In Essence

their Chinese vis- itors, Olmec "priests, artists, architects, and astronomers set the pace for later people (probably the Mayas) who conquered them and devel- oped the culture further."
"Tennyson's Crimean War Poetry: A
They Wanted Cross-Cultural Approach" Michael C.
C. Adams, in Journal of the History of
a Lovely War Ideas (July-Sept. 1979), Temple Univer- sity, Humanities Bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. 19122.
Modern critics of Alfred Lord Tennyson's Crimean War poetry ("Maud,"...

'The LastSupper' Milton Gendel, in ARTnews (Summer 1979). 121 Garden St., Marion, Ohio
Needs Saving 43302.
Leonardo da Vinci's famous mural, The Last Supper (1495-97), has never adhered well to the wall in the Dominican friars' refectory of the church of St. Maria delle Grazie in Milan. Dissatisfied with the tech- nique of painting frescoes on wet plaster (because he was a slow worker), Leonardo experimented with an oil-tempera medium that failed to penetrate and bond with the plaster, as fresco...

'The LastSupper' Milton Gendel, in ARTnews (Summer 1979). 121 Garden St., Marion, Ohio
Needs Saving 43302.
Leonardo da Vinci's famous mural, The Last Supper (1495-97), has never adhered well to the wall in the Dominican friars' refectory of the church of St. Maria delle Grazie in Milan. Dissatisfied with the tech- nique of painting frescoes on wet plaster (because he was a slow worker), Leonardo experimented with an oil-tempera medium that failed to penetrate and bond with the plaster, as fresco...

the governnlent's rural anti-guerrilla operations and the arrest of several key members in 1968. It concentrated its efforts in the hinterland, write Morel1 and Samudavanija, who teach political science at Princeton and at Thai- land's Chulalongkorn University, respectively. But, after 1973, in the new liberal climate, the party was free to proselytize among the stu- dents. Its agents distributed party publications on the campuses and emphasized to student leaders that the egalitarian society they...

Ann Crit-tendon, in Foreign Affairs (Summer 1979),
P.O. Box 2615,Boulder, Colo. 80322.
After two wars, Israel's economy is in serious straits, writes Crittendon, economics specialist for the New York Times. The statistics are grim. Prices rose almost 50 percent in 1978. The national debt stands at $12.5 billion, the world's largest per capita. The
PERIODICALS

OTHER NATIONS
balance-of-payments deficit last year was $3.25 billion, nearly one- fourth of the country's Gross National Product.
Prime M...

1972, the figure was $800 n~illion. Military expendi- tures hit $2 billion in 1975. In the fall of 1977, the new Begin govern- ment "floated" the Israeli pound to make exports cheaper, removed or reduced export subsidies, and eliminated certain currency controls to attract foreign investors. This "New Econon~ic Policy" was a moderate success. Exports rose 25 percent in 1978, and foreign investment in- creased more than 50 percent. But Begin failed to accompany these measures...

Shell and Exxon in Curacao and Aruba, refine more Venezuelan crude than does Venezuela). These service contracts enable the multi- nationals to take more money out of the country, Bye suspects, because the foreigners no longer re-invest in the Venezuelan plants.
Meanwhile, the government's net oil income has dropped: It is invest- ing heavily in oil and other heavy industries and must pay indemnifica- tion ($1 billion over five years) to the multinationals. Left out, Bye contends, are Venezuela's...

Hugh Trevor-Roper, in The Triu?EPhant American Scholar (Winter 1978/79), 181 1 Q St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20009.
Saint Thomas More (1478-1535) has never been so venerated: Henry VIII and his counselor Thomas Cromwell are damned for beheading him; Yale has undertaken a "More project" to reissue his complete writings (his collected works have been unpublished since the mid-16th century); and a famous play and award-winning film lionize him as "A Man For All Seasons."
But it...

Richard W. Smith, in Change School TV (Dee.-Jan. 1978/79), NEW Tower, New Rochelle, N.Y. 10801.
Educational television was launched with great expectations 25 years ago, prompted in part a shortage of grade school and college level teachers. Today, both closed-circuit TV in the classroom and instruc- tional TV intended for home audiences have yet to catch hold.
Its supporters contend that the new technology was sabotaged by teachers' unions in the grade schools and by the intellectual snobbery...

Hans Linde, in
The Center Magazine (Jan.-Feb. 19791, Box
4068, Santa ~arbara, Calif. 93103.
The continuing conflict between the courts and the news media is often said to result from two conflicting constitutional rights-the First Amendment right of the press to be free to publish without censorship and to protect its news sources and the Sixth Amendment right of an accused person to a fair trial.
This is a fallacy; these two constitutional rights are not in conflict at all, argues Oregon...

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