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- 1From:New Internationalist (Issue 540)1945 At the end of World WarTwo, following the withdrawal of Japanese forces, British-occupied Malaya's economy is in a downward spiral... Unemployment, low wages, and rampant inflation (including high food prices)...
- 2From:The Baltic TimesFormer German President Joachim Gauck on Wednesday received an honorary doctorate from Lithuania's Vytautas Magnus University (VMU). According to the university, Joachim Gauck was honored for his achievements in the...
- 3From:Vietnam (Vol. 35, Issue 2)Nhia Long Vang, a former major in an anticommunist force in Laos and prominent Hmong community leader in Fresno, California, died on March 2, 2022. No age was given. He and others in the Hmong ethnic group were trained...
- 4From:Commentary (Vol. 154, Issue 2)THE VICTIMS OF Communism Museum opened this June without the kind of fanfare that has accompanied the recent debuts of other exposition halls in the nation's capital. Indeed, outside of a lone article in the Wall Street...
- 5From:The New American (Vol. 38, Issue 9)America recently celebrated February 21 as President's Day. Concerning the evaluation of U.S. presidents, it has always perplexed me, as a former American History teacher, that historians consider Warren G. Harding to be...
- 6From:The New American (Vol. 38, Issue 9)In recent years, especially since the 2016 Trump vs. Clinton presidential campaign, the world has witnessed a Great Reversal: The most left-wing, pro-Soviet, pro-communist Democrats and their media enablers suddenly...
- 7From:The CriticTHE MUSIC IMMEDIATELY TRIGGERSa response. The graphics follow. And then there is David Suchet. For 13 seasons, from 1989 to 2013, Poirot provided a comfort blanket for Britain. Such style! Such a world of ease! Agatha...
- 8From:BookPageAmerican History When Franklin Delano Roosevelt died in April 1945, World War II was not over. His successor, Harry S. Truman, faced crucial choices both then and in the years to come. Some, such as the custody and use...
- 9From:The New American (Vol. 38, Issue 3)"We all love this place. Regrettably, what was ahead for us is not just pouring rains or blowing winds, but hurricanes and tsunamis." A spokesman at Citizen News announced its closure, in which it will join the...
- 10From:American History (Vol. 56, Issue 5)On the evening of Saturday, December 20, 1919, cold winds swept New York Harbor as 249 leftist radicals waited on Ellis Island to board USS Burford. The Army transport was to carry the deportees, most of whom were not...
- 11From:BookPageHistorical Fiction Juhea Kim's accomplished first novel, Beasts of a Little Land (Ecco, $27.99, 9780063093577), opens in 1917, deep in the frozen Korean wilderness, where a penniless hunter saves a young Japanese...
- 12From:The New Yorker (Vol. 97, Issue 20)Briefly Noted The Vixen, by Francine Prose (Harper). After graduating from Harvard, Simon Putnam, the narrator of this novel, set in the McCarthy era, stumbles into a position at a prestigious publishing firm, where he...
- 13From:National Review (Vol. 73, Issue 12)Woke capitalism began, as so many of these things do, with the best of intentions. In this case, those good intentions were focused on the long campaign against apartheid in South Africa. The South Africa divestment...
- 14From:The New American (Vol. 36, Issue 21)The 1619 Project, being adopted by schools nationwide, claims that the country's entire history is based on slavery. It's so wrong even leftist professors are tearing it apart. Lies by the New York Times in the late...
- 15From:The New American (Vol. 36, Issue 20)"I am inclined to uphold morals and values instead of counting money." After completing a trip to Taiwan and ignoring a threat from Beijing regarding business dealings, the speaker of the Czech Senate, Milos Vystreil,...
- 16From:The New American (Vol. 36, Issue 20)"Those who play with fire are bound to get burned." A spokesman for the Chinese Ministry of National Defense, Senior Colonel Ren Guoqiang explained that Beijing's sending of 18 fighter jets into the Taiwan Strait...
- 17From:Vietnam (Vol. 33, Issue 3)Throughout the mid-to-late 1950s, Dr. Thomas Anthony Dooley III was widely celebrated as embodying the great and unselfish good of American aid. His humanitarian medical assistance in rural areas of Laos and Vietnam...
- 18From:World History Bulletin (Vol. 36, Issue 2)From the Second World War's end to the Soviet Union's dissolution, the Cold War undoubtedly shaped American sport diplomacy. The Soviet Union's considerable investment in sport and the country's subsequent domination of...
- 19From:National Review (Vol. 72, Issue 15)Olivia de Havilland, a British-born, newly naturalized U.S. citizen, joined the Hollywood chapter of the Citizens' Committee in 1944, taking it for what it appeared to be, a pro-Roosevelt public-policy advocacy...
- 20From:Foreign Policy (Issue 237)RACE IS NOT A PERSPECTIVE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS; it IS a central organizing feature of world politics. Anti-Japanese racism guided and sustained U.S. engagement in World War II, and broader anti-Asian sentiment...