Sheila Sisulu is South Africa’s Ambassador to the United States, a post she has held since 1999.
Reviews
by Mary Jane Freeman and Paul Gallagher
In a decade, the Shenandoah Shakespeare Express has become a national touring company of considerable stature, and is to be noted for its honesty in performance.
Departments
The Voice from the Doomed in the Bunker.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Three years after the Paris car crash that claimed the lives of Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed, and Henri Paul, Mohamed Al Fayed filed a Federal civil suit in Washington, D.C., demanding that the U.S. government turn over all classified documentation that could shed light on the causes of that tragic event.
by Mohamed Al Fayed
by William Engdahl
Energy prices are rising because of speculation, pure and simple. The crisis is the spearhead of the collapse of the global financial system.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
An interview with LaRouche by Venezuela’s Radio Mágica.
by Kathy Wolfe
by John Hoefle
by Richard Freeman
Lying about the true state of the hyperinflationary price spiral now engulfing the world, is being used to loot the U.S. population of $150-330 billion per year.
Contrary to government lies, commodity price inflation is hitting hard.
by Mary Burdman and Roman Bessonov
Extensive efforts are under way to develop the Land-Bridge, but a New Bretton Woods is needed to ensure its success.
by Cynthia R. Rush
Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori’s sudden decision to step down had little to do with domestic scandals, and everything to do with the determination of the Anglo-American financier oligarchy to destroy everyone who stands in their way.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
An interview with Sheila Sisulu.
by Dean Andromidas
Israel and the Palestinians had completed a peace agreement on Oct. 31, 1995, but then, four days later, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was murdered.
by Rainer Apel
When the U.S. Ambassador walks out on a speech by the former President of Germany, it’s clear that tensions have gone far beyond “business as usual.”
by Poul E. Rasmussen
by Edward Spannaus
by Marsha Freeman and Edward Spannaus
The horror of what the Justice Department was attempting to do in the Lee case, comes clearly into focus, if one considers what would have happened if the government had been able to bring its case in its favorite venue for such cases: the Federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, which is notorious for its pro-prosecution bias, and which railroaded Lyndon LaRouche and associates into prison.
by Michele Steinberg
Beneath the sugar-coating of the “new economy,” the foundations of the U.S. economy are rotten, as snapshots of real conditions show.
by Carl Osgood