Mr. Small is a co-author of the bestseller Dope, Inc.; he was until recently a political prisoner in the United States, having been jailed along with Lyndon LaRouche. Mr. Méndez, the associate director of EIR’s publication Resumen Ejecutivo, was expelled from Venezuela in 1985, when police raided the offices of EIR and confiscated all copies of the Spanish-language edition of Dope, Inc.
by Jacques Cheminade
Mr. Bortner is a leader of the French wing of Poland’s Solidarnosc movement. He discusses the skullduggery by which both the KGB and western operatives have accentuated Poland’s current crisis.
Part II of an interview with a Leipzig industrial management expert who was twice imprisoned by the East German communist regime.
by Gerald Kopp
Night Came to the Farms of the Great Plains, by Raymond D. North.
by Nora Hamerman
A wonderful show at Washington’s National Gallery of Art pivots around the two great “artist/scientists” of Columbus’s era, Leonardo da Vinci and Albrecht Dürer. Part I of a series.
by Rainer Apel
Peace Through Economic Development.
by Andrea Olivieri
A Last Call to Arms?
by Lorenzo Carrasco
Military Crisis in Brazil.
1992: A Year To Remember.
by William Engdahl
What the Bush Administration is doing with the unemployment figures makes the former East German communist bureaucracy look good.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
Remarks by Lyndon LaRouche on the economic reconstruction of Europe.
by William Jones
by Stephen Parsons
by Lydia Cherry
by Evelyn Lantz
by William Engdahl
by Suzanne Rose
Milk Crisis Deepens.
by Carlos Wesley
Who should show up to defend the Venezuelan dope lobby against exposure of their activities by associates of Lyndon LaRouche, but the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith? The ADL is putting out glossy brochures, with garden variety libels written in illiterate Spanish.
by Carlos Wesley
An interview with Dennis Small and José Carlos Méndez.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Lucía Méndez and Cynthia R. Rush
by Konstantin George
The refusal of the Bush Administration to allow credits for food to help Russia survive the winter, means that Yeltsin is in an untenable position. He has made the blunder of opting for “partial shock therapy,” which will only make the bad situation worse.
by Frank Hahn
by Umberto Pascali
Documentation: On-the-scene reports from citizens of Croatia.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
by Katherine Kanter
by Ahmed Hussein
by Silvia Palacios
by Anno Hellenbroich
by Cynthia R. Rush
by H. Graham Lowry
The Administration has announced the biggest federal budget deficit in history—$268.7 billion for the 1991 fiscal year—and they call this a “recovery.”
by Joyce Fredman and Sue Atkinson
by Linda Everett
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
A discussion of natural law that Lyndon LaRouche wrote in 1987, throws light on what should have been the subject of the hearings into the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court.
by William Jones