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Back Issues for Skeptical Inquirer magazine

Prices are $5.00 for bimonthy issues, and $6.25 for quarterly issues (pre-1995). Shipping and handling charges are $2.25 for the first back issue, 50 cents for each additional issue, or a maximum of $8.50.

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Older issues (that might not be online) are listed below:

WINTER 1995 (vol. 19, no. 4; buy this back issue)

FALL 1995 (vol. 19, no. 3; buy this back issue)

SUMMER 1995 (vol. 19, no. 2; buy this back issue)

SPRING 1995 (vol. 19, no. 1; buy this back issue)

FALL 1994 (vol. 18, no. 5; buy this back issue) Empirical evidence for reincarnation? Angel. Reader's guide to the ozone controversy, Rensberger. Bigfoot evidence: Are these tracks real? Dennett. Why we are unmoved as oceans ebb and flow, Quincey. Anomalous phenomena in Kazakhstan, Efimov. False memories, Gardner.

SUMMER 1994 (vol. 18, no. 4; buy this back issue): `Extraordinary science' and the strange legacy of Nikola Tesla, Johnson. Nikola Tesla: Genius, visionary, and eccentric, Johnson. Pollens on the `Shroud': A study in deception, Nickell. Do televised depictions of paranormal events influence viewers' beliefs? Sparks, Hansen, and Shah. Synchronicity and the archetypes, Gallo. The synthetic mind clashes with the reductionist text, Reuter. Psi in pyschology, Blackmore.

SPRING 1994 (vol. 18, no. 3; buy this back issue): The Antiscience Threat: The growth of antiscience, Kurtz; The antiscience problem, Holton. Measuring the prevalence of false memories, Goertzel. Bleuler's views on inheritance of acquired characteristics and on psi phenomena, Windholz. Examining the satanic panic: . . . A personal perspective, Huston; . . . A sociological and historical perspective, Hines. Philosophy and the paranormal, Part 2: Skepticism, miracles, and knowledge, Grey.

WINTER 1994 (vol. 18, no. 2; buy this back issue) The new skepticism, Kurtz. Philosophy and the paranormal, Part 1: The problem of `psi,' Grey. Electromagnetic field cancer scares, Deutsch. Attacks on role-playing games, Cardwell. Global fortune-telling and Bible prophecy, Tremaine. Chernikov pattern puzzle, Pickover.

FALL 1993 (vol. 18, no. 1; buy this back issue): `Perspectives on education in America': Sandia study challenges misconceptions, Frazier. Do `honesty' tests really measure honesty? Lilienfeld. Astrology strikes back--but to what effect? Dean. Diagnoses of alien kidnappings that result from conjunction effects in memory, Dawes and Mulford. Mathematical magic for skeptics, Benjamin and Shermer. The blind girl who saw the flash of the first nuclear weapon test, Sinclair. Science: The feminists' scapegoat? Walker.

SUMMER 1993 (vol 17, no. 4; buy this back issue): The right hemisphere: An esoteric closet? Sarav=ED. Improving science teaching: The textbook problem, Padian. The eyewitness: Imperfect interface between stimuli and story, Reich. Pathological science: An update, Cromer. Jack Horkheimer, `Star Hustler,' interview by Gabriel Seabrook. The false memory syndrome, Gardner.

SPRING 1993 (vol 17, no. 3; buy this back issue): Anguished silence and helping hands: Autism and Facilitated Communication, Mulick, Jacobson, and Kobe. Facilitated Communication, autism, and Ouija, Dillon. Treading on the edge: Practicing safe science with SETI, Tarter. Education for science, Gore. A threat to science, Schatzman. Charles Honorton's legacy to parapsychology, Blackmore. 1993 CSICOP Conference.

WINTER 1993 (vol 17, no. 2; buy this back issue): Special report: 3.7 million Americans kidnapped by aliens? Stires and Klass. Psychics: Do police departments really use them? Sweat and Durm. Psychic detectives: A critical examination, Rowe. Therapeutic Touch, Bullough and Bullough. Improving science teaching in the U.S., Marek and Wayne Rowe. The Big Sur `UFO,' George. The strange case of the New Haven oysters, Quincey.

FALL 1992 (vol 17, no 1; buy this back issue): A celebration of Isaac Asimov: A man for the universe, Kendrick Frazier, Arthur C. Clarke. Frederik Pohl, Harlan Ellison, L. Sprague de Camp, Carl Sagan, Stephen Jay Gould, Martin Gardner, Paul Kurtz, Donald Goldsmith, James Randi, and E. C. Krupp. Gaia without mysticism, Shannon. Gaia's scientific coming of age, Frazier. The curse of the runestone: Deathless hoaxes, Whittaker. Night terrors, sleep paralysis, and devil-stricken telephone cords from hell, Huston. Scientific creationism: The social agenda of a pseudoscience, Shore. Observing stars in the daytime: The chimney myth, Sanderson. Does an ancient Jewish amulet commemorate the conjunction of 2 B.C.? Rubincam.

SUMMER 1992 (vol. 16, no. 4; buy this back issue): Freedom of scientific inquiry under siege, Kurtz. Psychic experiences: Psychic illusions, Blackmore. The scientist's skepticism, Bunge. The persistent popularity of the paranormal, Lett. Self-help books: Pseudoscience in the guise of science? Gambrill.

SPRING 1992 (vol. 16, no. 3; buy this back issue): Special Report: The Maharishi caper: JAMA hoodwinked, Skolnick. Myths of subliminal persuasion: The cargo-cult science of subliminal persuasion, Pratkanis; Subliminal perception: Facts and fallacies, Moore; Subliminal tapes, Phelps and Exum. The Avro VZ-9 `flying saucer,' Blake. Two 19th-century skeptics: Augustus de Morgan and John Fiske, Rothman.

WINTER 1992 (vol.16, no.2): On being sued: The chilling of freedom of expression, Kurtz. The crop-circle phenomenon, Nickell and Fischer. Update on the `Mars effect,' Ertel. A dissenting note on Ertel's `Update,' Kurtz. Magic Melanin: Spreading scientific illiteracy among minorities, Part 2, de Montellano. Adventures in science and cyclosophy, de Jager. Searching for security in the mystical, Grimmer.

FALL 1991 (vol. 16, no. 1; buy this back issue): Near-death experiences, Blackmore. Multicultural pseudoscience: Spreading scientific illiteracy, Part 1, de Montellano. Science and commonsense skepticism, Aach. Spook Hill, Wilder. Lucian and Alexander, Rowe. 1991 CSICOP conference.

SUMMER 1991 (vol. 15, no. 4; buy this back issue): Lucid dreams, Blackmore. Nature faking in the humanities, Gallo. Carrying the war into the never-never land of psi: Part 2, Gill. Coincidences, Paulos. Locating invisible buildings, Plummer. True believers, Bower.

SPRING 1991 (vol. 15, no. 3; buy this back issue): Special report: Hi-fi pseudoscience, Davis. Searching for extraterrestrial intelligence: An interview with Thomas R. McDonough. Getting smart about getting smarts, Faulkes. Carrying the war into the never-never land of psi: Part 1, Gill. Satanic cult `survivor' stories, Victor. `Old-solved mysteries': The Kecksburg incident, Young. Magic, medicine, and metaphysics in Nigeria, Roder. What's wrong with science education? Look at the family, Eve.

WINTER 1991 (vol. 15, no. 2; buy this back issue): Special report/ Gallup poll: Belief in paranormal phenomena, Gallup and Newport. Science and self-government, Piel. West Bank collective hysteria episode, Stewart. Acceptance of personality test results, Thiriart. Belief in astrology: A test of the Barnum effect, French, Fowler, McCarthy, and Peers. A test of clairvoyance using signal-detection, McKelvie and Gagne. Intercessory prayer as medical treatment? Wittmer and Zimmerman.

FALL 1990 (vol. 15, no. 1; buy this back issue): Neural Organization Technique: Treatment or torture, Worrall. The spooks of quantum mechanics, Stenger. Science and Sir William Crookes, Hoffmaster. The `N' machine, Cumming. Biological cycles and rhythms vs. biorhythms, Wheeler. 1990 CSICOP Conference.

SUMMER 1990 (vol. 14, no. 4; buy this back issue): Ghosts make news: How four newspapers report psychic phenomena, Klare. Thinking critically and creatively, Wade and Tavris. Police pursuit of satanic crime, Part 2, Hicks. Order out of chaos in survival research, Berger. Piltdown, paradigms, and the paranormal, Feder. Auras: Searching for the light, Loftin.

SPRING 1990 (vol.14, no.3): Why we need to understand science, Sagan. The crisis in pre-college science and math education, Seaborg. Police pursuit of satanic crime, Part 1, Hicks. The spread of satanic-cult rumors, Victor. Lying about polygraph tests, Shneour. Worldwide disasters and moon phase, Kelly, Saklofske, and Culver.

WINTER 1990 (vol. 14, no. 2; buy this back issue): The new catastrophism, Morrison and Chapman. A field guide to critical thinking, Lett. Cold fusion: A case history in `wishful science'? Rothman. The airship hysteria of 1896-97, Bartholomew. Newspaper editors and the creation-evolution controversy, Zimmerman. Special report: New evidence of MJ-12 hoax, Klass.

FALL 1989 (vol. 14, no. 1; buy this back issue): Myths about science, Rothman. The relativity of wrong, Asimov. Richard Feynman on fringe science; Luis Alvarez and the explorer's quest, Muller. The two cultures, Jones. The `top-secret UFO papers' NASA won't release, Klass. The metaphysics of Murphy's Law, Price.

SUMMER 1989 (vol. 13, no. 4; buy this back issue): The New Age--An examination: The New Age in perspective, Kurtz. A New Age reflection in the magic mirror of science, O'Hara. The New Age: The need for myth in an age of science, Schultz. Channeling, Alcock. The psychology of channeling, Reed, `Entities' in the linguistic minefield, Thomason. Crystals, Lawrence. Consumer culture and the New Age, Rosen. The Shirley MacLaine phenomenon, Gordon. Special report: California court jails psychic surgeon, Brenneman.

SPRING 1989 (vol. 13, no. 3; buy this back issue): High school biology teachers and pseudoscientific belief, Eve and Dunn. Evidence for Bigfoot? Dennett. Alleged pore structure in Sasquatch footprints, Freeland and Rowe. The lore of levitation, Stein. Levitation `miracles' in India, Premanand. Science, pseudoscience, and the cloth of Turin, Nickell. Rather than just debunking, encourage people to think, Seckel. MJ-12 papers `authenticated'? Klass. A patently false patent myth, Sass.

WINTER 1989 (vol. 13, no. 2; buy this back issue): Special report: The `remembering water' controversy, Gardner and Randi; Bibliographic guide to the `dilution controversy.' Pathologies of science, precognition, and modern psychophysics, Jensen. A reaction-time test of ESP and precognition, Hines and Dennison. Chinese psychic's pillbottle demonstration, Wu Xiaoping. The Kirlian technique, Watkins and Bickel. Certainty and proof in creationist thought, Leferriere.

FALL 1988 (vol. 13, no. 1; buy this back issue): Special report: Astrology and the presidency, Kurtz and Bob. Improving Human Performance: What about parapsychology? Frazier. The China syndrome: Further reflections on the paranormal in China, Kurtz. Backward masking, McIver. The validity of graphological analysis, Furnham. The intellectual revolt against science, Grove.

SUMMER 1988 (vol. 12, no. 4; buy this back issue): Testing psi claims in China, Kurtz, Alcock, Frazier, Karr, Klass, and Randi. The appeal of the occult: Some thoughts on history, religion, and science, Stevens. Hypnosis and reincarnation, Venn. Pitfalls of perception, Wheeler. Wegener and pseudoscience: Some misconceptions, Edelman. An investigation of psychic crime-busting, Emery. High-flying health quackery, Hines. The bar-code beast, Keith.

SPRING 1988 (vol. 12, no. 3; buy this back issue): Neuropathology and the legacy of spiritual possession, Beyerstein. Varieties of alien experience, Ellis. Alien-abduction claims and standards of inquiry (excerpts from Milton Rosenberg's radio talkshow with guests Charles Gruder, Martin Orne, and Budd Hopkins). The MJ-12 Papers: Part 2, Klass. Doomsday: The May 2000 prediction, Meeus. My visit to the Nevada Clinic, Barrett. Morphic resonance in silicon chips, Varela and Letelier. Abigail's anomalous apparition, Durm. The riddle of the Colorado ghost lights, Bunch and White.

WINTER 1987-88 (vol.12, no.2): The MJ-12 papers: Part I, Klass. The aliens among us: Hypnotic regression revisited, Baker. The brain and consciousness: Implications for psi, Beyerstein. Past-life hypnotic regression, Spanos. Fantasizing under hypnosis, Reveen. The verdict on creationism, Gould.

FALL 1987 (vol. 12, no. 1; buy this back issue): The burden of skepticism, Sagan. Is there intelligent life on Earth? Kurtz. Medical Controversies: Chiropractic, Jarvis; Homeopathy, Barrett; Alternative therapies, Jones; Quackery, Pepper. Catching Geller in the act, Emery. Special Report: CSICOP's 1987 conference.

SUMMER 1987 (vol. 11, no. 4; buy this back issue): Incredible cremations: Investigating combustion deaths, Nickell and Fischer. Subliminal deception, Creed. Past tongues remembered? Thomason. Is the universe improbable? Shotwell. Psychics, computers, and psychic computers, Easton. Pseudoscience and children's fantasies, Evans. Thoughts on science and superstrings, Gardner. Special Reports: JAL pilot's UFO report, Klass; Unmasking psychic Jason Michaels, Busch.

SPRING 1987 (vol. 11, no. 3; buy this back issue): The elusive open mind: Ten years of negative research in parapsychology, Blackmore. Does astrology need to be true? Part 2: The answer is no, Dean. Magic, science, and metascience: Some notes on perception, D. Sagan. Velikovsky's interpretation of the evidence offered by China, Lo.

WINTER 1986-87 (vol. 11, no. 2; buy this back issue): Case study of West Pittston `haunted' house, Kurtz. Science, creationism and the Supreme Court, Seckel, with statements by Ayala, Gould, and Gell-Mann. The great East Coast UFO of August 1986, Oberg. Does astrology need to be true? Part 1, Dean. Homing abilities of bees, cats, and people, Randi.

FALL 1986 (vol.11, no.1): The path ahead: Opportunities, challenges, and an expanded view, Frazier. Exposing the faith-healers, Steiner. Was Antarctica mapped by the ancients? Jolly. Folk remedies and human belief-systems, Reuter. Dentistry and pseudoscience, Dodes. Atmospheric electricity, ions, and pseudoscience, Dolezalek. Noah's ark and ancient astronauts, Harrold and Eve. The Woodbridge UFO incident, Ridpath. How to bust a ghost, Baker.

SUMMER 1986 (vol.10, no. 4): Occam's razor, Shneour. Clever Hans redivivus, Sebeok. Parapsychology miracles, and repeatability, Flew. The Condon UFO study, Klass. Four decades of fringe literature, Dutch. Some remote viewing recollections, Weinberg.

SPRING 1986 (vol. 10, no. 3; buy this back issue): The perennial fringe, Asimov. The uses of credulity, de Camp. Night walkers and mystery mongers, Sagan. CSICOP after ten years, Kurtz. Crash of the crashed-saucers claim, Klass. A study of the Kirlian effect, Watkins and Bickel. Ancient tales and space-age myths of creationist evangelism, McIver.

WINTER 1985-86 (vol. 10, no. 2; buy this back issue): The moon was full and nothing happened, Kelly, Rotton, and Culver. Psychic studies: The Soviet dilemma, Ebon. The psychopathology of fringe medicine, Sabbagh. Computers and rational thought, Spangenburg and Moser.

FALL 1985 (vol. 10, no. 1; buy this back issue): Investigations of firewalking, Leikind and McCarthy. Firewalking: Reality or illusion, Dennett. Myth of alpha consciousness, Beyerstein. Spirit rapping unmasked, Bullough. The Saguaro incident, Taylor and Dennett.

SUMMER 1985 (vol. 9, no 4; buy this back issue.): Guardian astrology study, Dean, Kelly, Rotton, and Saklofske. Astrology and the commodity market, Rotton. The hundreth monkey phenomenon, Amundson. Responsibilites of the media, Kurtz. `Lucy' out of context, Albert.

SPRING 1985 (vol. 9, no. 3; buy this back issue): Columbus poltergeist, Randi. Moon and murder in Cleveland, Sanduleak. Image of Guadalupe, Nickell and Fischer. Radar UFOs, Klass. Phrenology, McCoy. Deception by patients, Pankratz. Communication in nature, Orstan.

WINTER 1984-85 (vol. 9, no. 2; buy this back issue): The muddled `Mind Race,' Hyman. Searches for the Loch Ness monster, Razdan and Kielar. Final interview with Milbourne Christopher, Dennett. Retest of astrologer John McCall, Ianna and Tolbert.

FALL 1984 (vol. 9, no. 1; buy this back issue): Quantum theory and the paranormal, Shore. What is pseudoscience? Bunge. The new philosophy of science and the `paranormal,' Toulmin. An eye-opening double encounter, Martin. Similarities between identical twins and between unrelated people, Wyatt et al. Effectiveness of a reading program on paranormal belief, Woods, Pseudoscientific beliefs of 6th graders, A. S. and S. I. Adelman.

SUMMER 1984 (vol. 8, no. 4; buy this back issue): Parapsychology's past eight years, Alcock. The evidence for ESP, C. E. M. Hansel. $110,000 dowsing challenge, Randi. Sir Oliver Lodge and the spiritualists, Hoffmaster. Misperception, folk belief, and the occult, Connor. Psychology and UFOs, Simon.

SPRING 1984 (vol. 8, no. 3; buy this back issue): Belief in the paranormal worldwide: Mexico, Mendez-Acosta; Netherlands, Hoebens; U.K., Hutchinson; Australia, Smith; Canada, Gordon; France, Rouz=E9. Debunking, neutrality, and skepticism in science, Kurtz. University course reduces paranormal belief, Gray. The Gribbin effect, Roder. Proving negatives, Pasquarello.

WINTER 1983-84 (vol. 8, no. 2; buy this back issue): Sense and nonsense in parapsychology, Hoebens. Magicians, scientists, and psychics, Ganoe and Kirwan. New dowsing experiment, Martin. The effect of TM on weather, Trumpy. The haunting of the Ivan Vassilli, Sheaffer. Venus and Velikovsky, Forrest.

FALL 1983 (vol. 8, no. 1; buy this back issue): Creationist pseudoscience, Schadewald. Project Alpha: Part 2, Randi. Forecasting radio quality by the planets, Dean. Reduction in paranormal belief in college course, Tobacyk. Humanistic astrology, Kelly and Krutzen.

SUMMER 1983 (vol. 7, no. 4; buy this back issue): Project Alpha: Part 1, Randi. Goodman's `American Genesis,' Feder. Battling on the airwaves, Slavsky. Rhode Island UFO film, Emery.

SPRING 1983 (vol. 7, no. 3; buy this back issue): Iridology, Worrall. The Nazca drawings revisited, Nickell. People's Almanac predictions, Donnelly. Test of numerology, Dlhopolsky. Pseudoscience in the name of the university, Lederer and Singer.

WINTER 1982-83 (vol. 7, no. 2; buy this back issue): Palmistry, Park. The great SRI die mystery, Gardner. The `monster' tree-trunk of Loch Ness, Campbell. UFOs and the not-so-friendly skies, Klass. In defense of skepticism, Reber.

FALL 1982 (vol. 7, no. 1; buy this back issue): The prophecies of Nostradamus, Cazeau. Prophet of all seasons, James Randi. Revival of Nostradamitis, Hoebens. Unsolved mysteries and extraordinary phenomena, Gill. Clearing the air about psi, Randi. A skotography scam, Randi.

SUMMER 1982 (vol. 6, no. 4; buy this back issue): Remote-viewing, Marks. Radio disturbances and planetary positions, Meeus. Divining in Australia, Smith. "Great Lakes Triangle," Cena. Skepticism, closed-mindedness, and science fiction, Beyerstein. Followup on ESP logic, Hardin and Morris and Gendin.

SPRING 1982 (vol. 6, no. 3; buy this back issue): The Shroud of Turin, Mueller. Shroud image, McCrone. Science, the public, and the Shroud, Schafersman. Zodiac and personality, Gauquelin. Follow-Up on quantum PK, Hansel.

WINTER 1981-82 (vol. 6, no. 2; buy this back issue): On coincidences, Ruma Falk. Croiset: Part 2, Hoebens. Scientific creationism, Schadewald. Follow-Up on `Mars effect,' Rawlins; Responses by CSICOP Council, Abell, and Kurtz.

FALL 1981 (vol. 6, no. 1; buy this back issue): Gerard Croiset: Part 1, Hoebens. Test of perceived horoscope accuracy, Lackey. Planetary positions and radio propagation, Ianna and Margolin. Bermuda Triangle, 1981, Dennett. Observation of a psychic, McIntyre.

SUMMER 1981 (vol. 5, no. 4; buy this back issue): Investigation of `psychics,' Randi. ESP: A conceptual analysis, Gendin. The extroversion-introversion astrological effect, Kelly and Saklofske. Art, science, and paranormalism, Habercom. Profitable nightmare, Wells. A Maltese cross in the Aegean? Loftin.

SPRING 1981 (vol. 5, no. 3; buy this back issue): Hypnosis and UFO abductions, Klass. Hypnosis not a truth serum, Hilgard. H. Schmidt's PK experiments, Hansel. Further comments on Schmidt's experiments, Hyman. Atlantean road, Randi. Deciphering ancient America, McKusick. A sense of the ridiculous, Lord.

WINTER 1980-81 (vol. 5, no. 2; buy this back issue): Fooling some people all the time, Singer and Benassi. Recent perpetual motion developments, Schadewald. National Enquirer astrology study, Mechler, McDaniel, and Mulloy. Science and the mountain peak, Asimov.

FALL 1980 (vol. 5, no. 1; buy this back issue): The Velikovsky affair--articles by Oberg, Bauer, Frazier. Academia and the occult, Greenwell. Belief in ESP among psychologists, Padgett, Benassi, and Singer. Bigfoot on the loose, Kurtz. Parental expectations of miracles, Steiner. Downfall of a would-be psychic, McBurney and Greenberg. Parapsychology research, Mishlove.

SUMMER 1980 (vol. 4, no. 4; buy this back issue): Superstitions, Bainbridge and Stark. Psychic archaeology, Feder. Voice stress analysis, Klass. Follow-Up on the `Mars effect,' Evolution vs. creationism, and the Cottrell tests.

SPRING 1980 (vol. 4, no. 3; buy this back issue): Belief in ESP, Morris. UFO hoax, Simpson. Don Juan vs. Piltdown man, de Mille. Tiptoeing beyond Darwin, Greenwell. Conjurors and the psi scene, Randi. Follow-Up on the Cottrell tests.

WINTER 1979-80 (vol. 4, no. 2; buy this back issue): The `Mars effect'--articles by Kurtz, Zelen, and Abell; Rawlins; Michel and Francoise Gauquelin. How I was debunked, Hoebens. The metal bending of Professor Taylor, Gardner. Science, intuition, and ESP, Bauslaugh.

FALL 1979 (vol. 4, no. 1; buy this back issue): A test of dowsing, Randi. Science and evolution, Godfrey. Television pseudodocumentaries, Bainbridge. New disciples of the paranormal, Kurtz. UFO or UAA, Standen. The lost panda, Van Kampen. Edgar Cayce, Randi.

SUMMER 1979 (vol. 3, no. 4; buy this back issue): The moon and the birthrate, Abell and Greenspan. Biorhythms, Hines. `Cold reading,' Randi. Teacher, student, and the paranormal, Kral. Encounter with a sorcerer, Sack.

SPRING 1979 (vol. 3, no. 3; buy this back issue): Near-death experiences, Alcock. Television tests of Musuaki Kiyota, Scott and Hutchinson. The conversion of J. Allen Hynek, Klass. Asimov's corollary, Asimov.

WINTER 1978-79 (vol. 3, no. 2; buy this back issue): Is parapsychology a science? Kurtz. Chariots of the gullible, Bainbridge. The Tunguska event, Oberg. Space travel in Bronze Age China, Keightley.

FALL 1978 (vol. 3, no. 1; buy this back issue): An empirical test of astrology, Bastedo. Astronauts and UFOs, Oberg. Sleight of tongue, Schwartz. The Sirius "mystery," Ridpath.

SPRING/SUMMER 1978 (vol. 2, no. 2; buy this back issue): Tests of three psychics, Randi. Biorhythms, Bainbridge. Plant perception, Kmetz. Anthropology beyond the fringe, Cole. NASA and UFOs, Klass. A second Einstein ESP letter, Gardner.

FALL/WINTER 1977 (vol. 2, no. 1; buy this back issue): Von D=E4niken, Story, The Bermuda Triangle, Kusche. Pseudoscience at Science Digest, Oberg and Sheaffer. Einstein and ESP, Gardner. N-rays and UFOs, Klass. Secrets of the psychics, Rawlins.

SPRING/SUMMER 1977 (vol. l, no. 2; buy this back issue): Uri Geller, Marks and Kammann. Cold reading, Hyman. Transcendental Meditation, Woodrum. A statistical test of astrology, McGervey. Cattle mutilations, Stewart.

FALL/WINTER 1976 (vol. 1, no. 1; buy this back issue): Dianetics, Wallis. Psychics and clairvoyance, Fine. "Objections to Astrology," Westrum. Astonomers and astrophysicists as astrology critics, Kurtz and Nisbet. Biorhythms and sports, Fix. Von Daniken's chariots, Omohundro.

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