The Barnes Review, March/April 2003

The Barnes Review, March/April 2003

VOLUME IX, NUMBER 2


Table of Contents

WATERGATE REVISITED

By Richard Mcgowan. One of the little known stories of the watergate debacle is the activities of a little known senator from Connecticut—Lowell Weiker—that, in spite of his silly liberal rhetoric, was the main force uncovering White House corruption that led to the downfall of Richard Nixon…

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The Barnes Review, September/October 2002

The Barnes Review, September/October 2002

VOLUME VIII, NUMBER 5


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Table of Contents

UKRAINIAN NATIONALISM

By Dr. M. Raphael Johnson. Ukraine, the breadbasket of Europe, is a nation much overlooked by Americans, even those who are interested in eastern Europe. Is this a land whose time has come? Or is it destined forever to be a mere satellite of its giant neighbor, Russia?…

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The Barnes Review, May/June 1999

The Barnes Review, May/June 1999

VOLUME V, NUMBER 3


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Table of Contents

WHO WERE THE ORIGINAL NATIVE AMERICANS?

By John Nugent. Is America a “white man’s country” or a “red man’s country”? Who was here first? Surprisingly, the several oldest racially identifiable relics of human presence in the Americas, including the controversial “Kennewick Man,” strongly suggest a Caucasoid presence…

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Who Ordered the Death of French Admiral Darlan?

Who Ordered the Death of French Admiral Darlan?

By Alec de Montmorency. The “one man, one gun, no conspiracy” explanation of assassinations, used in the murders of President John F. Kennedy and Martin L. King, was nothing new. It was employed in the assassination of a leading French nationalist in Algeria during World War II. Following are the reminiscences of a journalist who knew Adm. Jean François Darlan and who questions the circumstances of his death.

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Britain’s Balfour Declaration of 1917

Britain’s Balfour Declaration of 1917

By Robert John. Eighty years ago, the British government—through international bankers—brokered away the land and the future of the people of Palestine in order to create a national home for the Jewish people. The president and Congress of the United States underwrote the World War I deal, which would cost Britain mightily and which continues to cost American taxpayers well over $4 billion dollars each year. But in terms of what it will cost in the future, in terms of both U.S. treasure and blood, is incalculable.

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