Volume 6, Number 3, Fall 1997
Features
Spaceless-Timeless Boundaries in Leibniz
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
The Deconstructionist Assault On China’s Cultural Optimism
by Michael O. Billington
John Dryden’s Attack on Shakespeare: The Origin of ‘Sing-Song’ Recitation in English Poetry
by Paul Gallagher
Editorial
The Exoneration of Lyndon LaRouche Is the Most Important Question for the Future of the United States
Translation
Friedrich Schiller: The Walk
News
Lyndon LaRouche Declares for President in 2000
Support Swells for LaRouche Exoneration at NAACP Convention
Helga Zepp LaRouche Tours Los Angeles: ‘We Must Move Mountains’
Institute Hails Hongkong Return
Feed North Korea Now!
Call for LaRouche Exoneration, New Bretton Woods in Manila
LaRouche at Washington, D.C. Forum: Africa Crisis: ‘A Fork in the Road’
Second LaRouche Book Published in Russia
A translation of LaRouche’s essay, “The Science of Physical Economy as the Platonic Epistemological Basis for All Branches of Human Knowledge,” which was originally serialized in Executive Intelligence Review in 1994.
Appeal to President Clinton: Stop London’s Holocaust in Africa!
Institute Mobilizes To Stop African Genocide
O’Dell Execution: Fight vs. Death Penalty
Interview
Fr. Richard T. McSorley, S.J.
by Nina Ogden
Father Richard T. McSorley, S.J. was born on Oct. 2, 1914 in Philadelphia, Pa., and has taught at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. since 1961. He is currently the director of the University’s Center for Peace Studies. He founded the Dorothy Day Center-Catholic Workers Center in Washington, D.C. in 1980, is a board member of the Catholic Worker, and was a national board member of Pax Christi for six years. He is the author of eight books, including his autobiography, “My Path to Justice and Peace,” published last year. The following interview was conducted by Nina Ogden on July 11, 1997.
Commentary
Glimpsing the Beauty of the Eternal
by Ted Andromidas
“At once full of form and full of abundance, at once philosophizing and creating, at once tender and energetic, we see [the Greeks] unite the youth of phantasy with manliness of reason in a glorious humanity.” —Friedrich Schiller
Books
There Is Fraud in What He Offers
by William F. Wertz, Jr.
The Fire of Invention: Civil Society and the Future of the Corporation and Business As a Calling: Work and the Examined Life by Michael Novak
The British ‘Anti-Jefferson’ Agenda
by Mark Burdman
The Long Affair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785-1800
The Bold Freshness of Artistic Discovery
by Karel Vereycken
Portement de Croix: Histoire d’un tableau de Pierre Bruegel l’Ainé by Michael Gibson