€^rn1994 IN REVIEWrnX5^rntx^^-^^rnHLrnPROTECTED BY SMITH & WESSON; LIFE, LIBERTY,rnAND PROPERTY—January 1994—Thomas Flemingrnon the home as one’s eastlc, Roger D. McGrath onrnthe virtue of armed communities, and RichardrnMaxwell Brown on the “no duty to retreat”rndoctrine in American law. Plus SamuelrnFrancis on the new populism and a reviewrnof Walter Laqueur’s B/act Hundred: ThernRise of the Extreme Right in Russia.rn• ^ A v ‘rn^N^rnC-rn90’s MEN: PUSHY QUEERS, TOUGH JEWS, ANDrnSENSITIZED WASPS—February 1994—ChiltonrnWilliamson, Jr., on the syphilization of Americanrnmanhood, Harold O.J. Brown on thernimportance of sports, Paul Gottfried onrnthe stereotypical Jewish male, and ThomasrnFleming on the extermination of manliness inrnAmerican culture. Plus Martin Mawyer on WilliamrnWeld’s empowerment of Queer Nation, andrnE. Christian Kopff’s “Real Men’s Studies.”rnOLD WORLD DISORDER—March 1994—W.rnBruce Lincoln on the burden of Russianrnhistory, Curtis Gate on the United Nationsrnand Third Balkan War, and Thomas Fleming onrnwhv Europe needs to grow up. Plus R. CortrnKirkwood on the Presidential Commission onrnWomen in the Military and a review of SamuelrnFrancis’s Beautiful Losers: Essays on the Failurernof American Conservatism.rnPOP CuLlUREr-April 1994—George Garrettrnon the sorry state of popular culture, Paul A.rnTrout on the 40th anniversary of Fahrenheit 45i (withrncommentary from Ray Bradbury), and ThomasrnFleming on tuning out technology. Plus R.H.W.rnDillard on Federico Fellini, Bill Kauffman on rockrnand roll, Samuel Francis on Star Trek and therncultural elite, and William Norman Grigg onrnthe new race war.rn”I DON’T HATE ‘THE SOUTH”—May 1994—rnM.E. Bradford on Donald Davidson, Fred Chappell onrnthe writer’s responsibility, J.O. Tate on the filmrnGettysburg, and William Pratt on Andrew Lytic.rnPlus Thomas Fleming on Southern chauvinismrnand Samuel Francis cm the anniversary of Brownrn””^^StX V. The Board of Education.rnHEALIHY, WEALTHY AND WISE? THErnHEALTH CARE DEBATE—June 1994—GarrettrnHardin on why discrimination is needed in health carernservices, Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr., on the AMA, Yuri N.rnMaltsev on the Soviet experience with socialized medicine, ThomasrnFleming on the lack of a real health care debate, and Robert Weissberg onrnthe death of natural causes.rn’^’^ArnFORBIDDEN FRUITS: THE NEW PURITANISM—rnJuly 1994—Thomas Fleming in praise of sex andrnviolence, Samuel Francis on anarcho-tyranny,rnPhilip Jenkins on the New Puritanism, andrnSarah J. McCarthy on antiharassment andrnspeech crime laws. Plus Chilton Williamson,rnJr., on the violent West and WaynernAllensworth’s review of VladimirrnZhirinovsky’s The Last Drive to the South.rnAMERICAN DILEMMAS—August 1994—rnMurray N. Rothbard on life in the Old Right,rnEugene D. Genovese on black autonomy,rnJoseph Brown on “the other black history,”rnand Bill Kauffman on Senator J. WilliamrnFulbright. Plus Thomas Fleming onrnequality vs. privilege and Samuel Francisrnon secessionist fantasies.rnAFTER LITERACY: EDUCATION IN POS’TCIVILIZEDrnAMERICA—September 1994—John Lukacsrnon civilization vs. culture, Michael Gormanrnon technovandals and the future of libraries,rnTheodore Pappas on the nagging problem ofrnplagiarism, and Stephen A. Erickson on thernpolitics of education. Plus Thomas Fleming onrnthe education of liberals and John Dombrowskirnon politically incorrect research.rnTHE YELLOW (BELLIED) PRESS—Octoberrn1994—Philip Jenkins on our free and gutlessrnpress, Erwin Knoll on the “liberal” media,rnTerry Przybylski on the Chicago Tribune,rnAlex N. Dragnich on Yugoslavia and thernWestern media, and Ewa M. Thompson on Russiarnand the American press. Plus Samuel Francis onrnthe abortion gambit.rnAIN’T FREEDOM GRAND, PT. II—Novemberrn1994—Chronicles interviews formerrnCalifornia governor Jerry Brown, RichardrnWinger on restricting ballot access, JeffreyrnTucker on the third-party option, and WaynernAllensworth on the religious right. Plus TomislavrnSunic on video politics and Paul Foster’srn”Memoirs of a Reagan Hack.”rnKEEPING THE FAITH: LIFE IN POSTCHRISTIANrnAMERICA—December 1994—rnPhilip Jenkins on the radicalism in thernEpiscopal Church, Thomas Fleming on therncase for religious boycotts, Thomas Molnar on thernNational Conference of Catholic Bishops, and JohnrnPatrick Zmirak on AIDS and the wrath of God. Plus JacobrnNeusner on the left’s hijacking of Judaism and Sanford Pinsker onrnaffirmative action and the Lubavitcher Rebbe.rnBACK ISSUE ORDER FORMrn1 to 4 issues $6.00 each; 5 to 9 issues $3.50 each; 10 or more issues $2.50 each (postage and handling included)rnDaternJanuary 1994rnFebruary 1994rnMarch 1994rnApril 1994rnMay 1994rnJune 1994rnNamernQty. Cost DaternJuly 1994rnAugust 1994rnSeptember 1994rnOctober 1994rnNovember 1994rnDecember 1994rnQty. CostrnTotal Qty. Total!rnAddressrnMAIL WITH CHECK TO: CHRONICLES * 934 NORTH MAIN STREET * ROCKFORD, IL 61103rn48/CHRONICLESrnrnrn
January 1975April 21, 2022By The Archive
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