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Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1999: Vol 55 Index PDF

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Preview Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1999: Vol 55 Index

Authors Dec., 42-45 Lluma, Diego, “Low Probability, High Conse- Flynn, Michael, “The Do-it-yourself Reactor,” quence,” Nov./Dec., 14—16 ‘Jan. /Feb., 7-9; “Political Minefield,” Mar./ Longworth, Richard C., “A New Kind of War,” Ackland, Len, “The Day We Almost Lost Den- Apr., 49-53; “Spies R Us,” May/June, 8-9; July/Aug., 28-31; review of Welsome, The ver,” July/Aug., 58-65 “Blitzkriegi nt he Backyard,” July/Aug., 12; Plutonium Files: America’s Secret Medical Aftergood, Steven, review of Moynihan, Secre- “What Did You Do in the Cold War, Experiments During the Cold War, Nov/ cy, Mar./Apr., 59-60; “Wrongheaded Pro- Daddy?” Sept/Oct., 9-10; “Web Watch: Dec., 58-61 tection,” “july/Aug., 6 Games,” Sept/Oct., 13; “Major Tom to Prize Lortie, Bret,*Nano Nukes for Microma- Ahmedullah, Mohammed, “Sugarcoating Nu- Control,” Nov/Dec., 8-10; review of chines?” Sept/Oct., 11-12; “Web Watch: clear Power,” Sept./Oct., 16, 19 Moreno, Undue Risk: Secret State Experi- Scientists,” July/Aug., 13; “BRC: Here We Arkin, William M., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear ments on Humans, Nov./Dec., 61-62 Go Again,” Nov/Dec., 5-7; “Web Watch: Forces, End of 1995,” Jan./Feb., 78-80; “A Frankel, Sherman, “Missile Defense a Dead Space,” Nov/Dec., 11 New Idea for Reductions,” Jan/Feb., 81; Issue,” July/Aug., 75-76 Lumpe, Lora, “The Leader of the Pack,” Jan./ “Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, End of Goldblat, Jozef, “Rules of Negotiating Need Feb., 27-33 1998," Mar/Apr., 62-63; “UNSCOM Renegotiation,” Nov/Dec., 64-65 Luongo, Kenneth, “Getting it Right,” May/ R.L.P.,” Mar/Apr., 64; “Chinese Nuclear Goldring, Natalie, “The NRA Goes Global,” June, 62-65 Forces, 1999,” May/June, 79-80; “End of an Jan/Feb., 61-65 Macfarlane, Allison, “Canning Plutonium: Era,” May/June, 81; “French and British Greacen, Chris, “The Wind Farm in the Cab- Faster and Cheaper,” May/June, 66-69 Nuclear Forces, 1999,” July/Aug., 77-79; “In bage Patch,” May/June, 40-49 Masiza, Zondi, “Mandela’s Legacy,” Mar./Apr., Praise of Heavy Bombers,” July/Aug., 80; Gusterson, Hugh, “Los Alamos: Summer 21-23; review of Gourevitch, We Wish to In- “World Plutonium Inventories,” Sept /Oct.. Under Siege,” Nov/Dec., 36-41 form You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed 71; “One to Watch,” Sept/Oct., 72; “Where Hagerman, Edward, “Germ Warfare Was With Our Families, May/June, 76-77 They Were,” Nov./Dec., 26-35; °P oliticra lly Used,” July/Aug., 3-5 Mathews, Brendan, “London Calling, the NSA De ple ted Munitions,” Nov /Dec., 72 Hansen, Chuck, “The End of Openness,” Listening,” Mar/Apr., 9-11; “Nukewaste. Austin, Kathi, “Heartso fD arkness,” Jan/Feb., May/June, 3-4; “No Change,” Sept/Oct., 4 gov,” May/June, 10-11] 34-37 Hartung, William D., “Billions for Bombs, Pen- McKiernan, Kevin, “Turkey's War on the Bernstein, Adam, “Canning Plutonium: Faster nies for Peacekeeping,” Sept/Oct., 6 Kurds,” Mar./Apr., 26-37; “Reply to Ozdag’s and Cheaper,” May/June, 66-69 Hayes, Peter, “The Wind Farm in the Cabbage Letter,” May/June, 5, 77 Bourgholtzer, Frank, review of Koehler, Stasi: Patch,” May/June. 40-49 Mendelson, Jack, “Missile Defense: And It Still The Untold Story of the East German Secret Herby, Peter, “Focus on Humans, Not Num- Won't Work,” May/June, 29-31 Police, July/Aug., 66-68 bers,” July/Aug., 74 Moon, John, review of Hagerman and Endi- Boutwell, Jeffrey, “The Wild West Bank,” Hoehn III, William, “Getting it Right,” May/ cott, The United States and Biological War- Jan/Feb., 41-44 June, 62-65 fare, May/June, 70-72; reply to “Germ War- Burns, Ken, “Web Watch: Games,” Sept/Oct., Isaacs, John, ‘Pragmatism, Not Principle,” fare Was Used,” July/Aug., 5, 71 13 Jan/Feb., 16-17; “Fortifying Fortress Amer- Moore, Mike, “Easy Killing,” Jan/Feb., 2; re- Burr, Wiiliam, “Where They Were,” Nov./ ica,” Mar/Apr., 24-25; “Missile Defense: It’s view of Cohen, Israel and the ake Dec., 26-34 Back,” May/June, 26-28; “Having Your Jan/Feb., 74-76; “The Hapless Kurds,” Butler, Judy, review of LeoGrande, Our Own Cake,” July/Aug., 19-20; “F-22 in a Tail- Mar/Apr., 2; “In Memoriam: Leonard Backyard: The United States in Central spin,” Sept/Oct., 14-15; “Test Ban Fizzles,” Rieser,” Mar./Apr., 4-5; “A Small Project,” America, 1977-1992, May/June, 74-75 Nov/Dec., 21-22 May/June, 2; “In Memoriam: Henry Clegg, Liz, “NGOs Take Aim,” Jan/Feb., Johnson, Chalmers, “In Search of a New Cold Kendall, Glenn Seaborg, Gerhard 49-51 War,” Sept./Oct., 44-52; response to “John- Herzberg,” May/June, 21-22; “Invisible Cole, Leonard, “Anthrax Hoaxes: Hot New son Got it Wrong,” Nov/ Dec., 3, 64 War, July/Aug., 2; “Call China’s Hand,” Hobby?” July/Aug., 7-9; review of Stern, Johnson, Rebecca, “Troubled Treaties: Is the July/Aug., 23; “Splitism,” Sept /Oct., 2; “De- The Ultimate Terrorists, Sept/Oct., 67-68 NPT Tottering?” Mar./Apr., 16-18 muystification,” Nov/Dec. 2; “A Kafkaesque Cotta-Ramusino, Paolo,” The Unasked Ques- Karp, Aaron, “Uncertain Prognosis,” Jan/Feb., Case of Hua Di,” Nov/Dec., 12-14 tion,” July/Aug., 42-45 66-69 Mushtaq, Najum, “A Funny Kind of Deter- Cox, Christopher, “Johnson Got It Wrong,” Khan, Ayesha, “Nuclear but Needy,” Jan/Feb., rence,” May/June, 6; “Islam Distorted,” Nov/ Dec., 3 12-13 July/Aug., 53-57 Cumings, Bruce, review of Weart, Never at Khripunov, Igor, “Minatom at the Edge,” May/ Nelson, Daniel N., “Damage Control,” Jan./ War: Why Democracies Won't Fight One June, 56-61; “Moscow Reacts,” July/Aug., Feb., 55-57; No New War,” Sept/Oct., 34 Another, May/June, 72-74; “China Through 32-35 Nolan, Janne, “Which Nuclear Future?” Jan// the Looking Glass,” Sept/Oct., 30-38 Kibaroglu, Mustafa, “Turkey's Deterrent,” Feb., 3, 77 Datt, Savita, “Engaging North Korea,” July/ Mar//Apr., 3, 61 Norris, Robert S., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear Aug., 76 Klare, Michael T., “The Kalashnikov Age,” Forces, End of 1998,” Jan./Feb., 78-80; Dicks, Norm. “Johnson Got It Wrong,” Nov./ Jan/Feb., 18-22 “Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, End of Dec., 3 Kraig, Michael, “Safe or Sorry: The “Y2K Prob- 1995,” Mar./Apr., 62-63; “Chinese Nuclear Dreyer, June Teufel, “Tangled up with Tai- lem’ and Nuclear Weapons,” Mar/Apr., Forces,1999.” May/June, 79-80; “French wan,” Nov/Dec., 46-51 3843 and British Nuclear Forces, 1999.” Eisendrath, Craig, “Needed: More Intelligent Krepon, Michael, “CTBT Deadline Nears,” July/Aug,, 77-79; “World Plutonium Inven- Intelligence,” Nov./Dec., 22-25 Mar/Apr., 18-20; “Missile Defense: Not tories,” Sept/Oct., 71; “Where They Were,” Endicott, John E., “Track II,” Nov/Dec., 64 Such a Bad Idea,” May/June, 31-33 Nov/Dec., 26-35 Endicott, Stephen, “Germ Warfare Was Used,” Kristensen, Hans M., “Secrecy on a Sliding O'Callaghan, Geraldine, “Wheeling and Deal- July/Aug., 3-5 Scale,” Nov/Dec., 33 ing,” Jan/Feb., 52-54 Epstein, William, “Voting by Abstention,” Mar/ Kumaraswamy, P.R., “Israel's Embarrassment Ozdag, Umit, “Turks Fighting Terrorism, Not Apr., 6 of Spies,” Mar/Apr., 14-15, 61 Kurds,” May/June, 4-5 Evangelista, Matthew, “Russia’s Fragile Union,” Larin, Vladislav, “Soviet PNEs: A Legacy of Paine, Christopher, “Let's Finish the Job,” May/June, 50-55 Contamination,” May/June, 18-20; “Mayak’s July/Aug., 24-27 Farinella, Paolo, “And Then There’s Vanunu,” Walking Wounded,” Sept/Oct., 20-27 Page, Benjamin I., review of Kull and Destler, Jan/Feb., 3 Leahy, Patrick, “Landmines and Kurds,” Misreading the Public: The Myth of a New Ferguson, Charles, “Tritium: TVA Gets the July/Aug., 74 Isolationism, Nov/Dec., 62-63 Nod,” Mar/Apr., 12-14 Leitner, Peter, “A Reckless Disregard for Secu- Pearson, Ruth, “Angst on the East River,” Fetter, Steve, “After the Dust Settles,” Nov/ rity,” July/Aug., 71-73 Nov/Dec., 19-20, 65 68 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Authors Dec., 42-45 Lluma, Diego, “Low Probability, High Conse- Flynn, Michael, “The Do-it-yourself Reactor,” quence,” Nov./Dec., 14—16 ‘Jan. /Feb., 7-9; “Political Minefield,” Mar./ Longworth, Richard C., “A New Kind of War,” Ackland, Len, “The Day We Almost Lost Den- Apr., 49-53; “Spies R Us,” May/June, 8-9; July/Aug., 28-31; review of Welsome, The ver,” July/Aug., 58-65 “Blitzkriegi nt he Backyard,” July/Aug., 12; Plutonium Files: America’s Secret Medical Aftergood, Steven, review of Moynihan, Secre- “What Did You Do in the Cold War, Experiments During the Cold War, Nov/ cy, Mar./Apr., 59-60; “Wrongheaded Pro- Daddy?” Sept/Oct., 9-10; “Web Watch: Dec., 58-61 tection,” “july/Aug., 6 Games,” Sept/Oct., 13; “Major Tom to Prize Lortie, Bret,*Nano Nukes for Microma- Ahmedullah, Mohammed, “Sugarcoating Nu- Control,” Nov/Dec., 8-10; review of chines?” Sept/Oct., 11-12; “Web Watch: clear Power,” Sept./Oct., 16, 19 Moreno, Undue Risk: Secret State Experi- Scientists,” July/Aug., 13; “BRC: Here We Arkin, William M., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear ments on Humans, Nov./Dec., 61-62 Go Again,” Nov/Dec., 5-7; “Web Watch: Forces, End of 1995,” Jan./Feb., 78-80; “A Frankel, Sherman, “Missile Defense a Dead Space,” Nov/Dec., 11 New Idea for Reductions,” Jan/Feb., 81; Issue,” July/Aug., 75-76 Lumpe, Lora, “The Leader of the Pack,” Jan./ “Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, End of Goldblat, Jozef, “Rules of Negotiating Need Feb., 27-33 1998," Mar/Apr., 62-63; “UNSCOM Renegotiation,” Nov/Dec., 64-65 Luongo, Kenneth, “Getting it Right,” May/ R.L.P.,” Mar/Apr., 64; “Chinese Nuclear Goldring, Natalie, “The NRA Goes Global,” June, 62-65 Forces, 1999,” May/June, 79-80; “End of an Jan/Feb., 61-65 Macfarlane, Allison, “Canning Plutonium: Era,” May/June, 81; “French and British Greacen, Chris, “The Wind Farm in the Cab- Faster and Cheaper,” May/June, 66-69 Nuclear Forces, 1999,” July/Aug., 77-79; “In bage Patch,” May/June, 40-49 Masiza, Zondi, “Mandela’s Legacy,” Mar./Apr., Praise of Heavy Bombers,” July/Aug., 80; Gusterson, Hugh, “Los Alamos: Summer 21-23; review of Gourevitch, We Wish to In- “World Plutonium Inventories,” Sept /Oct.. Under Siege,” Nov/Dec., 36-41 form You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed 71; “One to Watch,” Sept/Oct., 72; “Where Hagerman, Edward, “Germ Warfare Was With Our Families, May/June, 76-77 They Were,” Nov./Dec., 26-35; °P oliticra lly Used,” July/Aug., 3-5 Mathews, Brendan, “London Calling, the NSA De ple ted Munitions,” Nov /Dec., 72 Hansen, Chuck, “The End of Openness,” Listening,” Mar/Apr., 9-11; “Nukewaste. Austin, Kathi, “Heartso fD arkness,” Jan/Feb., May/June, 3-4; “No Change,” Sept/Oct., 4 gov,” May/June, 10-11] 34-37 Hartung, William D., “Billions for Bombs, Pen- McKiernan, Kevin, “Turkey's War on the Bernstein, Adam, “Canning Plutonium: Faster nies for Peacekeeping,” Sept/Oct., 6 Kurds,” Mar./Apr., 26-37; “Reply to Ozdag’s and Cheaper,” May/June, 66-69 Hayes, Peter, “The Wind Farm in the Cabbage Letter,” May/June, 5, 77 Bourgholtzer, Frank, review of Koehler, Stasi: Patch,” May/June. 40-49 Mendelson, Jack, “Missile Defense: And It Still The Untold Story of the East German Secret Herby, Peter, “Focus on Humans, Not Num- Won't Work,” May/June, 29-31 Police, July/Aug., 66-68 bers,” July/Aug., 74 Moon, John, review of Hagerman and Endi- Boutwell, Jeffrey, “The Wild West Bank,” Hoehn III, William, “Getting it Right,” May/ cott, The United States and Biological War- Jan/Feb., 41-44 June, 62-65 fare, May/June, 70-72; reply to “Germ War- Burns, Ken, “Web Watch: Games,” Sept/Oct., Isaacs, John, ‘Pragmatism, Not Principle,” fare Was Used,” July/Aug., 5, 71 13 Jan/Feb., 16-17; “Fortifying Fortress Amer- Moore, Mike, “Easy Killing,” Jan/Feb., 2; re- Burr, Wiiliam, “Where They Were,” Nov./ ica,” Mar/Apr., 24-25; “Missile Defense: It’s view of Cohen, Israel and the ake Dec., 26-34 Back,” May/June, 26-28; “Having Your Jan/Feb., 74-76; “The Hapless Kurds,” Butler, Judy, review of LeoGrande, Our Own Cake,” July/Aug., 19-20; “F-22 in a Tail- Mar/Apr., 2; “In Memoriam: Leonard Backyard: The United States in Central spin,” Sept/Oct., 14-15; “Test Ban Fizzles,” Rieser,” Mar./Apr., 4-5; “A Small Project,” America, 1977-1992, May/June, 74-75 Nov/Dec., 21-22 May/June, 2; “In Memoriam: Henry Clegg, Liz, “NGOs Take Aim,” Jan/Feb., Johnson, Chalmers, “In Search of a New Cold Kendall, Glenn Seaborg, Gerhard 49-51 War,” Sept./Oct., 44-52; response to “John- Herzberg,” May/June, 21-22; “Invisible Cole, Leonard, “Anthrax Hoaxes: Hot New son Got it Wrong,” Nov/ Dec., 3, 64 War, July/Aug., 2; “Call China’s Hand,” Hobby?” July/Aug., 7-9; review of Stern, Johnson, Rebecca, “Troubled Treaties: Is the July/Aug., 23; “Splitism,” Sept /Oct., 2; “De- The Ultimate Terrorists, Sept/Oct., 67-68 NPT Tottering?” Mar./Apr., 16-18 muystification,” Nov/Dec. 2; “A Kafkaesque Cotta-Ramusino, Paolo,” The Unasked Ques- Karp, Aaron, “Uncertain Prognosis,” Jan/Feb., Case of Hua Di,” Nov/Dec., 12-14 tion,” July/Aug., 42-45 66-69 Mushtaq, Najum, “A Funny Kind of Deter- Cox, Christopher, “Johnson Got It Wrong,” Khan, Ayesha, “Nuclear but Needy,” Jan/Feb., rence,” May/June, 6; “Islam Distorted,” Nov/ Dec., 3 12-13 July/Aug., 53-57 Cumings, Bruce, review of Weart, Never at Khripunov, Igor, “Minatom at the Edge,” May/ Nelson, Daniel N., “Damage Control,” Jan./ War: Why Democracies Won't Fight One June, 56-61; “Moscow Reacts,” July/Aug., Feb., 55-57; No New War,” Sept/Oct., 34 Another, May/June, 72-74; “China Through 32-35 Nolan, Janne, “Which Nuclear Future?” Jan// the Looking Glass,” Sept/Oct., 30-38 Kibaroglu, Mustafa, “Turkey's Deterrent,” Feb., 3, 77 Datt, Savita, “Engaging North Korea,” July/ Mar//Apr., 3, 61 Norris, Robert S., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear Aug., 76 Klare, Michael T., “The Kalashnikov Age,” Forces, End of 1998,” Jan./Feb., 78-80; Dicks, Norm. “Johnson Got It Wrong,” Nov./ Jan/Feb., 18-22 “Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, End of Dec., 3 Kraig, Michael, “Safe or Sorry: The “Y2K Prob- 1995,” Mar./Apr., 62-63; “Chinese Nuclear Dreyer, June Teufel, “Tangled up with Tai- lem’ and Nuclear Weapons,” Mar/Apr., Forces,1999.” May/June, 79-80; “French wan,” Nov/Dec., 46-51 3843 and British Nuclear Forces, 1999.” Eisendrath, Craig, “Needed: More Intelligent Krepon, Michael, “CTBT Deadline Nears,” July/Aug,, 77-79; “World Plutonium Inven- Intelligence,” Nov./Dec., 22-25 Mar/Apr., 18-20; “Missile Defense: Not tories,” Sept/Oct., 71; “Where They Were,” Endicott, John E., “Track II,” Nov/Dec., 64 Such a Bad Idea,” May/June, 31-33 Nov/Dec., 26-35 Endicott, Stephen, “Germ Warfare Was Used,” Kristensen, Hans M., “Secrecy on a Sliding O'Callaghan, Geraldine, “Wheeling and Deal- July/Aug., 3-5 Scale,” Nov/Dec., 33 ing,” Jan/Feb., 52-54 Epstein, William, “Voting by Abstention,” Mar/ Kumaraswamy, P.R., “Israel's Embarrassment Ozdag, Umit, “Turks Fighting Terrorism, Not Apr., 6 of Spies,” Mar/Apr., 14-15, 61 Kurds,” May/June, 4-5 Evangelista, Matthew, “Russia’s Fragile Union,” Larin, Vladislav, “Soviet PNEs: A Legacy of Paine, Christopher, “Let's Finish the Job,” May/June, 50-55 Contamination,” May/June, 18-20; “Mayak’s July/Aug., 24-27 Farinella, Paolo, “And Then There’s Vanunu,” Walking Wounded,” Sept/Oct., 20-27 Page, Benjamin I., review of Kull and Destler, Jan/Feb., 3 Leahy, Patrick, “Landmines and Kurds,” Misreading the Public: The Myth of a New Ferguson, Charles, “Tritium: TVA Gets the July/Aug., 74 Isolationism, Nov/Dec., 62-63 Nod,” Mar/Apr., 12-14 Leitner, Peter, “A Reckless Disregard for Secu- Pearson, Ruth, “Angst on the East River,” Fetter, Steve, “After the Dust Settles,” Nov/ rity,” July/Aug., 71-73 Nov/Dec., 19-20, 65 68 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Peters, Ann, “Dozens of Grantees,” Sept/Oct, 5 4648S War, reviewed by Richard Longworth, Rauf, Tariq, “Accommodation, Not Confronta- Wittner, Lawrence, review of Wang, American Nov/Dec., 58-61 tion,” Jan/Feb., 14-16 Science in an Age of Anxiety, July/Aug., Renner, Michael, “Arms Control Orphans,” 65-69 Jan/Feb., 22-26 Wood, Brian, “Wheeling and Dealing,” Subjects Rethinaraj, T. S$. Gopi, “India: Frozen Out,” Jan/Feb., 52-54 May/June, 15; “In the Comfort of Secrecy,” Woodard, Colin, “Endless Détente,” Jan/Feb., Nov/Dec., 52-57 10-12; “NATO Throws Itself a Party,” Activists: at Los Alamos, Nov./Dec., 36-41 Richelson, Jeffrey T., “The Cheating Factor,” July/Aug., 36-41 ; Afghanistan: as source of Islamic jihad, Jan/Feb., 3; “Uncertain Damage,” Sept/ Wright, David C., “Cut North Korea Some July/Aug., 53-57 Oct., 17-19 Slack,” Mar/Apr., 54-58 Africa: gun running in, Jan./Feb., 34-37; Man- Roberts, Brad, review of Hoffman, Inside Ter- Wright, Susan, “The Hijacking of UNSCOM,” dela’s legacy, Mar/Apr., 21-23 rorism, and Falkenrath, et al., America’s May/June, 23-25 Agreed Framework: N. Korea has followed, Achilles’ Heel, Jan/Feb., 72-74 Wu, Changhua, “The Price of Growth,” Sept/ Mar./Apr., 54-58 Rothstein, Linda, “Smaller and Smaller . . ..” Oct., 58-66 Agroterrorism: Nov/Dec., 10 Jan/Feb., 5-7; “Explosive Secrets,” Mar-./ Wurst, Jim, “The U.N. Gears Up,” Jan/Feb., Air pollution: in China, Sept./Oct., 58-67 Apr., 7-8; “Stratcom’s Russian Connection,” 58-60 Americium: Mar/Apr., 7-8 Mar/Apr., 11; “The War on Speech,” Zamora Collina, Tom, “Let's Finish the Job,” Angola: landmines, May/June, 13-15 May/June, 7-8; “When Quebec Shrugged,” July/Aug., 24-27 Antarctica: and international cooperation, Jan./ May/June, 12; “The Crystal Ball, Crack'd,” Zhang, Ming, “What Threat?” Sept/Oct., Feb., 10-12 July/Aug., 10-11; “The Perseus Papers,” 52-58; “China: War Without Rules,” Nov./ Anthrax: threats now common, July/Aug., 7-9 July/Aug., 17-19; “The Sound of Music,” Dec., 16-18 Arms control: Clinton lost opportunities, Nov./ Sept./Oct., 12; “Talk About Environmental Dec., 21-22 Impact!” Sept./Oct., 7-9; “Oh No: Not An- Arms merchants: shadowy world of, Jan./Feb., other Weapon of Mass Destruction,” Books 37-40 Nov/Dec., 10 Assault rifles: Jan/Feb., 22-26 Sagrillo, Mark. “The Wind Farm in the Cab- B-2 bomber: now post-nuclear, May/June, 81; bage Patch,” May/June, 40-49 Alibek, Ken, Biohazard, reviewed by Amy E. used in Yugoslavia, July/Aug., 80 Sands, Amy, “An Unlikely Threat,” July/Aug., Smithson, July/Aug., 69-71 Ballistic missile defense: it’s 4 May/June, 46-52 Avner, Cohen, Israel and the Bomb, reviewed 26-28; not a bad idea, May/June, 31-33; still Schwartz, Stephen I., “A Very Convenient by Mike Moore, Jan./Feb., 74-76 won't work, May/June, 29-31 Scandal,” May/June, 34-39; response to “A Falkenrath, Richard, et al., America’s Achilles’ BBC: had post-nuclear programming ready, Reckless Disregard for Security,” July/Aug.., Heel, reviewed by Brad Roberts, Jan./Feb., | Sept /Oct., 12 73-74 72-74 “Below regulatory concern”: Nov/Dec., 5-7 Seitz, Russell, “First Reference,” July/Aug., Gourevitch, Philip, We Wish to Inform You Bioweapons: and agroterrorism, Nov/Dec., 10; 74-75 That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed With Our and terrorism, Nov./Dec., 14—16; anthrax Sharma, Kalpana, “Kashmir: Wilting Rose,” Families, reviewed by Zondi Masiza, threats as hobby, July/Aug., 7-9; unlikely Jan/Feb., 4 May/June, 76-77 threat, July/Aug., 46-52 Silver, Ken, “Plutonium Puzzle,” Sept/Oct., Hagerman, Edward, and Stephen Endicott, Bombers: B-2 an intercontinental weapon, 15 The United States and Biological Warfare, July/Aug., 80 Sly, Liz, “A State Of Paranoia,” Sept./Oct., reviewed by John Moon, May/June, 70-72 Britain: Nuclear forces 1999, July/Aug., 77-79 3844 Hoffman, Bruce, Inside Terrorism, reviewed Brookhaven National Laboratory: Doomsday Smith, Wayne S., review of Schwab, Cuba: by Brad Roberts, Jan/Feb., 72-74 site?, Sept/Oct., 7-9 Confronting the U.S. Embargo, Sept/Oct. Kahn, Anne, Killing Detente, reviewed by Paul Canada: target of N. Korean missiles?, May/ 68-69 C. Warnke, Jan/Feb., 70-71 une, 12 Smithson, Amy E., review of Alibek, Biohaz- Koehler, John O., Stasi: The Untold Story of Challenges of Fissile Material Control: Mar/ ard, July/Aug., 69-71 the East German Secret Police, reviewed by Apr., 7-8 Stober, Dan, “Steal This!” July/Aug., 14-16 Frank Bourgholtzer, July/Aug., 66-68 Chemical weapons: and terrorism, Nov./Dec., Tar, Eugeny, “Soviet PNEs: A Legacy of Con- Kull, Steven, and I.M. Destler, Misreading the 14-16; unlikely threat, July/Aug., 46-52 tamination,” —— 18-20 Public: The Myth of a New Isolationism, re- Chester, Pennsylvania: U.S. Army exercises in, Tsipis, Kosta, “Turkish Threat,” May/June, viewed by Benjamin Page, Nov/Dec., 62-63 July/Aug., 12 71-78 LeoGrande, William, Our Own Backyard: The Chile: and Antarctica, Jan/Feb., 10-12 Tucker, Jonathan, “An Unlikely Threat,” United States in Central America, 1977- China: accused of spying, May/June, 34-39; July/Aug., 46-52 1992, reviewed by Judy Butler, May/June, and Taiwan, Sept./Oct., 2; does U.S. want Vegar, Jose, “Working in the Shadows,” 74-75 new cold war with?, Sept/Oct., 44-52; econ- Jan/Feb., 3740 Moreno, Jonathan D., Undue Risk: Secret State omy slacking, Sept./Oct., 38-44; food and Venter, Al, “Angola: New Mines, What Ban?” Experiments on Humans, reviewed by energy needs, Sept./Oct., 58-67; holding May/June, 13-15 Michael Flynn, Nov./Dec., 61-62 Hua Di, Nov/Dec., 12-14; military strategy, Von Hippel, David, “The Wind Farm in the Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, Secrecy, reviewed Nov/Dec., 16-18; nuclear forces, Sept/Oct., Cabbage Patch,” May/June, 40-49 by Steven Aftergood, Mar./Apr., 59-60 52-58; nuclear forces 1999, May/June, von Hippel, Frank, “When the Dust Settles,” Schwab, Peter, Cuba: Confronting the U.S. 79-80; similarities with U.S., Sept/Oct., WaltN,o vS/tDeevce,. ,“ M4u2s-c4l5e bound: The Limits of U.S. ESempbta r/gOoc,t ., 6r8e-v6i9e wed by Wayne S. Smith, 3230;- 3s8p;y insgp ybiyn,g Saenpdt /Odcits.a,r m1a7m-e1n9t; , stiJlul lay /pAoulgi.c,e Power,” Mar./Apr., 44-48 Stern, Jessica, The Ultimate Terrorists, re- state, Sept/Oct., 38-44 Warnke, Paul C., review of Kahn, Killing De- viewed by Leonard Cole, Sept/Oct, 67-68 Chinese communist party: rules by force, Sept /Oct., 38-44 tente, Jan/Feb., 70-71 Wang, Jessica, American Science in an Age of Wesolowsky, Tony, “Nuclear Power: Tough Anxiety, reviewed by Lawrence Wittner, CIA: needs reform, Nov./Dec., 22-25 Choices on Temelin,” May/June, 16-17 Julv/Aug., 68-69 Clinton, Bill: blew arms agreements, Nov./ Whitmore, Don, “Which Nuclear Future?” Weart, Spencer, Never at War: Why Demoera- Dec., 21-22 Jan/Feb., 77 cies Won't Fight One Another, reviewed by Cold War: medal for, Sept/Oct., 9, 10 Williams, Jim, “Tae Wind Farin in the Cab- Bruce Cumings, May/June, 72-74 Common Aerial Vehicle: CAV new convention- bage Patch,” May/June, 40-49 Welsome, Eileen, The Plutonium Files: Ameri- al powerhouse, Sept/Oct., 72 Williams, Phil, “Drugs and Guns,” Jan/Feb., ca’s Secret Medical Experiments During the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty: see CTB November/December 1999 69 Computers: Y2K and nuclear weapons, ing in China, Sept/Oct., 38-44 May/June, 66-69 Mar/Apr., 38-43 ICBL: diverts demining funds?, Mar//Apr., National missile defense: see BMD Congress: increases military spending, July 49-53 National Rifle Association: Jan /Feb., 2: goes Aug., 19-20; may junk spending cap, Jan India: and arms control, Jan./Feb., 14-16; con- global, Jan/Feb., 61-65 Feb., 16-17 flict with Pakistan, May/June, 6; importance National Security Agency: listening in around Conventional weapons: wat h for CAV Sept. of Kashmir, Jan/Feb., 4; nuclear power, the world?, Mz u/Apr., 9-11 Oct., 72 May/June, 15; nuclear P.R., Sept/Oct. 16, NATO: members favor nuclear disarmament, Cox report: May/June 34-39; July/Aug., 23; 19; condition of nuclear industry, Nov./Dec., Mar/Apr., 6; action in Yugoslavia, July/Aug., Sept/Oct., 17-19 52-57 2: war in Kosovo, Jul./Aug., 28-31; angers CTB: ratify it, Julv/Aug., 24-27; treaty in trou Intelligence: needs reform, Nov./Dec., 22-25; Moscow with Kosovo intervention, Juby/ ble, Mar Apr . 18-20: Nov./Dec., 21-22 Echelon program, Mar /Apr., 9-11 Aug., 32-35; at 50, July/Aug., 36-41; and nu- Czech Republic: and nuclear power, May/June, Iraq: U.N. inspections dead, Mar./Apr., 64; clear weapons, July/Aug., 42-45; Nov./Dec., 16-17 U.S. used UNSCOM to spy, May/June, 26-35; nuclear weapons in, Nov./Dec., Declassification: enhances security, July/Aug., 23-25 66-67 6. of nuclear weapon deployments abroad, Islamic fundamentalism: and Pakistan, July/ Nautilus Institute: effort in N. Korea, May/ Nov/Dec., 26-35: inconsistency of. Nov./ Aug., 53-57 June, 40-49 Dec., 33 Israel: and guns, Jan./Feb., 41-44; and Soviet Neptunium: Mar/Apr., 7-8 Defense budget: increased, July/Aug., 19-20 spies, Mar/Apr., 14-15, 61 NGOs: small arms and landmine campaign, Defense Department: too many new programs, Japan: and nuclear weapons, Nov/Dec., 26-35 Jan/Feb., 49-51; landmine campaign, Mar/ Mar/Apr., 24-25 Kalashnikov age: jan/Feb., 18-22 April, 49-53 Defense spending: F-22 in trouble, Sept/Oct., Kashmir: importance to India, Jan/Feb., 4 Nonproliferation Treaty: see NPT 14-15; will increase, Jan/Feb., 16-17 Kendall, Henry: May/June, 21-22 North Korea: May/June, 2: and wind power, Denmark: and nuclear weapons, Nov/Dec., Korea: famine in North, May/June, 40-49. May/June, 40-49; targets Canada?, May/ 26-35 work with North, Mar/Apr., 54-58 June, 12; work with, Mar/Apr., 54-58 Denver: threatened by 1969 Rocky Flats fire, Kosovo: excuse to increase defense budget, NPT: in trouble, Mar/Apr., 16-15 July/Aug., 58-65 July/Aug., 19-20; NATO intervention angers Nuclear accidents: and Indian power, Nov./ Depleted uranium: danger from, Nov./Dec.. Russia, July/Aug., 32-35: NATO war in, Dec., 52-57 42-45 July/Aug., 25-31 Nuclear Cities Initiative: May/June, 62-65 Doomsday: a new Big Bang?, Sept/Oct., 7-9 Kurds: and Turkey, Mar/Apr 2; Mar./Apr., Nuclear contamination: in household items, Drug trade: and small arms, Jan/Feb., 46-48 26-37 Nov/ Dec., 5-7 Echelon: Mar/Apr., 9-11 Landmines: in Angola, May/June, 13-15; poli- Nuclear deployments: historical, Nov./Dec., Energy Department: chooses TVA for tritium, tics of, Mar/Apr., 49-53 67-68 Mar/Apr., 12-14; increasing classification, Language: politically correct, May/June, 7-5 Nuclear deterrence: strange in South Asia, Julv/Aug.. 6 Lee, Wen Ho: May June, 34- 39: Se pt /Oct., May/June, 6 Espionage: and Eche -~ Mar/Apr., 9-11; by 17-19 Nuclear disarmament: time for unilateral re- China, May/June, 34-39; july Aug., 23; Liberia: Jan/Feb.. 18-22 ductions?, Jan./Feb., 81; and NATO, Mar./ Furby toy as agent, friv /June, 8-9: Soviet, in Limits to power: Mar/Apr., 44-45 Apr., 6; July/Aug., 42-45; call China’s hand, Israel, Mar/ /Apr.. 14-15, 61: U.S. used UN- Los Alamos: under siege, Nov./Dec., 36-41 23: Clinton lost opportunities, Nov./Dec., SCOM in Iraq, Mar/Apr., 64; May/June, Machines: miniaturization of, Jan./Feb., 5-7: 21-22 23-25, wrong response to, July/Aug., 6 Sept/Oct. 11-13 Nuclear Notebook: U.S. strategic nuclear F-22: in trouble, Sept/Oct., 14-15 Mandela, Nelson: Mar/Apr., 21-23 forces 1998, Jan/Feb., 78-80; Russian Fissile materials: include neptunium, americi- Mavak: nuclear acc myn its at, Sept /Oct., 20-27 strategic nuclear forces 1998, Mar/Apr., um, Mar/Apr., 7-8 MEMs: Jan. /Feb.., : miniature nuclear en- 62-63: Chinese nuclear forces 1999, Foreign aid: too little, Sept /Oct., 6 gines for?, Sept/Oct . 11-13 May/June, 79-80; French, British forces France: nuclear forces 1999, July/Aug., 77-79 Micromachines: nuclear powered?, Sept /Oct., 1999. July/Aug.. 77-79; world plutoniuimn - Furby: a spy?, May/June, 8, 9 11-13 ventory, Sept/Oct., 71; “Appendix B,” Greenland: and nuclear weapons, Nov/Dec.. Military spending: will increase, Jan/Feb.. Nov/Dec. 66-67 26-35 16-17; increased , July/Aug., 19-20; more Nuclear power: in South Asia, Jan/Feb., 14-16; Gulf War: depleted uranium in, Nov/Dec., not the answer, Mar/Apr., 24-25 in India, May/June 15; Temelin, May/June, 42-45 Minatom: May, June, 56-61 16-17; “selling it” in India, Sept/Oct., 16, 19; Guns: societies at fault, Jan/Feb., 22: Jan/Feb. Missiles: N. Korea’s as bargaining chip, Mar/ condition of Indian nuclear industry, Nov./ 18-22: giveawavs and _ ille oe transfers, Apr., 54455 Dec., 52-57 J:in /Feb., 22-26; U.S. giveaways, Jan/Feb., Morrison, Philip: accused by Jeremy Stone, Nuclear proliferation: treaty in trouble, Mar./ 27-33; smuggling, Jan/Feb., 34-37; and July/Aug., 17-19 or., 16-18; see also NPT arms merchants, Jan/Feb., 37-40; in Middle MOX: more expensive than immobilization, Nuclear reductions: unilateral?, Jan/Feb., 81 East, Jan/Feb., 41-44; and drug trade, Nuclear targeting: de-alert, Mar/Apr., 38-43 Jan/ Feb., 46-48; NGO efforts to control, Nuclear testing: legacy of PNEs, May/June, Jan/ Feb., 49-51; and human rights, 18-20 Jan/Feb., 52-54; and U.S. policies, Nuclear waste: online database, May/June, Jan/Feb... 55-57; U.N. policies on 10-11 Jan/Feb., 58-60: NRA goes global, Nuclear weapons: U.S. strategic nuclear Jan/Feb., 61-65; difficult to control, forces 1998, Jan./Feb., 78-80; and Y2K Jan/Feb., 66-69 problem, Mar./Apr., 35-43; Russian strate- Hall, Ted: July/Aug., 17-19 gic nuclear forces 1998, Mar/Apr., 62-63; Helms, Jesse: may block CTB, Mar./Apr., Russian agency broke, May/June, 56-61; 1$-20 Chinese forces 1999, May/June, 79-80; Herzberg, Gerhard: May/June, 21-22 end of era of, May/June, 81; Bomb data Hoaxes: anthrax threats increase, July/Aug.. goes on line, July/ Aug., 14-16; and NATO, 7-9 July/A ug., 42-45; fire at Rocky Flats pro- Homemade reactor: Jan/Feb., 7-9 duction plant, July/Aug., 58-65; French, Hua Di: Nov/Dec., 12-14 British forces 1999, July/Aug., 77-79; acci- Human rights: and Kurds, Mar/Apr., 26-37; dents at Russia’s production _ plant, and small arms Jan/Feb., 52-54; still lack- the millennium bug.” Sept/Oct., 20-27: China's ambitions, 70 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Sept/Oct., 52-58; abroad, Nov/ Dec., trol, Jan./Feb., 49-51; and human rights, cold war with China?, Sept/Oct., 44-52 26-35: Nov./Dec., 66-67 Jan/Feb., 52-54; and U.S. policies, Watts Bar: will produce tritium, Mar/Apr., Nuclear weapons labs: spied on?, May/June, Jan/Feb., 55-57; U.N. policies on, Jan/Feb., 12-14 34-39; putting bomb data on computer, 58-60; NRA goes global, Jan/Feb., 61-65; Weapons labs: Los Alamos under siege, July/Aug., 14-16; security deficiencies at, difficult to control, Jan./Feb., 66-69 Nov/Dec., 36-41 Sept/Oct., 17-19 Smart dust: Jan/Feb., 5-7 World Wide Web: Y2K and nuclear weapons, Nuclear weapons material: producing STRAT- South Africa: Mandela’s legacy, Mar./Apr., Mar./Apr., 38-43; nuclear waste dihone. COM's electricity, Mar/Apr., 11; cheaper to 21-23 May/June, 10-11; and scientists, July/Aug., immobilize plutonium, May/June, 66-69; South Asia: nuclear arms in, Jan/Feb., 14-16 13; and games, Sept/Oct., 13; and space, world inventory of plutonium, Sept/Oct., 71 Sovereignty: no longer inviolate, Jul/Aug., Nov/Dec. 11 Okinawa: nuclear weapons in, Nov./Dec., 28-31 X Prize: and space travel, Nov/Dec., 8-10 26-35 Soviet Union: spies in Israel, Mar/Apr., 14-15, Yugoslavia: as post-nuclear conflict, May/June, Ozersk: see Mayak 61; accidents at Mayak, Sept./Oct., 20-27; 81; conflict in, July/Aug., 2; NATO war in, Pakistan: and Kashmir, Jan/#eb., 4; hurt by nu- see also Russia Jul/Aug., 28-31; B-2 bomber used in con- clear testing, Jan/Feb., 12-13; and arms Sovietologists: wrong, July/Aug., 10-11 flict, July/Aug., 80; money for bombs, no control, Jan/Feb., 14-16; conflict with India, Space: contest, Nov./Dec., 8-10; on the Net, money for aideS ept/Oct., 6 May/June, 6; and Islamic fundamentalism, Nov/Dec., 11 _fuly/Aue.. 53-57 Spending priorities: U.S. gives little Palestine: and guns, Jan /f’eb., 41-44 foreign aid, Sept/Oct., 6 Peaceful Nuclear Explosions: see PNEs Spying: May/June, 34-39; highlights and Peacekeeping: needs J.N. leadership, Nov./ need for intelligence reform, Nov/ a ||) Pag oue Dec., 19-20, 65 Dec., 23-25; puts Los Alamos he ‘BoiBmuelo Flnoeetqthuialnnyc y of the Atomic Scientists ©3 fe \aopi e orfia si 1e-P8i s te i4 A3er0mu ai|ty 2)" 6$2A r8e nas Suimcnpian Pre Pentagon: too manv programs, Mar./Apr., under siege, Nov./Dec., 36-41, see nar ee Steet iy ey sate wdP Po h iat Pomon Per2s4eu-s2:5 who was he?, July/Aug., 17-19 Staarlcsho asEesrp iosnpaagcee rocket, Nov./Dec., - 6C0h4i2c agSoo,u thI L Ki6m0b6a37r k A_v enue ‘= 1 aes (Msc rete! 173-j7a0r2y- 2M5e5t5c alt same as above PKK: struggle with Turkey, Mar./Apr., 26-37 8-10 Ta eres andC ompaen Mating ASaeates & Puan i|to r aneM anaging Fair On ofm aea r) Plutonium: cheaper to immobilize, May/June, START: ignore?, ie eb., 81 Pree Nate aedc ore mary ate 66-69; fire at Rocky Flats, July/Aug., 58-65; Stone. Jeremy: July/Aug., 17-19 For S60tN4ea2pm hee aSnot u CtoImh p aSencK hiawmstabrraay r atkcz r eAsv e., Chicago, IL 69637 world inventory of, Sept/Oct., 71 STRATCOM: and recycled nukes, le e PNEs: contamination from Soviet, May/June, Mar./Apr., 11] 6a 042 So“pani uth oKaitm bcaiasate ark sang Avea.eb,e eniC ~hi cago, IL— 6 0637 18-20 Strategic Concept: NATO's new, L60i4n2d a SoRuotthh stKeiimnb ark Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 PoliNtoivca.l/ Dperci.s,o ne1r2s-:1 4K afkaesque case of Hua Di, TaiJwualny:/ Auga.n,d 42C-h4i5n a, Sept/Oct., 2; 10 aSCare Sre: (a2DedSoa e mR0E Ri NmnNaa Ewe SD aFrTtae P e PAeRhRrepR EeuL St t RANer E Oy9 RO Political science: expert judgment wrong, July/ Nov./Dec., 46-51 The Educational Foundation for 6042 South Kimbark Ave. Aug., 10-11 Temelin: ready to start?, May/June, Nuclear Science Chicago, IL 60637 Politically correct: language, May/June, 7-8 16-17 Press: and India’s nuclear agency, May/June, 15 Tennessee Valley Authority: will pro- Radioactive boy scout: Jan/Feb., 7-9 duce weapons tritium, Mar./Apr., " rhosei nS e| cPuerersc yn oo nMeMe orweoFo nezefTede tCeoA em ows ofB orat Mogae > > 0 howe Radioactivity: and scrap metal, Nov./Dec., 5-7: 12-14 Ft ame Comptauiintg aeare es effect of depleted uranium, Nov/Dec., Terrorism: anthrax hoaxes rampant, 42-45 July/Aug., 7-9; bio or chemical use Recycling: and radioactivity, Nov/Dec., 5-7 unlikely, July/Aug., 46-52; and agri- Relativistic Heavy lon Collider: Sept /Oct., 7-9 culture, Nov/Dec., 10; and chemi- Rieser, Leonard: Mar./Apr., 4-5 cal, bioweapons, Nov./Dec., 14-16 Rocky Flats: 1969 fire at, July/Aug., 58-65 Test ban treaty: in trouble, Mar/ Apr. Rules of war: a Western idea, Nov./Dec., 16-18 18-20; ratify it, July/Aug., 24-27 Russia: powering STRATCOM's lights?, Mar./ Treaties: small arms _ difficult, ) amour Te Apr., 11; Strategic nuclear forces 1998, Jan/Feb., 66-69; NPT in trouble, 4 okayM roafCo p men (Meerp ress an Mar./Apr., 62-63 ; contaminated by PNEs, Mar./Apr., 16-18; CTB in trouble, |("|) PeemnaR 25u6e1 ceuer naeah erstatery’ M parseS a antden ucaho ngSee aaetesdo! r May/June, 18-20; could break up, May/June, Mar./Apr., 18-20 > Put wretor | (2) ePEO Cneanntge, Sumeemcsme mare MCR mBeriser 5 oer 50-55; nuclear agency broke, May/June, Tritium: to come from TVA, Mar./ Sano |[(") | SCoautmenseT r Sratge s,Da enactO omne arnN daC anrU eSrPs,S S PtaettO v meanrdtonrtsor | 56-61; scientists need help, May/June, Apr., 12-14 (4) Cnr Chana Maes Toren ineU SPS 6M2a-y6/5J;u nceh,e a6p6e-r6 9;to ainmgmeobrieldi zbey NplAuTtOon iiunm Yuin-, Tur2k6e-y3:a7 y and the Kurds, Mar./Apr., 2; © tC=—oN.ma et aeeP ne ea |r—[0"e09o]) r RCe_upaeemsein eC— oCuorcy oa a— Sta(nSeud omo n2 Ff o1r 5m0:R( s1 )P anay Ze slavia, July/Aug., 32-35; nuclear accidents, U.S. Army: urban exercises, July/Aug., toweee: |(8) |} Omer Cases satan MapesUS PS Sept/Oct., 20-27; see also Soviet Union 12 + ann Canacts ome cee Satellites: on the web, Nov./Dec., 11 United Nations: small arms policies, Nota Fe Onno (Suen of1 5 amst e) Seaborg, Glenn: May/June, 21-22 Jan/Feb., 58-60; nuclear p erenay Tota!O nstn(Sbemu otfS icoa nnt 1 90) Secrecy: wrong protection, July/Aug., 6; bomb ment efforts and NATO, Mar, Apr., data goes on line, July/Aug., 14-16; inconsis- 6; Special Commission dead, tent use of, Nov/Dec., 33 Mar/Apr., 64; UNSCOM used by 16 3N AaemamtonAc Srkeaaqtaeertd WoeatiO tene prm ea eseme NO/VD e c = Senate: votes to deploy NMD, May/June, U.S., May/June, 23, 25; Nov/Dec., 1H Sohpnaa nsnT OeseJo fF h atiel Pazmce g,Ga_r e MGaergnea r> Oomhe [Marans September 17, 1999 26-28 19-20, 65 Sequoyah: will produce tritium, Mar/Apr., United States: small arms transfer NE —— ——— SSEiTm1Ip2:s- o1na4,t hJoomhen,: MNaoyv//JDuence.,, 1121 p7no8ul-ci8lce0ia;er s, aJrfamonsr/ cFeesTb u.r,k 19e59y58 -,5 7f;or J a—nw.a/rF e b.o,n Insttbcoo wrr y oUuusrec rt Deioctao nrPiedu ssb ohleienstsh sefro srA es cs peacceh m=t o rne0gq augreesd 0 wrcnsde 7 teens 10a nd 1) shoecn ka ei n1 t heme p1)e rsfoonn w ec ocmhDeOy crpkae OOrNce ef o SmaJ2l7al-n 3/3Fa;er bms.a: n d 1g8gl-uo2nb6 a;l r unUtn.riSa.nd ge, roJilnae, n /iFJnea, bn./e,F eb3n.4,- 37 ;2; woKfou rrpdkos w,e wriM,ta hr M.a/rAN.p./r .A,pK ro.2r,6e -a34,7 4;4 8Maa;nr d. /sAhlpiomrui.lt,ds f2e mes t1e5ramt eCs TaepnothteOo nsmuts rnibemaws tseds agmen utsst wachnadc( t3e) (1c " ontpetreaoitro moef1hFer 5se a Fgu use set ele:f tpouvebrksc abspoonm etdph uitsaeFS o:rnm dt aaf36to 4t1te eorm cfoOe wpr1enesr5t vna©od pt. d, ae nsMwt aertni >augieesm ent and arms merchants, Jan/Feb., 37-40; in 5458; should aid Russian scientists, Middle East, Jan/Feb., 41-44; and drug May/June, 62-65; how it sees trade, Jan/Feb., 46-48; NGO efforts to con- China, Sept/Oct., 30-38; seeks new November/December 1999 71

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