by Andrew Rotstein
A forest ecologist and lumber company executive from Union City, Georgia, debunks the Wilderness Society’s campaign to ruin the nation’s forests.
by William Jones
Lebanon’s Ambassador to the United States says that the U.S. refusal to back his country against drug-pushing Syrian regime is handing the initiative to the Soviet Union.
by Rainer Apel
Can the Angry Russian Bear Be Tamed?
by Maria Cristina Fiocchi
A New Christian Humanism.
by Mark Sonnenblick
Will Peru Continue Its War on Drugs?
Kissinger and friends must be stopped.
by Donald Phau
Why Knock Rock? by Dan Peters and Steve Peters and The Devil’s Disciples, The Truth About Rock, by Jeff Godwin.
by David Shavin
The Secret Power of Music, by David Tame.
Jean Cocteau et Anna de Noailles: Correspondance 1911-1931 and Journal 1942-1945, by Jean Cocteau.
by Nora Hamerman
Picasso: Creator and Destroyer, by Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington.
by Odile Monjon
Maurice Ravel: Lettres, écrits, entretiens, compiled and annotated by Arbie Orenstein.
by Christopher White
Over $1 trillion worth of indebtedness is tied up in the financing put together especially over the period since 1986, to pay for leveraged buyouts.
by Rubén Cota
A study issued by Mexico’s Planning and Budget Department says 42 million Mexicans cannot meet minimal food requirements, thanks to President Salinas’s destruction of his country on behalf of the IMF.
by Ramtanu Maitra
Beijing’s optimistic harvest figures may be nothing more than a publicity stunt.
by Marcia Merry
Buffalo Instead of People?
by William Engdahl
IMF “Structural Adjustment” = Disaster.
by Marsha Freeman
Humanity’s first “grand tour” of the Solar System ended with Voyager 2’s triumphant fly-by of Neptune, a planet whose turbulent weather system seems out of keeping with its vast distance from the Sun. Marsha Freeman describes the remarkable spacecraft and the painstaking scientific work which guided it on its 4.4 billion-mile journey, and reviews some of the mountains of data which it has sent back to us.
Magellan is already on its way to Venus, and Galileo is being readied for its flight to Jupiter.
by Göran Haglund
The Soviet Union, through its disinformation chief Boris Pankin, is imperiously demanding that the Swedish government cover up new evidence that it was Gorbachov who ordered the assassination of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme.
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Konstantin George
by Birgitt Vitt and Gabriele Liebig
by Thierry Lalevée
by Valerie Rush
Unless there is real international support, Colombia will fall.
by Carlos Wesley
by Linda de Hoyos
by Jeffrey Steinberg
Mistakes of omission: The Administration should break with two of the world’s biggest drug dealers, Kissinger’s friends Hafez al-Assad and Communist China.
From the right to the left ends of the political spectrum, the rationale is the same—the lie that the war on drugs, which has yet to be fought, “failed.”
by Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
by Andrew Rotstein
by Nicholas F. Benton
Quayle Defends Curtailed SDI.
by Scott Thompson
In this third installment of a series on the whiskey dynasty, Scott Thompson explores how Edgar Bronfman has exploited Jewish concerns on behalf of Moscow.
by William Jones
In the centerfold strategic map in last week's issue (No. 36), no doubt the geographically astute reader noted that the number 17 for Communist China was misplaced, to point to the eastern U.S.S.R. In the Feature. Table 1 had several errors. A corrected version of the table and the relevant portion of the text, will appear in our next issue. We apologize for any confusion that may have resulted.