Új Látóhatár, 1989 (40. évfolyam, 1-4. szám)

1989 / 1. szám

ÚJ LÁTÓHATÁR LITERARY AND POLITICAL REVIEW IN HUNGARIAN Editors: Gyula Borbándi, Josef Molnár and Zoltán Sztáray CONTENTS István Sinka (1897-1969): Unpublished poems Mihály Hógye (Washington): The plan to visit Hungary and the death of former prime minister Ferenc Nagy (1979) Pál Harmat (Linz): Suicides in Hungary after 1945 National consciousness and the future of Hungary Béla Király (Highland Lakes, N.J.): Necessary Utopia László Papp (New Canaan, CT): Small country, great nation Sándor Radnóti (Budapest): Our social and cultural alternatives Gyula Hellenbart (Hamburg): Chances of democracy in Hungary Poems by Attila Elekes (Milan), Imre Goldstein (Tel-Aviv), Tamás Hunyor (Vienna), Dezső Monoszlóy (Vienna) and Géza Thinsz (Stockholm) Short stories by György Ferdinandy (Puerto Rico) and Zoltán Thury, Jun. (New York) DOCUMENT István Somodi (Budapest): Duties of bereaved (A speech on the burial feast of Gyula Illyés, 1983) Zoltán Sztáray (San Bernardino, CA): Heritage of Recsk, nightmares OBSERVER József Molnár: Endre Zsigmond who became 60. Lóránt Czigány (London): The historian Jenő Szűcs (1928-1988) Gyula Borbándi: The book of the year (The Hungarians: a divided nation) Tamás Kabdebó (Maynooth): The new Hungarian translation of Kalevala Tibor Hanák (Vienna): A collection of short stories by Győző Határ Tamás Bogyay (Munich): A reference book on the Hungarian Knigths of St. John Lóránt Czigány: The author Ferenc Temesi and his new novel László Gerencsér (Vienna): A collection of newspaper reports by Erzsébet Galgóczi Zoltán Rónai (Madrid): Visiting Transylvania (A book by Antal Végh) József Szabados (Mokelumne Hill, CA): The decline of the bipolar world (A book by Paul Kennedy) Győző Határ (London): Tamás Kabdebó's book on Ireland ISSN 0501—0160

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