by Christina Nelson Huth
Review of Dancing On My Grave: An Autobiography by Gelsey Kirkland.
by Silvia Palacios
Drugs and Narco-Dollars Invade Brazil.
by Augustinus
The Existence of Satan.
by Rainer Apel
How Nice Is the Red Army?
by Valerie Rush
Drug Legalization Advances.
by Hugo López Ochoa
Bankers Fear a Break with IMF.
An Obligation to History.
by Christopher White
More of same to come. The Saudis haven’t changed their policy, but markets are so weak and nerves so jittery, it doesn’t matter anymore.
by Warren J. Hamerman
by Roger Moore
by Mark Burdman
by Galliano Maria Speri
by Christopher White
Steel on Merrill Lynch Auction Block.
by Marcia Merry
USDA’s Big 1987 Acreage Cuts.
by David Goldman
S&Ls Hit by Real Estate Crash.
by Mel Klenetsky
UAW Urged Members To Vote Democrat.
Twilight of the Banks.
by Robert Gallagher
In the second part of our three-part series, Robert Gallagher discusses recent milestones and the physical principles that lie at the basis of its operation.
Part 10 of our exclusive series based on the Schiller Institute book, Ibero-American Integration: 100 Million New Jobs by the Year 2000, focuses on the problem of the composition of the workforce.
by Criton Zoakos
By the official estimates of the U.S. State Department in the 1920s and 1930s, Dr. Armand Hammer was a “Soviet agent.” Today, he has become the principal “back-channel” connection between the Reagan Administration and the Soviet leadership. What has changed? An evaluation by Editor-in-Chief Criton Zoakos.
A chronology of the Soviet “culture mafia’s” offensive to infiltrate U.S. intelligence services.
by Scott Thompson
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Surprising facts about the head of the U.S. Information Agency.
by Thierry Lalevée
The British decision to break diplomatic relations with Soviet-allied Syria on Oct. 24 is one of the most decisive moves yet against state-sponsored terrorism.
by Linda de Hoyos
EIR’s treatment of the government of the P.R.C. has not changed.
by Mark Burdman
An EIR investigative team’s exclusive report from the Conference of European Churches in September; we found Western churches willing pawns in the Soviets’ cultural warfare strategy.
On Oct. 29 at press conferences in Washington and 27 other cities around the world, an international commission was formed to investigate the U.S. Justice Department for Soviet-style human rights violations against LaRouche and other Americans.
by Warren J. Hamerman
by Nicholas F. Benton
Weinberger Attacks Congress’s Micromanagement — Soviets Bugged Hofti House — Giving Kalb Too Much Credit.