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  • Reviewers

Ron Hollander teaches journalism at Montclair State University, where he offers a course on the American press and the Holocaust. He has presented on the subject at Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and Oxford University, among others.

Nancy Isserman is Associate Director of the Feinstein Center for American Jewish History, Temple University. She earned her Ph.D. at the Graduate Center, City University of New York, where she received the Randolph S. Braham Award for her dissertation, "I Harbor No Hate": A Study of Intolerance and Tolerance in Holocaust Survivors.

Jürgen Matthäus is Senior Applied Research Scholar at the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. His is co-author, with Christopher Browning, of The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939-March 1942 (2004) and co-editor, with K. Kwiet, of Contemporary Responses to the Holocaust (2005).

Steven A. Riess is Professor of History at Northeastern Illinois University. He has written and edited several books, including Sports and the American Jew (1998).

Marianne Sanua is Associate Professor in the Department of History and the Jewish Studies Program at Florida Atlantic University. She is the author of Going Greek: Jewish College Fraternities in the United States, 1895-1945 (2003).

Jeffrey Shandler is Associate Professor in the Department of Jewish Studies at Rutgers University. His most recent publication is Adventures in Yiddishland: Postvernacular Language and Culture (2005).

April G. Shelford is Assistant Professor of History at American University. She is completing Apollo's Children, a book on the Republic of Letters in seventeenth-century France.

Amy Hill Shevitz teaches in the Religious Studies Department at California State University, Northridge. Her book on the small Jewish communities of the Ohio River Valley will be published in 2007.

Gerald Sorin is Distinguished University Professor of History and Jewish Studies, State University of New York at New Paltz. His most recent book, Irving Howe: A Life of Passionate Dissent, won the National Jewish Book Award in History in 2003.

Miriam Heller Stern is Adjunct Lecturer in Education at the University of Judaism and a Ph.D. candidate in the History of Education at Stanford University. Her dissertation is titled "Your Children, Will They Be Yours?: Jewish Education for Jewish Survival in Interwar New York."

Sonja P. Wentling is Assistant Professor of History at Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota. She has published articles on Herbert Hoover's relationship with leading American non-Zionists and the role of Zionism in U.S. foreign policy during the pre-state era.

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