by Nora Hamerman
The president of the Schiller Institute in Germany, Mrs. Zepp-LaRouche was recently elected the chairman of a new political party, the Civil Rights Movement Solidarity. She outlines the need for a broader perspective for German patriots, now that they have achieved the reunification of their nation.
by Silvia Palacios
War Breaks Out on Privatization.
by Carlos Cota Meza
The Torricelli Corollary.
by Rainer Apel
“A Strategy of Tension.”
by Lydia Cherry
Zionist Lobby Is Frantic over LaRouche.
by Carlos Wesley
Another Kissinger Rip-Off.
by Kathy Wolfe
Original Instruments Cantabile.
Fifty Years Later.
by Gretchen Small
During an International Seminar on Peace Negotiations organized by the Jesuit-run Center for Research and Popular Education in Bogotá, Colombia, speakers boasted that the U.S. government is bringing to power communist narco-terrorist forces throughout Ibero-America, to eliminate national sovereignty.
by Mark Burdman
Eugenics, Human Genetics and Human Failings: The Eugenics Society, Its Sources and Its Critics in Britain, by Pauline M.H. Mazumdar.
by Stuart K. Lewis
The Life of a Tormented Evolutionist: Darwin, by Adrian Desmond and James Moore.
by Molly Hammett Kronberg
Hitler and Stalin: Parallel Lives, by Alan Bullock.
by William Engdahl
The worst speculative attacks on European currencies in the postwar period, plus the launching of trade war measures by the United States against Europe, are not the workings of “the magic of the marketplace,” but represent a deliberate effort at destabilization.
by Rogelio A. Maduro
Although the ecological fascists did manage to implement a large part of their agenda, the delegates from 87 nations refused to ban production of methyl bromide by 1995, as demanded by Washington.
by Nigel Gleeson
by Mark Burdman
by Marcia Merry
Oilseeds Were Never the Real Issue.
by Carol White
An on-the-scene report by Carol White from the Third International Conference on Cold Fusion, held in Nagoya, Japan. Three and a half years after Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann first captured headlines with their announcement that they could produce fusion in a test tube at room temperature, there is a body of experimental results which confirms their contention.
by Carol White
by Cynthia R. Rush
Carlos Andrés Perez, the darling of the International Monetary Fund, succeeded in putting down the rebellion, but not because he has any support from within his own country.
by Nora Hamerman
An interview with Helga Zepp-LaRouche.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
A policy statement.
by Umberto Pascali
by Claudio Celani
A report from Milan on a conference sponsored by EIR and the Schiller Institute. Only if a new Mattei emerges, will Italy be able to overcome the economic crisis and the Anglo-American destabilization.
by Lawrence Freeman
by H. Graham Lowry
The current babbling about an economic recovery has nothing to do with reality, but is intended to check any inclinations the Clinton Administration might have to undertake a fundamental policy shift.
by Warren J. Hamerman
Excerpts from the record of the government’s surveillance of a team charged with conspiring to kidnap a political associate of Lyndon LaRouche. The gang goes to trial on Dec. 14.
by Edward Spannaus
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Clinton Advisers Head for Europe.
We reported incorrectly in our last issue (page 67) that Washington, D.C. Park Police had arrested Rev. James Bevel and historian Anton Chaitkin while they were leading a rally at the statue of KKK founder Albert Pike. The arrest was actually made by federal Park Police.