In our March 27 issue, in the article by Prof. Stefan Kurowski (p. 26), an editorial error resulted in the wrong figure for conversion of the Polish zloty to the dollar. There are 9,500 zlotys to the dollar.
by Michael Billington
Mr. Jin is one of the leading composers of the People’s Republic of China, whose opera “Savage Land” was recently performed in Washington, D.C. He spent 20 years in internal exile during the Cultural Revolution, accused of being a “rightist.”
by Carol White
Integrated transportation systems are being developed for the 21st century, and a design is being developed in Japan for an electric car which would be magnetically levitated.
by Silvia Palacios
Bankers Panic over Venezuela “Effect.”
by Edilson Herrera
Free Trade vs. Food Production.
by Rainer Apel
An Attack on Germany that Backfired.
by Carlos Wesley
Asbestos, Crack, Murder, and Tear Gas.
A Decade of Wars.
by Christopher White
What’s being hit now is the core of British-led international finance, and it’s happening while the powerhouse economies of Germany and Japan are now also undergoing decline.
by Konstantin George
by Ramtanu Maitra and Susan Maitra
by Anthony K. Wikrent
by Linda de Hoyos
by Lorenzo Carrasco Bazúa
Documentation: A case study: the destruction of the capital goods industry.
by Marcia Merry
What’s Your Beef?
by Nora Hamerman
Does a society treasure great music, and hold it to be coherent with scientific principles? Or does its music reject reason, in favor of the romantic expression of the “sincere feelings”? Therein lies a key to whether that society has the moral fitness to survive.
by Michael Billington
An interview with Jin Xiang.
An excerpt from the video “From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China.”
by Seth Taylor
An open letter to Dr. Bernhard Vogel, the prime minister of the eastern German state of Thuringia, by Seth Taylor, the American concertmaster at the Eisenach State Theater.
by Joseph Brewda
Turkey’s recent bombardment of the Kurds, and threats against its neighbors, are receiving the full support of the British and U.S. governments. If the Turkish rulers were not so easily manipulated because of their own imperial pretensions, they would smell a rat.
by Joseph Brewda
by Nancy Spannaus
by Valerie Rush
The proposal for a multilateral military force, presented by Argentine President Menem, was rejected by the Rio Group of 11 nations.
by Lydia Cherry
by Umberto Pascali
by Linda de Hoyos
by Mark Burdman
by Linda Everett
The breadth, numbers, and sweeping enforcement powers of pro-death bills flooding state legislatures signal one thing: Desperate officials have gone into a malthusian frenzy, willing to utilize as many ways as politically feasible to eliminate whole layers of their own constituency.
by William Jones
A high-powered delegation, including former political prisoners of the communist regime in Hungary, and Austrian jurist Dr. Kurt Ebert, put some people on Capitol Hill on the hot seat.
by Stephen Parsons
by Leo Scanlon
by M.T. Upharsin
CBS Kicks Over Fat Henry’s Trough.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Brown, Clinton Ready To Attack Iraq Again.
by William Jones