GREAT TOPICS—GREAT ISSUESrn•’/)/(/(.JrnNATION UNDER GOD—December 1997—ThomasrnFleming praises intolerance, D. George Leech outlines arnChristian foreign policy, William A. Donohue discussesrnthe last respectable bias-anti-Catholicism, Llewellyn H.rnRockwell, Jr. shows why the Christian right needs Econ.rn101, and Harold O.J. Brown questions the ethics ofrnclergy.rnMANIFEST DISASTER—June 1997—ThomasrnFleming on the new imperialism, Samuel Francis onrnglobalism and its consequences, Joseph Sobran on therncase for anti-Americanism, Srdja Trifkovic on America’srnrole in the Balkans, and James George Jatras onrnbenevolent global hegemony. Plus Rajko Dolecek’srnLetter from Pale, and Justin Raimondo on David Horowitzrnand the ex-communist confessional.rnIDENTITY POLITICS—November 1997—Thomasrnneming on race as the American religion, Samuel Francisrnon the witch-hunts of Morris Dees, Jacob Neusner on secularrnJudaism, and Joseph Fallon on the politics of Hispanicrnidentity. Plus Justin Raimondo on the black warrnon Asians in San Francisco, and Mark Tooley on thernchurch burning hoax.rnUTOPIAS UNLIMITED—May 1997—ThomasrnFleming on the worid of W.S. Gilbert, Thomas Bertonneaurnon the death of science fiction, Jesse Walker on therncult of Philip K. Dick, and Scott R Richert on the XFiles.rnPlus Samuel Francis reviews the latest biographyrnof H.P. Lovecraft, and August Derleth’s last editor recallsrnthe founding of Arkham House.rn^ CTWonr^^’Jrn• * « jrnIMPERIAL PRESIDENCY—October 1997—PattickrnJ. Buchanan on Mr. Lincoln’s War, Samuel Francis on therndemise of checks and balances, Llewellyn Rockwell onrnexecuuve branch evils, and Donald Livingston andrnThomas Naylor on the real meaning of the Pledge of Allegiance.rnPlus Thomas Heming on how Presidents becamernour masters.rnEDUCATION AND THE AMERICAN ELITE—rnSeptember 1997—John Lukacs says “To Hell WithrnCollege,” George Watson on elitism and its virtues, J.O.rnTate on the reign of “red diaper” babies in academe, andrnHerb Ixjndon on parietaJs past and present. Plus RichardrnWilbur on good manners and good literature, andrnScott Southworth on the forced funding of studentrnradicalism.rnTHE MEANING OF DEATH—AUGUST 1997—BillrnKauffinan on the costs of war, Michael Hill on things worthrndying for, Allan Carlson on the new euthanasia pill, andrnBarry Baldwin on the case for capital punishment. PlusrnFrank Brownlow’s review of Alias Shakespeare byrnJoseph Sobran and Justin Raimondo’s report on GeorgernSoros.rnNATIONAL SUICIDE—July 1997—Thomas Flemingrnon learning a lesson from the Czechs, Curtis Cate on thernFrench debate over immigradon, R.J. Stove on PaulinernHanson’s influence in Australia, Justin Raimondo on thernfuture of the Pacific Northwest, William Murchison onrnwhy Mexico lost Texas, and Gregory McNamee on thernstate of Native Americans.rnSQUEEZE PLAY: THE CONSERVATIVErnMIDDLE—April 1997—Samuel Francis on the GOPrnflop, Mark Royden Winchell on paleoconservatism,rnGeorge Watson on the strange friendship betweenrnconservatives and the fifee market, Martin Mawyer onrnthe fiimre of the Christian right, and Paul Gottfried onrnMartin Luther King as conservative hero.rnNEW WORLD CULTURE: Mmm, imnm, good?-rnMarch 1997—Bill Kauffman on life on PlanetrnHollywood, David Hackett Fischer on multiculturalism’srnassault on scholarship, Jesse Walker on Ray Davies andrnthe Kinks as localists, and Michael Hill on the New Reconstructionrnof the South. Plus former ambassadorrnFrank Ruddy on “Au Revoir, Boutros.”rnTHE SERVILE STATE CRACKS DOWN—Februaryrn1997—Thomas Fleining on why everybody gonnarnpay tax today, Samuel Francis on the new federal policernstate, Sarah J. McCarthy on why Uncle Sam is notrntrusted, and U.S. Congressman Don Manzullo on judicialrntaxation without representation.rnHATE: OPEN SEASON ON HUNS, POLACKS,rnREDNECKS, WOPS, RUSSKIES, HUNKIES—rnJanuary 1997—Paul Gottfried on Polonophobia,rnRalph Raico on Nazifying die Germans, Michael Hillrnon the tar and feathering of the South, and WaynernAllensworih on the Russian Demon. Plus MargiernBurns on “Southern White Trash” as a genrernof film.rn'(mirn”^”ti””””]rn^’^'<>ni(krnBACK ISSUE ORDER FORMrn1 to 4 issues $7.00 each; 5 to 9 issues $5.00 each; 10 or more issues $4.50 each (postage and handling included)rnDate Qty. Cost Date Qty. CostrnDecember 1997rnNovember 1997rnOctober 1997rnSeptember 1997rnAugust 1997rnJuly 1997rnN a m e _rnAddress _rnJune 1997rnMay 1997rnApril 1997rnMarch 1997rnFebruary 1997rnJanuar’ 1997rnTotal Qty. TotalrnMAIL WFTH CHECK TO: CHRONICLES • P.O. Box 800 <• MT. MORRIS, I I 61054. • OR TO ORDER BY CREDIT CARD, CALL: 1-800-397-8160rnrnrn