by Antonio Gaspari
Panama’s Ambassador to Rome blasts U.S. aggression against other countries that use the Canal.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
What’s required concerning China is not just “action,” but a change in policy. For starters, George Bush has to declare that Kissinger was wrong, says the jailed American statesman, whose candidacy for Congress from Virginia has already awakened much attention.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Describes the political and banking networks which financed Dennis King’s book-length slander, Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fascism.
by Garance Upham Phau
Findings presented at the Montreal AIDS conference show how in tropical countries, AIDS is leading to an explosion of other diseases such as tuberculosis, sleeping sickness, and elephantiasis.
by Silvia Palacios
Is Petrobrás Dying?
by Cruz del Carmen de Cota
Food Consumption Plummets in Mexico.
by Rainer Apel
A Contribution to China’s Future.
by Valerie Rush
Terrorists Play Yo-Yo with Barco.
by Rachel Douglas
Russian Groups Flaunt Racism.
by Patricia Salisbury
Anti-Satan Bills before Two Governors.
by M.T. Upharsin
Scowcroft Scandal Looms over White House.
Scientific Optimism Vindicated.
by Christopher White
Apparently George Bush didn’t want to hear what Helmut Schmidt had to say about the financial debacle that lies ahead.
by Mary McCourt Burdman
Documentation: The Bangkok Resolution: The Decisive Question for Human Survival.
by Javier Almario
by Rogelio A. Maduro
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Robert L. Baker
Food Cartel Puts Out 1990s Plan.
by William Engdahl
Bankers’ Plot Advances in Madrid.
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Death Throes of the S&Ls.
by Webster G. Tarpley
A comprehensive report, filed by Webster Tarpley from Taipei, on death warrants which Deng has already issued against all opposition leaders. “After all,” Deng argued before the massacre at Tiananmen Square, “1 million victims is a small price to pay in a country as large as China.”
by Webster G. Tarpley
Taiwan leaders are intensively debating the best way to achieve their long-term goal of retaking the mainland from the Communists.
by Joseph Brewda
A new look at the Western banking apparatus which relies for its survival on the world’s biggest opium producer—the P.R.C.
by Konstantin George
With the outbreak of the biggest Hungarian crisis since 1956, the temptation is high in Moscow for a military adventure.
by Claudio Celani
From a conference and concert in Venice, progress in the campaign for a tuning fork based on natural law.
by Carlos Wesley
The U.S. is now so desperate to crush Noriega, it’s asking Moscow for help.
Documentation: Statements to the recent meeting of 150 Ibero-American legislators, from Panama’s legislature, President, foreign minister, planning minister, and the head of the U.S.-Panama Combined Commission for Military Security of the Panama Canal.
by Antonio Gaspari
by Mark Burdman
The 100th anniversary meeting of the Socialist International in Stockholm.
by Lydia Cherry
by Nicholas F. Benton and Nancy Spannaus
Although its flag-burning decision got the most attention, the court committed far worse crimes against the Constitution.
by Herbert Quinde
The CIA has been collaborating with the Beijing regime on covert operations, including Afghanistan, Kampuchea, Africa, and Central America. No wonder they were caught flat-footed in their evaluations of the P.R.C.
by Nicholas F. Benton
Soviets Seek Press Censorship Treaty.
by William Jones
In last week’s issue the “IMF” and “EIR” labels were inadvertently switched on the two curves in Figure 14 on page 38 of the feature on Argentina’s economy; EIR’s alternative is for much lower interest payments through the year 2000. In the article on page 50 titled “Palme murder trial serves political aims,” the correct spelling of the defendant’s name is Christer Pettersson, while on the following page, Palme’s widow spoke of an “insane deed by a psychopath,” not an “insane murder.”