future president Herbert Hoover as a specialized collection of documents
on the causes and consequences of World War I. In a statement, the NEH
noted the path the Institution has taken since 1919: “The collection
grew rapidly and soon became one of the largest archives and most complete
libraries in the world devoted to political, economic, and social change in
the 20th century. By the late 1940s, the richness of the collection had led
to the recruitment of scholars to use the documents in their work.
Expanding its agenda to include specific research endeavors led to a vast
accumulation of knowledge, and the Hoover Institution became one of the
first and most distinguished academic centers in the United States
dedicated to public policy research. Today, with its world-renowned group
of scholars and ongoing programs of policy-oriented research, the Hoover
Institution puts its accumulated knowledge to work as a prominent
contributor to the world marketplace of ideas defining a free
society.”
The National Humanities Medal was first awarded in
1989 as the Charles Frankel Prize. The bronze medallion on the cover of
this issue was designed by David Macaulay, a 1995 Frankel
Prize–winning author celebrated for his intricate books about the
making of pyramids, castles, cathedrals, and other giant structures.
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