by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
The vice chairman of General Atomics discusses the bright prospects for the modular helium nuclear reactor.
by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
The manager of a West German project to construct cheap high-temperature gas-cooled nuclear plants says construction could start in 1992-93.
A leading French forensic psychiatrist tells why he came to the United States to testify in the case of Lewis du Pont Smith.
by Carol White
A co-author of Satanism: Crime Wave of the ’90s, reviews Satanism in America: How the Devil Got Much More Than His Due, by Shawn Carlson and N. Gerald Larne with Gerry O’Sullivan, April A. Masche, and D. Hudson Frew.
by Nora Hamerman
Rembrandt’s Landscapes: Drawings and Prints, by Cynthia P. Schneider; and The Drawings by Rembrandt and his School in the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, by Geroen Giltraij.
by Patrick Ruckert
Partners in Tyranny: The Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact—August 23, 1939, by John Kolasky.
by Maria Cristina Fiocchi
Turnaround on Nuclear?
by Rainer Apel
Too Much Inertia among Politicians.
by Göran Haglund
Soviet Sub Base Is Not “Defensive.”
by Peter Rush
Shining Path in Pre-Election Rampage.
by Carlos Wesley
The El Chorrillo Land-Grab.
by Susan Maitra
India’s Confused Planners.
by M.T. Upharsin
How Eagleburger Bankrupted Yugoslavia.
The reality of depression politics.
by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
With the advent of the new generation of modular helium nuclear reactors, environmentalists now have even less grounds to complain about “dirty” or “unsafe” nuclear plants.
by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
Isidor A. Weisbrodt, manager of a Siemens subsidiary in West Germany which is specializing in high-temperature gas-cooled nuclear reactor technology, sees it as an ideal power source for Eastern Europe.
by Christopher White
The Japanese stock market blowout is the beginning of the financial mudslide which LaRouche predicted earlier this year.
by Ana Maria Papert
by Andrew Rotstein
by Rosa Tennenbaum
German “Food for Peace” leader Rosa Tennenbaum reports on the history of the East German communists’ disastrous attempt to run farms precisely the same way they ran industrial plants: into the ground.
by William Engdahl
Wall Street Plays with Fire in Japan.
by Marcia Merry
Farm Protests Rock Europe.
by Peter Rush
Despite the horrors of the past decade, caused by international banks’ unabashed looting of the national economies of Ibero- America, its 400 million inhabitants still have a chance to avoid plunging into a repeat of the Thirty Years War, if their leaders heed the advice of Lyndon LaRouche, which they foolishly rejected ten years ago.
Extracts from “The Mercantilist Manifesto for an industrial Peru,” the program of Peru’s Independent Solidarity Movement which is running in the upcoming elections there.
by Cynthia R. Rush
Profile of the great Argentine patriot, who before his death in 1983 fought relentlessly for the “American System” economic principles of Henry Carey and Friedrich List.
by Konstantin George
Documentation: World reactions to the Lithuania crisis.
by Poul Rasmussen
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Luba George
by Herbert Quinde
by Susan Maitra and Ramtanu Maitra
by Andrea Olivieri
Documentation: The letter of resignation of interior Minister Lemos Simmonds.
by William Jones
In the words of one high Administration official, “I see the umbrella.” But there is a growing popular revulsion against the President’s cowardice in the face of naked Russian aggression.
The machinations of the “Get LaRouche” task force and of Edgar Bronfman’s Anglo-Soviet “Trust” are now a matter of court record.
by Joseph Brewda
by Patricia Salisbury
by Kathleen Klenetsky
by William Jones