by Ivès Zilli
The head of the Ecology Department at the Pasteur Institute in Paris gives his evaluation of the current cholera epidemic.
by Herbert Quinde
Spannaus, a political prisoner and associate of Lyndon LaRouche, knew more about Iran-Contra arms trafficker Cyrus Hashemi than just about anyone else, when the “October Surprise” first made headlines.
by Stanley Ezrol
This Hemisphere of Liberty; A Philosophy of the Americas, by Michael Novak.
by Denise Henderson
The Hidden Nations: The People Challenge the Soviet Union, by Nadia Diuk and Adrian Karatnycky.
by Carlos Wesley
Judicial Terrorism.
LaRouche Campaigned for the World.
by Albert Menez
Although the U.S. is strangling its own fusion effort, international efforts have shown that tokamak reactors are still possible by the year 2000. Albert Menez reports on the successes of the European JET program.
by Charles B. Stevens
Moscow’s Academician Kadomtsev has laid down the challenge. Will the West respond?
by Carol White
The NAFTA and GATT accords will gut U.S. wage levels, freeing billions of dollars for debt service to the major banks.
by Hartmut Cramer
The government is moving toward large-scale “internal improvements” to increase productivity, rather than imposing free market ideology on regions wrecked by 40 years of communism.
by Konstantin George
by Valerie Rush
by Ivès Zilli
Interview with Dr. André Dodin.
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Marcia Merry
Where’s the Beef?
by Kathleen Klenetsky
George Bush has been in the vanguard of the population control effort since the 1960s. For him, the more people who die in the Third World, the better.
by Hassan Ahmed and Joseph Brewda
Analysis of the recently declassified documents through which the Kissinger-era NSC defined population growth as a “national security issue.”
by Kathleen Klenetsky
The shocking story of Bush’s support for William Shockley and Arthur Jensen in their campaigns against the racial “down-breeding” of the U.S. population.
Documentation: Excerpts from the President’s statements, and those of his malthusian cronies.
by Rosanna Impiccini
On the eve of a new encyclical on the Vatican’s social teaching, expected to redefine East-West and North-South relations, Helga Zepp-LaRouche presents a Christian approach to economics in the Italian capital.
by Joseph Brewda
Documentation: International media coverage is beginning to point to the suffering caused throughout Iraq—not only to the Kurds. As in the effects of a neutron bomb, the real estate was mostly left standing; it is only the people who die.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Umberto Pascali
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Lorenzo Carrasco
by Mary McCourt Burdman
by Ramtanu Maitra and Susan Maitra
by H. Graham Lowry
The environmentalists are on the prowl, looking for properties formerly owned by bankrupt thrifts, to turn them into wilderness preserves. The trend started in California—naturally.
by Herbert Quinde
An interview with Edward Spannaus.
by Umberto Pascali and Michael Maddi
by Nancy Primack
by William Jones