On Fall’s Hell in a Very Small Place, A Frenchman’s Viewpoint
Marvin E. Gettleman reviews the late Bernard B.
First Thoughts on the Announcement of the Death of Bernard Fall
Like many who came to political consciousness during the second world war, Bernard Fall possessed a sixth sense about political issues.
A Bernard Fall Retrospective
On February 21, 1967, while on patrol with US Marines north of Hue, in South Vietnam, Bernard Fall, distinguished French-born expert on Vietnam and
A Vietnam Bibliography
A bibliography compiled by Marvin E. Gettleman consisting of 105 works related to Vietnam.
Volume 3, Number 3 (Spring-Autumn 1967)
Democracy And The Formation Of Foreign Policy: The Case of F.D.R. and America’s Entry into World War II
Discussion about the methods used by Franklin D. Roosevelt to bring the United States into World War II is not new.
War Guilt in the Middle East
The trouble with sectarians, whether they be libertarians, Marxists, or world-governmentalists, is that they tend to rest conten
A Note to Our Subscribers
A note to the subscribers of Left and Right informing them of the special 1968 Harry Barnes-Pearl Harbor double-length issue.
Pearl Harbor After a Quarter of a Century
The surprise Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, is regarded by most persons who recall it at all as an isolated dramatic episode,
On Desecrating the Flag
The Congress of the United States, in its wisdom, has now moved to make a federal offense out of “desecrating the flag”.
The Black Revolution
Bewildered white Liberals are wont to ask: “What do you people want?” Some newsmen recently asked virtually this same question of H.
Ronald Reagan As Educator
For two years we have been instructed by the radical opposition at Berkeley on the evils of the swollen and gigantic multiversity that constitutes
Why the Futile Crusade?
Sidney Lens, by his analysis of the roots of the Cold War In The Futile Crusade, Anti-Communism as American Credo, challenges observers of
Freedom To Travel
The recent activities of the Passport Office of the State Department have recently made headlines in the press.
Isolationism Reconsidered
Leonard Liggio reviews Isolationism America, 1935-1941 by Manfred Jonas. Like so much recently published scholarship&
From Georgia With Love: The Case Of Julian Bond
Julian Bond, a brilliant young leader of SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee), having been duly elected to the Georgia state legislatu
SDS: The New Turn
Among the activist organizations of the New Left, two and only two have had a direct impact on American life: SNCC And SDS (the Berkeley phenomenon
The General Line
A new journal of opinion must justify its existence; our justification is a deep commitment to the liberty of man.