Part 2: Air Force Magazine
Articles and Editorials
- War Stories at Air and
Space
At the Smithsonian, history grapples with cultural angst
April 1994
- The Decision That
Launched the Enola Gay
In April 1945, the new President learned the most closely held secret
of the war
April 1994
- "The Last Act’ at Air and
Space
The Enola Gay exhibit still lacks balance and still is emotionally
charged, but the
Smithsonian says the plans are final.
September 1994
- Museum Proposes to Change
Enola Gay Exhibition
October 1994
- The Three Doctors and the
Enola Gay
Under fire from Congress and public opinion, curators at the Air and
Space
Museum are making changes to their plan for exhibiting the famous B-29.
November 1994
- Editorial: Airplanes in
the Mist
People come to the Air and Space Museum to see restored airplanes, not
for counterculture pageants and spiels about the ozone layer.
December 1994.
- Air and Space Museum
Hit By Academic Backlash, January 1995
- Political Exhibit Crashes
at the Smithsonian, March 1995
- Smithsonian Continues the
Cleanup, April 1995
- Editorial: Japan’s
Struggle With History
The truth is that imperial Japan started the war, waged it savagely, and
refused to surrender until the bombs fell.
May 1995
- Air and Space Museum
Director Resigns, June 1995
- Exhibit Blunders Force
Smithsonian Probe, July 1995
- Presenting the Enola
Gay, August 1995
- The Activists and the
Enola Gay
The Smithsonian has cleaned up its act, but the cause lives on with
those who
claim we bamboozled the press, Congress, and the public.
September 1995
- The Revelations of
Martin Harwit
The former director of the National Air and Space Museum has written a
book about the Enola Gay controversy.
December 1996
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