by David Goldman
Looks at Music, Mysticism, and Magic: A Sourcebook by Joscelyn Godwin.
by Charles B. Stevens
Reviews the prospects of space transport with a view to achieving a permanent colony on Mars within 40 years. Part of an ongoing series on new methods of space propulsion.
by Marjorie Mazel Hecht
by Silvia Palacios
Which Government Negotiates?
by Rainer Apel
Caught in the Persian Gulf Trap.
by Hugo López Ochoa
Porfirio Díaz Reincarnated?
by Mark Sonnenblick
The Greening of Bolivia.
Bush Campaigns against LaRouche.
by Sophie Tanapura
by Ronald Kokinda
by David Goldman
If Louis XV, to whom are attributed the words, “After me, the flood,” had had advisors like Jim Baker, the French Revolution would have occurred a dozen years early.
by Sophie Tanapura
The WHO’s Australia conference of 27 Asia-Pacific nations was just another attempt to prevent governments from doing anything about AIDS.
by Joyce Fredman
Taiwan To Buy U.S., Cheap.
by Birgit Vitt
by Marcia Merry
Congress Tries To Rescue FCS.
by Joyce Fredman
Boosting Food Output from Virginia Can Help Meet World Food Needs.
by Susan Welsh
As pressures mount for an arms agreement and a summit, the U.S. press is blacking out the obvious fact that the Russian leader’s much-heralded perestroika is nothing but a massive war economy mobilization.
by Rachel Douglas
He met with Prime Minister Turgut Özal, among others, and told a press conference that some Americans value the alliance with Turkey.
by Sara Madueño
In a July 28 message to the nation, he changed all the rules, nationalizing the banks and imposing strict exchange controls.
Documentation: Excerpts from García’s speech and from a July 31 interview on Mexican TV.
by Valerie Rush
The bishops are throwing their considerable moral weight behind defending the nation from narcoterrorism’s growing power.
by Carlos Potes
Once again, the Kremlin’s New Times publication devoted six pages to attacking the presidential candidate.
by Ralph de Toledano
Copley News Service’s Ralph de Toledano takes a look at the suit.
Gen. Bernard Rogers speaks out.
by David Goldman
If America is governed by law, to look at Congress in the face of the debt ceiling crisis, you would think it was Murphy’s Law.
by Herbert Quinde
by Dolia Estévez-Pettingell
His testimony outlined a scenario for invasion of Central and South America that would make the Kremlin smile.
by Linda Everett
Patients can now be murdered at relatives’ request.
by Nicholas F. Benton
Reagan’s Contradiction on Superconductivity — U.S. Media Loves Gorbachov, “glasnost” — “War on Drugs” Caving In.
by Ronald Kokinda