Article

Paul Silberstein
Anderson, Clayton and Company, though the world's largest trader of cotton and other agri- cultural commodities, is little known to anyone outside the pages of the financial press. Despite its anonymity, the decisions made by this Houston- based corporation have greatly affected cotton farming in both the United States and Latin Ameri- ca.
Chris Peterson
The Revolution That Never Was: Northeast Brazil, 1955-1964. Joseph A.
Marsha Miliman
In contrast to its position prior to World War II as a major world exporter of raw materials, the United States presently depends on imports for almost half of its raw material needs. The dependence is almost complete for minerals that are strategic to the sophisticated military and space industries, such as tin, nickel, asbestos, manganese and tungsten.
Israel Yost
The massive flow of "development" aid into Brazil in recent years is not simply a phenomenon appropriate to its size. It is rather a measure of the unqualified support given the military regime by the United States and the U.