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...stranglehold on policy. But one official of Foreign Policy makes his distaste for the competition very clear: " Foreign Policy is a direct alternative. Foreign Affairs is the voice of all the people who've been wrong in the past. It's a bad magazine run by bad people, a bunch of dinosaurs who've been around for years." Some other editors, however, insist that Foreign Policy is complementary to Foreign Affairs, not a direct competitor...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Foreign Policy: Fighting the Dinosaurs | 4/23/1971 | See Source »

Both Senators took pains to impress the rally with their opposition to the war in Vietnam. They were generally well-received, though there was one "dump Muskie" sign as well as intermittent chants of "dump the whole bunch...

Author: By ??? B. Hamilton, | Title: Providence Anti-War Ratty Draws 20,000 Despite Rain | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

During Cravens' speech Paul Ferolito, a longtime Cambridge resident, interrupted to say, "You people are all a bunch of shirkers. My son was over in Vietnam and he was proud to be there...

Author: By Joyce Heard, | Title: Cambridge Council Urges Withdrawal From Vietnam | 4/13/1971 | See Source »

Anyway. Baron and Mary and Blaire got this idea together last spring, this fantasy of a fashion, or maybe call it anti-fashion, magazine that didn't tell you what to wear in big 9 x 14 glossies, but just let a bunch of people hang it all out, let 'em rap about what they and their friends were wearing. The kind of magazine that would go out into the street and bring street people back into your home. Like it no longer mattered what you wore to the wedding feast and so there was this real need...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: The Counter-Culteha Consciousness I in Bellbottoms | 4/13/1971 | See Source »

...often violent Philippines. The country is more than usually beset by economic, political and social ills-and by the guns of extremists. The old scourges of the islands, the Huks, have been so cut up by government raids that they now amount to little more than a Mafia-like bunch of "protection" racketeers. But on Luzon, several hundred members of a Maoist New People's Army wage intermittent guerrilla war against the central government. On Mindanao, some 2,000 people died during the past year in clashes between private armies of Christians and Moslems over land and timber holdings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PHILIPPINES: Prescription for Revolution | 4/12/1971 | See Source »

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