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The Economist (US) articles from March 1991

86,464 total articles

The Economist is a weekly newsmagazine covering business and world events. The Economist includes feature articles on domestic and international issues, business, finance, current affairs, science, and technology, in addition to editorials and analyses focusing on industries, markets, and countries.

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<a href="http://www.highbeam.com/The+Economist+(US)/publications.aspx?date=199103" title="Articles and back issues from The Economist (US)">The Economist (US) articles</a>

The Economist (US) back issues from March 1991:

Veni, vidi, vici. (Persian Gulf War victory for allied forces) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

A newcomer on the catwalk. (Goldman Sachs' international capital-asset pricing model)

Mar 02, 1991

Caught out in the Gulf: Pakistan. (pro-Saddam Hussein stance of the people puts government in a quandary)

Mar 02, 1991

Not all Democrats got it wrong. (Democratic Party reaction to the Persian Gulf War) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

A little bit of luck. (China's new relations with European countries)

Mar 02, 1991

At odds, again. (British industrialists, Labour Party and Tories)

Mar 02, 1991

Passport to prosperity: America, it is said, has the best business schools, Japan the best businesses. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991;

What the tanks think. (think tanks plan strategies for peace in the Middle East) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Japan's medicine men take aim. (Japanese pharmaceutical firms plans to go international)

Mar 02, 1991

Change, then change again: as markets change, so must managers. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

A particular way of seeing things. (synchrotron radiation creates powerful x-rays)

Mar 02, 1991

Illegal, but wanted, in Taiwan. (Chinese and non-Chinese illegal workers in Taiwan are needed)

Mar 02, 1991

Reshuffling the pack: research may be necessary, it isn't sufficient. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Votes, wars, coups, dictators - and votes again? (politics in Africa)

Mar 02, 1991

Poachers' pause. (moratorium on elephant killing in parts of Africa)

Mar 02, 1991

Wider horizons: analytical skills are not enough. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Mystifying headaches. (controversy of Imigran as migraine treatment)

Mar 02, 1991

Welcome home. (how the yellow ribbon became the symbol of returning home) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Tonics without quinine. (Dr. Manuel Patarroyo's malaria vaccine)

Mar 02, 1991

Export and die. (Colombia's cocaine trade and the government)

Mar 02, 1991

Older, wiser: executives need educating, too. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

A History of the Arab Peoples.

Mar 02, 1991

Scoundrel's refuge. (Persian Gulf war spawns fraud schemes) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

The Wallenbergs: the empire strikes back. (Wallenberg group of Sweden investment activity)

Mar 02, 1991

Consequences: A Personal and Political Memoir.

Mar 02, 1991

Now, the peace. (Persian Gulf War) (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Where East meets West: making managers the Japanese way. (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Not so sweetcorn. (trade with the United States may depress Mexico's own farm industry)

Mar 02, 1991

History of the Comic Strip.

Mar 02, 1991

Romancing Vietnam.

Mar 02, 1991

And now, togetherness: Should a marriage be arranged. (Japanese business schools) (Management Education Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Welcome to the seething south. (break-up of the Soviet European empire)

Mar 02, 1991

Make friends, not war. (Greece and Turkey)

Mar 02, 1991

State spending battles on public sector bad, private sector good was the credo of the 1980s as governments tried, often unsuccessfully, to trim public spending. In the 1990s their task will be harder still. (Economics Focus)

Mar 02, 1991

That old runaround at the National Gallery: looking for Michelangelo (redecoration at the Gallery)

Mar 02, 1991

Sloping off. (television program, 'Twin Peaks')

Mar 02, 1991

Sell by 1992: subsidising state-owned firms is incompatible with Europe's internal market. (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Please try again: British Telecom still has 97% of Britain's telephone market; for new competitors to flourish, the company should be broken up. (British Telecommunications PLC)

Mar 02, 1991

Race in Thrace. (Greek government wants to settle non-Muslims in Muslim Rodopi province)

Mar 02, 1991

How the Treasury won the war. (Britain and the cost of the Persian Gulf war)

Mar 02, 1991

Employee loyalty in service firms: have a nice day.

Mar 02, 1991

Too late for tactics. (political changes in Albania)

Mar 02, 1991

Rival or partner? the tests for Russia in the post-war Middle East. (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Good intentions. (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade negotiations) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

A new range of old products: Labour's fresh advocacy of an interventionist role for government should put paid to too much talk of a new consensus mood at Westminster.

Mar 02, 1991

Boxing on. (politics among Yugoslavia's republics; includes a related article on Croatia's Martin Spegelj)

Mar 02, 1991

Slow train. (North Carolina supports programs to retrain low-skill workers for high-skill positions) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Looking for profits, not kudos. (Wellcome PLC)

Mar 02, 1991

The ivory paradox: killing the trade in tusks could wipe out the elephant, too. (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

A terrible truth unfolds: the Birmingham Six case may be one of the century's great miscarriages of justice; the appeal next week could traumatise the judicial system. (British 1974 terrorist case)

Mar 02, 1991

Divided they fight. (tribal animosities within Soviet Georgia)

Mar 02, 1991

I can do anything.... (educational reformer Jeffrey Howard works to improve motivation of inner city Black children) (American Survey)

Mar 02, 1991

Paddy's office carpet. (Paddy Ashdown, Leader of Britain's Liberal Democrats) (column)

Mar 02, 1991

Selling safer cars: surviving the crash. (Chrysler Corp. airbags to protect drivers in the event of an accident)

Mar 02, 1991

Thomas Pickering excavates the United Nations. (United States ambassador to the United Nations) (American Survey) (column)

Mar 02, 1991

Is Thailand typical? Coups are not the right way forward for well-run Asian economies. (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Dell Computer: it's in the mail. (computer mail order business)

Mar 02, 1991

Seventeenth time unlucky. (17th military coup in Thailand since 1932) (American Survey) (column)

Mar 02, 1991

Open up: how to empty Britain's over-populated jails. (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Voting for a memory. (Bangladeshi elections)

Mar 02, 1991

Europe's gas industry: flare play: environmentally friendly natural gas ought to be the fuel of the future. But for it to reach its potential in Europe, the gas industry needs to be shaken up.

Mar 02, 1991

Off the hook on trade: the GATT trade talks have been rescued, but without a deadline they could yet die of neglect. (General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) (editorial)

Mar 02, 1991

Walking on eggs. (Japan's financial and military contributions to the Persian Gulf War)

Mar 02, 1991

Soaking the rich, Japanese-style. (move to increase taxation of the wealthy)

Mar 02, 1991

Now it's over. (The Gulf War)

Mar 02, 1991