by Warren J. Hamerman
Ghana’s ambassador to the United Nations, who is also chairman of the Group of 77 developing nations, speaks eloquently of the Third World’s demand for justice and economic progress, not an imperial “new world order.”
by Nora Hamerman
G. W. Leibniz’s Monadology: An Edition for Students, by Nicholas Rescher.
by Silvia Palacios and Lorenzo Carrasco
Institutional Chaos Looms.
by Carlos Cota Meza
Another Face of the Mexican “Miracle.”
by Lydia Cherry
ADL-Tied Pornographers Under Fire.
by Ramtanu Maitra and Susan Maitra
Clash of Views at Commonwealth Meet.
Can Civilization Be Saved?
by Ralf Schauerhammer
Europe’s new political unity must be consolidated with the first new form of ground transportation since the invention of the wheel.
by Robert D. Allen
European banking sources tell EIR that they have “reason to believe” that Citicorp has been operating under de facto government receivership since this past summer.
by Warren J. Hamerman
An interview with Dr. Kofi Nyidevu Awoonor.
by Marsha Freeman
A report from the International Conference on Coal Research.
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Nancy B. Spannaus
by Birgitt Vitt
by Suzanne Rose
France, Germany Sell Out on GATT.
by Umberto Pascali
Analyzes the criminal folly of the refusal of the United States and other western powers to back Croatia’s drive for independence—and for survival against the aggression of “Greater Serbia.”
by Maurizio Blondet
A report from the Milan daily Avvenire.
Croatian Information Minister Branko Salaj spoke to EIR’s correspondents in Frankfurt, Germany.
by Srecko Felix Korpar
A commentary by a journalist living in political exile in the United States.
by Leonardo Servadio
by Gretchen Small and Luis Ernesto Vásquez
The international bankers have never forgiven Peru’s former President for two decisions he made in 1985: first, to limit payments on the foreign debt; and second, to destroy the narcotics laboratories in Peru’s jungles.
by Valerie Rush
by Joseph Brewda
by Mary McCourt Burdman
by Cynthia R. Rush
by Susan Maitra and Ramtanu Maitra
by Carlos Wesley
by Mel Klenetsky
Bush is running into trouble as the economy slides downhill, but the announced Democratic candidates, with the exception of political maverick Lyndon H. LaRouche, represent some combination of Bush’s austerity policies and Jimmy Carter’s anti-industrial, malthusian programs.
by Marianna Wertz
by Harley Schlanger
by Steve Komm
by William Jones