RES U R G ENCE Journal of the Fourth World 275, Kings Road, Kingston, Surrey, ENGLAND Volume 4 Number 3

Editorial Group Victor Anderson, Brian Bridge, Jimoh Omo Fadaka, Clive Harrison, Stephen Horne, Tony Colbert, Steve Lambert, John Lloyd, Hugh Sharman, Terry Sharman, Anne Vogel

Associated Editors Ernest Bader, Danilo Daiei, Ray Gosling, Leopold Kohr, Jayaprakash Narayan, John Papworth, Dr. E. F. Schumacher.

CONTENTS

Page 3

4 7

9

10 12

14 18 19 21

The Other Side of the Butter Mountain - Editorial Malemployment - Keith Paton Might and Right in Indochina - John Shippee

World Exchange Poem 'Stranger, Sit at my Table' - Thomas Land Euro-Quotes

Vive la Difference - Anne Vogel Problems of Intensive Agriculture - Stephen Willetts

Slight Eco-Catastrophe at the Albert Hall - Stephen Horne Community in Industry - Paul Derrick Other Poems by Jay Leahy, Seamus Finn & Anon

Contributors

PAUL DERRICK

Paul Derrick is a writer. He is Editor of the CbJistian Socialist, Secretary of the Robert Owen Association, and a member of the Executive Committee of the Industrial Common Ownership Movement. He has written much on co-operative matters and on industrial and economic problems. His book 'Lost Property' was published in 194 7 and his Co-operative Party Pamphlet 'Socialism in the Seventies' in 1970.

JOHN SHIPPEE John Shippee, 29, Assistant Professor of Political Science at the California State University at Fullerton currently on leave. This year he is a visiting researcher at the International Peace Research Institute in Oslo. His main interests are future, peace and survival studies and, in the short term getting the United States out of Indo-China and the economic super-powers out of the Imperialism/international exploitation business.

STEPHEN WILLETIS Stephen Willetts is 23 and a Biochemistry graduate of Sussex University . Rather than specialise he then joined the InterDisciplinary Research team at Surrey University which is looking into the problems, especially the economic ones, of disposing of agricultural wastes.