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Volume VII, Number 5
September/October 2001

In This Issue:

Did Irishmen Discover America?

By John Tiffany

Fabulous stories have been told of a sixth-century Irish monk, St. Brendan the Navigator. According to these legends, he  discovered America centuries before the Vikings, let alone Christopher Columbus.

Mystery Cave Could Prove Ancient Visitors Were Here

By John Tiffany
 
A spelunker named Russell Burrows from the southern Illinois town of Olney allegedly discovered a mysterious cave along a branch of the Little Wabash River. If even some of the stories told surrounding this mysterious event are true, what are said by some to be the startling contents of the cave would set traditional American archeology on its ear.

Rediscovering the Forgotten White Ancestors Of Many American Indians

By J.S. Slaymaker
 
With the discovery of “Kennewick Man”, the national media is almost at a loss for words and, due to the unexpected discovery of such inconvenient facts, their own historically tainted doctrines of political correctness now hang in the balance.

 More Evidence for A Lost White Civilization In Ancient America
 
By Frank Joseph
 
One of history’s greatest mysteries is also one of its least well known: More than 3,000 years ago, at  least half a million tons from the world’s highest-grade copper ore deposits vanished without a trace from the upper Great Lakes region of North America.

 The Mind-Boggling Accomplishments of The Pre-Inca Civilizations

By Ralph P. Forbes
 
According to court historians, the ancient civilizations of South America had no tools made of anything harder than wood, copper and stone. And even the Incas, the most recent of these civilizations (A.D. 1105-1572), had no form of writing, we are told—much less the civilizations that preceded the Incas. However, the author maintains that there was indeed an ancient writing system—indeed, more than one—and the pre-Incas had the use of bronze, iron and even steel.

Volume VII, Number 4
July/August 2001

In This Issue:

To The Front-Line Fighters Of the First World War

By Rudolf Hess

No greater man of peace than Rudolf Hess ever lived, as is evidenced by his daring flight to Britain in an effort to avert war between the United Kingdom and Germany.

The Imprisonment & Murder Of Rudolf Hess

By Daniel W. Michaels

Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler's deputy, was wrongfully imprisoned and finally strangled to death while in U.S. custody in Spandau Prison in August 1987.

The Tragedy of Rudolf Hess What Manner of Man Was He?

By M. Raphael Johnson, Ph.D.

The  life of Rudolf Hess constitutes one of the glaring examples of myth within the study of World War II and beyond.

The Sexual Revolution

By M. Raphael Johnson, Ph.D

Has the worship of Dionysos gone too far? A book review.

Blockade Runners Of The Civil War

By Edward T. May

During the Civil War, it was the vital job of the blockade-runners to provide  the necessary supplies to enable the Confederacy to continue its quest for the sovereignty, freedom and independence of each Southern state.

Hog-Tying The U.S. Military In Vietnam

By Stephen Earl Lombardo

The Vietnam War was not lost by American servicemen, but by the civilians in the Defense Department.
 

Volume VII, Number 3
May/June 2001

In This Issue:

The Dual Nature of the Byzantine Empire And The Anecdota of Procopius

By Edward T. May

When considering vast events such as the fall of the western Roman empire, the linkage of specific  events with exact dates is a dicey proposition at best.

What They Didn’t Tell You About The Byzantine Empire

By M. Raphael Johnson, Ph.D

John Julius Norwish’s  new edition, a  shortened work called A Short History of Byzantium, remains a treasure house of facts about the Roman empire in the east.

Little-Known Facts Regarding African Slavery

By Steven A. Raper

The enslavement of Africans by Africans is an ancient native custom and still continues in the Dark Continent today. Here is a look at some shameful “roots” the establishment would rather you not know about...
 

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