by Andrew Rotstein
The leader of a delegation of Ohio unionists and businessmen who traveled to the nation’s capital to lobby against the Clean Air Bill.
by Margaret Sexton
Desert Solitaire, and Hayduke Lives! by the late Edward Abbey.
by John Grauerholz, M.D.
AIDS Continues To Spread.
by Rainer Apel
East Germany Enters a New Era.
by Francisco Roncalli
CIA’s Ties to Drug Runners Exposed.
by José Restrepo
Narcos’ Demands Terrorize Colombia.
by Carlos Wesley
Holocaust Still Active Issue in U.S.
by Lorenzo Carrasco Bazúa
An Amazon Trusteeship.
Who Needs Henry?
by John Hoefle
The U.S. government’s second attempt to sell 40-year “bailout bonds” flopped just as badly as the first.
by Konstantin George
by William Jones
by William Jones
by Ronald Kokinda
by Ramtanu Maitra
by Anthony K. Wikrent
by Anthony K. Wikrent
A Growing Economy?
by Marcia Merry
This bill, which if passed would shut down what’s left of U.S. industry, comes not from the American grassroots, but from the Kremlin, whose greatest fear is a U.S. economic recovery.
by Marsha Freeman
by Anthony K. Wikrent and Carol White
by Andrew Rotstein
Interview with Roger J. D’Anniballe, leader of a delegation of Ohio businessmen and trade unionists who came to Washington to lobby against the bill.
by Peter Rush
Liberal porn-writer Mario Vargas Liosa, once thought a shoo-in as Peru’s next President, was rejected in droves in favor of Alberto Fujimori, a pro-technology agricultural engineer.
by Gilles Gervais
by Mary McCourt Burdman
by Susan Maitra
by Linda de Hoyos
by Linda de Hoyos
Part I of a formal petition submitted to the UN Human Rights Commission, seeking UN action against the political and judicial witchhunt against Lyndon LaRouche and his political movement.
by Alejandro Peña Esclusa
by Silvia Palacios
by Kathleen Klenetsky
Just as Hitler kept canceling his deals with Neville Chamberlain, so now Gorbachov’s foreign minister has told George Bush that “the deal’s off” on arms control. How low will the President stoop in order to have his spring summit?
by Leo F. Scanlon
by Herbert Quinde
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Myra Collirio
Media Credit Gorby for Eastern Europe.
In the March 30 issue, the book review on p. 16, “India braces for new Dope, Inc. assault,” misspelled the name of the author of The Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Laws of India several times. The correct name is B.V. Kumar and he is not a “new member” at the Central Board of Excise and Customs in the Finance Minister, but rather “now Member and formerly Director General of Revenue Intelligence.” We apologize to Mr. Kumar and our readers for this extreme lapse in attention by our proofreading staff. In the April 13 issue, p. 13. Figure 2 had an incorrect headline, due to a production error. It should have been titled, “U.S. raw steel production capacity.”