by Paul Gallagher
Population and Human Resources Development in the Sudan, edited by Omer S. Urtur and William J. House.
by Mark Burdman
Aldous Huxley, Between the Wars: Essays and Letters, edited by David Bradshaw.
by Leo Scanlon
Microchipped: How the Education Establishment Took Us Beyond Big Brother, by Beverly K. Eakman.
by Edward Spannaus
Special Trust, by Robert C. McFarlane.
by Marilia Barbosa
Lula’s Cronies Throw Terror Tantrum.
by Javier Almario
Samper’s Narco-Links Confirmed.
Let’s Start the Digging.
Monetary and market upheavals are not separate from the other eruptions which are racking the British elite these days, undermining the very existence of the institutions on which Britain’s political, as well as financial and global influence has depended.
Documentation: The Impending Fall of the House of Windsor.
by Anthony K. Wikrent
by Mark Burdman
by William Engdahl
Bush owes his early wealth to Texas oil. So, why would he pursue a policy which he knew would bankrupt tens of hundreds of companies in the U.S. independent oil industry?
by Michael Billington
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
Iraq has complied with all UN resolutions (over 20), its weapons production facilities have been shut down and will be monitored, and its economy is on the verge of breakdown. Yet the embargo continues. To grasp the true strategic aim behind the aggression in the Persian Gulf war and the embargo, one must review the history of modern Iraq’s successful attempt to establish a model of industrialization for the developing sector.
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
A report back from the “International Symposium of Non-Governmental Organizations on the Effects of the Embargo against Iraq,” held Sept. 12-14 in Baghdad, and attended by several hundred delegates from 25 nations.
by Carlos Cota Meza
The murder of the secretary general of the ruling PRI party confirms the charges of the Ibero-American Solidarity Movement of a foreign conspiracy to destroy Mexico’s institutions.
by Lydia Cherry
The Clinton Administration is being urged to intervene into Nigeria next, after Haiti. But the would-be “democracy” chief seems cut from the same cloth as Aristide.
by Helga Zepp-LaRouche
by Angelika Beyreuther-Raimondi
Schiller Institute spokesmen from Germany and Russia contribute to a unique conference organized by the Christian Democratic Union of Ecologists in Slovakia and the Slovak Catholic Academy.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
The court’s decision metes out overdue comeuppance not only to the fraudulent “Nazi hunters” in the Department of Justice, but to their power-hungry friends in the Anti-Defamation League as well.
by Gretchen Small
A chronology.
by Robert Ingraham
Anti-immigration hysteria is being used to cover up for the state’s bankruptcy.
One of the linchpins in nasty operations against Lyndon LaRouche and his associates, was questioned in a legal proceeding in Chicago.
by Jeffrey Steinberg
by Leif Johnson
by Carl Osgood