Ozouf, he edited the Critical Dictionaryrnof the French Revolution (1989). A storyrnon Furet in The Economist eharaeterizedrnhim as “a new monarch of French studiesrnof the revolution” who “seeks to establishrna new collective wisdom which avoidsrn. . . the left- or right-wing distortions ofrnthe past.”rnAccording to Thomas Fleming,rn”Frangois Furet has gone to the heart ofrnmodernity—both its good and its evil—rnin laving bare the reality of the FrenchrnRevolution. With meticulous researchrnand unflinching courage, Furet has givenrnus a profound understanding of the revolutionrnthat set the stage for our own age.rnUntil we can comprehend the FrenchrnRevolution, we shall never comprehendrnourselves. In this sense, M. Furet has givenrnus the historical mirror we so desperatelvrnneeded.”rnPast winners of the T.S. Eliot Awardrnare Wendell Berry (1994), Fred Chappellrn(1995), Munel’Spark (1992), Mariorn4rrgas Llosa (1991), Charles Causleyrn(1990), George Garrett (1989), WalkerrnPercy (1988), Octavio Paz (1987), V.S.rnNaipaul (1986), Eugene loncsco (1985),rnAnthony Powell (1984), and Jorge LuisrnBorges (1983). Recipients of the RichardrnM. Weaver Award include Murray Rothbardrn(1994), Eugene Genovcse (1993),rnWalter Burkert (1992), John Lukacsrn(1991), Forrest McDonald (1990), EdwardrnO. Wilson (1989), Edward Shilsrn(1988), Josef Piepcr (1987), Andrew Lyticrn(1986), Robert Nisbct (1985), RussellrnKirk (1984), and James Burnhamrn(1983).rnOBITER DICTA: Between Novemberrn21, 1995, and April 14, 1996, the RosenbachrnMuseum and Library in Philadelphiarnwill run an exhibition entitledrn”Robert Burns: The Poet’s Progress.”rnGurated by Nicholas Barker and WendyrnVan Wyek Good, the exhibition will includernletters, manuscripts, first-editionrnbooks, and other impossible-to-findrnproducts of Burns’ literary genius. Thernexhibition is scheduled to coincide withrnthe Burns International Festival, whichrncommemorates the 200th anniversary ofrnBurns death. Admission will be a merern$2. The Rosenbach Museum and Libraryrnis located at 2010 DeLancey Place,rnPhiladelphia. For more information, callrn(215)732-1600.rnThe following stores in Minnesotarnnow sell Chronicles: Little ProfessorrnBook Center, 1301 N.W. 18th Avenue,rnAustin; Borders Bookstore, 1501 PlymouthrnRoad, Minnetonka; Mary Lundell/rnBook Dept., 10400 Yellow CirclernDr., Minnetonka; Barnes & Noble, 7505rnMetro Blvd., Minneapolis; DinkytownrnNews, 301-14th Ave. SE, Minneapolis;rnDugout Sportseards & News, 2726 DivisionrnSt., St. Cloud; Tobak Shop of St.rnPaul, 2140 Ford Parkway, St. Paul; Barnesrn& Noble Superstore, 2090 Ford Parkway,rnSt. Paul; Moorhead St. University Bookstore,rnMoorhcad; Barnes & Noble Superstore,rnChateau Theatre, Rochester;rnBarnes & Noble Superstore, 2100 N.rnSnelling Ave., Roscville; Barnes & NoblernSuperstore, 5225 W. 69th Street, Edina.rnCONCERNING IMMIGRATION . . .rnhe presence in this volume of Cahfornia’s Governor Pete Wilson,rneasily reelected since his essay ‘Citizenship and Immigration’ firstrnappeared in Chronicles’ November 1993 issue and now widelyrnmentioned as the possible catalyst of the immigration issue inrnpresidential politics, is only one reason Chronicles’ editors canrnfairly say: you read it here first.”rn—Peter Brimelow, ForbesrnA publication of The Rocliford Institutern232 pp., paper, $14.95 List Pricern(plus $2.50 for shipping & handling)rnTo order by credit card, call: 1-800-397-8160rnOr send check or money order in the amount of $17.45 ($14,95-1-$2.50 shipping & handling) tornChronicles, P.O. Box 800, Mt. Morris, IL 61054rnPlease list on payment or mention when ordering: SOURCE CODE: SC958, and ITEM CODE: MGRT.rnNOVEMBER 1995/7rnrnrn