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- GRAPEVINE, Page 21Maxwell's Hall of Shame
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- By DAVID ELLIS/Reported by Sidney Urquhart
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- Robert Maxwell sailed into the turbulent New York City
- newspaper world with his eleventh-hour purchase of the ailing
- Daily News. But News editors beware! The British media magnate
- has shown some rather peculiar proclivities as a publisher. His
- Pergamon Press, soon to be sold to a Dutch firm, produced a
- World Leaders series that seemed to specialize in official or
- groveling accounts of dictators. All have since been discredited
- and relegated to history's scrap heap. Among the titles:
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- Nicolae Ceausescu: Builder of Modern Romania and
- International Statesman, 1983. In an introduction, Maxwell
- grilled the strongman (who was executed in the 1989 uprising):
- "What has, in your opinion, made you so popular with the
- Romanians?"
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- Erich Honecker: From My Life, 1981. His vital role in the
- construction of the Berlin Wall is proudly recounted by the
- ousted East German party leader, who was whisked off to the
- Soviet Union last month to receive "medical treatment" -- and
- to evade a life sentence for allegedly ordering border guards
- to shoot East Germans trying to escape his regime.
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- Janos Kadar: Selected Speeches and Interviews, 1985. A
- mind-numbing collection from Hungary's collaborationist leader,
- who was removed as party leader in 1988.
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- Wojciech Jaruzelski: Prime Minister of Poland, 1985. A
- laudatory portrait of the father of martial law, who so
- impressed Maxwell during a 1985 meeting in Warsaw that the
- publisher declared in a radio interview that the Solidarity
- problem was "solved."
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- Todor Zhivkov: Statesman and Builder of New Bulgaria,
- 1982. One year after this admiring biography was published,
- Zhivkov, now under house arrest for corruption and stealing
- state funds, awarded Maxwell the Order of Stara Planina for "the
- strengthening of peace between peoples."
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