1992 IN REVIEWrn^ ^ •rn^^^rn^”^rn^^^rn^_>*rnrnI he Coming Wrath—January 1992—Samuel Francisrnn James Burnham and the managerial revolution,rnAndrei Navrozov on democracy and dictatorship.rnTomislav Sunic on the future of nationalism, andrnHarold O.J. Brown on the prophecies of PitirimrnSorokin. Plus Chilton Williamson, Jr.. on DeeprnEcology, William Grigg on the case against thernBoy Scouts, and Anne Marie Morgan on thernbureaucracy of getting married.rnBread and Circuses: The Politics of Welfare—rnFebruary 1992—Allan Carlson on how federal housingrnpolicies have contributed to the breakup of the family,rnWilliam Murchison on the doctor and the state,rnand Christina F. Jeffrey on Social Security as familyrnpolicy. Plus Barbara McCarthy on welfarernand illegal immigration, and Jeffrey Tucker onrnHousing and Urban Development.rnFaces of Eve: Goddess, Starlet, Poetess—Marchrn1992—Janet Scott Barlow on the devolution of womenrnon the screen, Thomas Reming on marriage as thernreal right to privacy, and R.S. Gwynn on Americanrnwomen poets. Plus Betsy Clarke on the politics ofrnrape, Anne Marie Morgan on the new technologyrnof fertility control, and Kenneth Craycraft onrnMary Ann Glendon’s Rights Talk.rnThe Spanish Americas—April 1992—RichardrnEstrada on the Hispanic contributions to American culture,rnMario Vargas Llosa on the difficult rise of thernLatin American novel, Chilton Williamson, Jr., onrnbullfighting in Juarez, Mexico, and poems by JorgernLuis Borges. Plus Brad Linaweaver on Albert JayrnNock, William Murchison on LBJ, and MurrayrnRothbard on violence in New York City.rnLaw and Order: Crime and Punishment—Mayrn1992—Thomas Fleming on the role of the executioner,rnPhilip Jenkins on the drug war and personal liberties,rnGraeme Newman on the case for corporal punishment,rnand Theodore Pappas on vigilante justice.rnPlus Murray Rothbard on street crime. LlewellynrnRockwell on vagrancy law, Richard Irvingrnon taxi drivers and minority crime, and a firsthandrnaccount of life in prison.rn,>’^i Restoring the Republic—June 1992—Clyde Wilsonrnon the republican approach, Samuel Francis onrnthe nationalist approach, and E. Christian Kopffrnon the Augustan compromise. Plus ThomasrnFleming on why we have the government werndeserve, Theodore Pappas on Japanese-rnAmerican trade, Chilton Williamson. Jr., on illegalrnimmigration, and Murray Rothbard on repudiating thernnational debt.rnCitizenship—July 1992—John Lukacs on patriotism,rnRichard D. Lamm on why great nations need great i iirnzens, Richard Flathman on four models of citizenshurnand Peter Schuck and Rogers Smith on why citizenshi)rnshould be based on consent and not birth. Plus ThomasrnFleming on the rebirth of nationalism, and SamuelrnFrancis on the Buchanan Revolution.rnReactionary Modernism—August 1992—rnThomas Molnar on Celine and French reactionary modrnemism, Peter J. Stanlis on Robert Frost, J.O. TaternWyndham Lewis, and Larr>’ Woiwode on Dos PassosrnPlus David R. Slavitt on the novels of 1991, JustinrnRaimondo on Ayn Rand as plagiarist. Bill Kauffmanrnon Sinclair Lewis, and Chilton Williamson. Jr.’srnreview of R. Emmett Tyrrell’s The Con!>en-ativernCrack- Up.rnRotten to the Core: American CollegesrnSeptember 1992—Thomas Fleming on literature and tlirncurriculum debate. Robert Weissberg on the life of .irncampus conservative, E. Christian Kopff on a truernclassical curriculum, and student reports on politicalrncorrectness at the University of Florida, GrinnellrnCollege, and Georgetown University. Plus LaurarnRogers’ expose of the Parents as Teachers program.rn1492: ItaHans and America—^October 1992—rnChristie Davies on blaming Columbus, E. ChristianrnKopff on Margaret Fuller in Rome, ChiltonrnWilliamson, Jr., on pseudoscholarship aboutrnColumbus, and Samuel Francis on The Godfatherrnas political metaphor. Plus Thomas Flemingrnon the changing frontier, David R. Slavitt onrnLorenzo Da Ponte, and Thomas O. Jones on Columbus’rndescendants.rnAin’t Freedom Grand: The 1992 Election-rnNovember 1992—^Donald Warren on the empty votingrnbooth, William J. Quirk on the unrepresentedrnmiddle class, Thomas Fleming on the ElectoralrnCollege, James S. Fishkin on deliberative polling,rnand Samuel Francis on the passivity of the electorate.rnPlus Allan Carlson on proportional representation, andrnTheodore Pappas on Martin Luther King, Jr.’s eai’lyrnplagiai’isms.rnTen Commandments^—December 1992—rnA round-table discussion on the Decalogue—rnby Thomas Molnar, Gary North, Frank W.rnBrownlow, Allan Carlson, Jacob Neusner,rnTheodore Pappas, Murray Rothbard, E. ChristianrnKopff, Harold O.J. Brown, and George Garrett. Plus PhiliprnJenkins on the panic over priestly pedophilia, Sally Wright onrnMalcolm Muggeridge, and William Wilson on C.S. Lewis.rn>«rnfe5P.rn-^rnmrnB A C K I S S U E O R D E R F O R Mrn1 to 4 issues $5.00 each; 5 to 9 issues $3.00 each (postage & handhng included);rn10 or more issues $2.00 each (postage billed separately)rnDaternJanuary 1992rnFebruary 1992rnMarch 1992rnApril 1992rnMay 1992rnJune 1992rnNamernQty. Cost DaternJuly 1992rnAugust 1992rnSeptember 1992rnOctober 1992rnNovember 1992rnDecember 1992rnQty. CostrnTotal Enclosed 5rnAddressrnMail with check to: Chronicles * 934 North Main Street * Rockford, Illinois 61103rnrnrn