Article

Micheal Locker
The base of power for U.S. domination overseas lies so close to our lives that we can't even see it, let alone attack it effectively.
Lois Reivich
Edwin Lieuwen, The United States and the Challenge to Security in Latin America, The Social Science Program of the Mershon Center for Education in National Security, Ohio State University Press, April, 1966, 9 8 pp, $1.50.
Edie Black
The apologists for the Alliance for Progress herald the Latin American Common Market proposed at Punta del Este last April as the major instrument of "development" in Latin America (see especially Lincoln Gordon's article in Foreign Affairs, July 1967). For these government spokesmen and social scientists, "development" is tantamount to the establishment of a diversified industrial base and increased pro- ductivity.
Lois Reivich
Bolivia has been called "the beggar on a throne of gold." While rich in natural resources, it is the poorest nation in South America.
Fred Goff and Michael Locker
The paper asserts and attempts to demonstrate that the base of Dominican power rests on economic, political, military and social structures within the United States, not the Dominican Republic.
Enno Hobbing
In recent years private enterprise in Latin America has shown that it knows the uses of adversity. In response to the challenges of Castroism, Communism, and jingoism, it has become more sophisticated, more socially responsible, and substantially stronger than before.
Laraine Fletcher
The United Fruit Company's white power policy is currently under investigation by the Equal Opportunity Commission (EEOC). This action was precipitated by the complaints of a black U.S. citizen