The Economist (US) back issues from November 1994:
Slicing the cake. (economic inequalities) (Editorial) (Cover Story)
Nov 05, 1994
Let the cameras roll: televising the O.J. Simpson trial will do more good than harm. (Editorial)
Nov 05, 1994
Reach for the open sky: how to persuade airlines to put up their wings and surrender the world's biggest cartel to freer market forces. (Editorial)
Nov 05, 1994
Israel's settler block: to save the peace with the Palestinians, and win peace with Syria, Mr. Rabin will have to dismantle some Israeli settlements. (peace accord with the Palestine Liberation Organization) (Editorial)
Nov 05, 1994
The intermediary's lot: will be ever less happy as the world's financial markets come together. (Editorial)
Nov 05, 1994
An agenda for accession: integrating Eastern Europe is the European Union's biggest challenge. It is time it set about the task. (Editorial)
Nov 05, 1994
For richer, for poorer. (Inequality) (Cover Story)
Nov 05, 1994
Vietnam beats China at its own game: Asia. (moves toward free enterprise in Vietnam)
Nov 05, 1994
Ordinary deaths: China. (mistreatment of Chinese workers in joint venture companies)
Nov 05, 1994
An Asian snail: Laos. (economic development slow in Laos)
Nov 05, 1994
Missing in Laos. (search of 1969 crash site for U.S. soldiers missing in action)
Nov 05, 1994
Snapping them up. (development of crocodile farming in Thailand)
Nov 05, 1994
Silvio Shinawatra: Thailand. (Thai foreign minister Thakson Shinawatra)
Nov 05, 1994
The poor get richer: India. (consumption boom in India)
Nov 05, 1994
Latin America? Where's that? (U.S. relations with Latin America)
Nov 05, 1994
Less welcome: Canada. (Canada cuts 1995 immigration by 40,000)
Nov 05, 1994
For sale: South Africa. (privatization plans)
Nov 05, 1994
Whose elephants are they anyway? (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species to meet Nov 7, 1994)
Nov 05, 1994
One cheer: Mozambique. (President Joachim Chissano wins re-election in first multi-party election)
Nov 05, 1994
Violence: Algeria. (war between security and guerrilla factions)
Nov 05, 1994
A disease of society: crime, law and disorder in Brazil.
Nov 05, 1994
Santer cracks the whip. (European Union's president-designate Jacques Santer)
Nov 05, 1994
Matching up to the market. (market economies in East European countries)
Nov 05, 1994
A turning tide: Bosnia.
Nov 05, 1994
Treaty-tinkering: weapons in Europe.
Nov 05, 1994
Next in line? (Russian Duma Chairman Ivan Rybkin is considered the second most powerful politician in Russia, and may become the next president)
Nov 05, 1994
The sour taste of gravy. (laws governing political corruption and financial disclosure)
Nov 05, 1994
Redistribution to the rich. (UK's national lottery)
Nov 05, 1994
State sale: the Post Office. (privatization plans scrapped)
Nov 05, 1994
Waiting for a rise: interest rates.
Nov 05, 1994
Eat your heart out: food and health. (UK Committee on the Medical Aspects of Food Policy report opposed by snack food industry)
Nov 05, 1994
On life support. (private hospital in Clydeside, Scotland, failing financially)
Nov 05, 1994
Giving arms a hand: export credits. (UK government subsidies of defense companies)
Nov 05, 1994
That dam affair returns. (Malaysian dam financed by UK)
Nov 05, 1994
From villain to martyr. ('Guardian' editor Peter Preston facing misconduct charges by UK House of Commons)
Nov 05, 1994
Come fly the unfriendly skies. (price wars between airlines)
Nov 05, 1994
Stirring the porridge. (Quaker Oats' proposed acquisition of Snapple Beverage)
Nov 05, 1994
eoul's big splash: South Korean industry. (economic growth)
Nov 05, 1994
Pssst! Want to buy a country? (valuation of Russian companies)
Nov 05, 1994
The gain in Spain falls mainly in parts. (world's most efficient car parts industry)
Nov 05, 1994
The long march back to China: communications satellites. (export opportunities for the U.S.)
Nov 05, 1994
A shattering experience. (trade talks fail to open Japan's flat glass market)
Nov 05, 1994
A shiny future: Brazilian steel.
Nov 05, 1994
Dead reckoning. (high cost of maintaining a cemetery site in Tokyo, Japan)
Nov 05, 1994
Hammer defends re-engineering. (management expert Michael Hammer)
Nov 05, 1994
A new broom for Europe's capital markets. (single European securities market)
Nov 05, 1994
Flattened, sort of. (European financial market playing field to be leveled by capital asset requirements in the European Union Capital Adequacy Directive)
Nov 05, 1994
At Cuccia's bidding: Italian banking. (bank reform; Mediobanca chairman Enrico Cuccia)
Nov 05, 1994
More murk in Moscow. (MMM pyramid scheme investigation does not harm political ambitions of chairman Sergei Mavrodi)
Nov 05, 1994
Closed shop: Hong Kong's stock exchange. (a group of local stock trading houses still controls the elections for the Hong Kong Exchange Council)
Nov 05, 1994
Taking a hard line: soft commissions. (gifts from brokers to clients)
Nov 05, 1994
Spread'em. (Justice Dept investigates accusations of collusion by NASDAQ dealers on bid-offer quotations)
Nov 05, 1994
A capital competition. (global capital distribution) (Column)
Nov 05, 1994
A problem as big as a planet. (global-change science)
Nov 05, 1994
Song without end. (older opera singers)
Nov 05, 1994
Tate's tourists: art by the sea. (Tate Gallery, St. Ives, England, exhibits works made by local people or artists who visited the small Cornwall town)
Nov 05, 1994
America the dark: photography. (Robert Frank, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)
Nov 05, 1994
The Moral Animal: Why We Are the Way We Are.
Nov 05, 1994
Last Train to Memphis.(Brief Article)
Nov 05, 1994
Burying Mao.(Brief Article)
Nov 05, 1994
Deng Xiaoping and the Chinese Revolution.(Brief Article)
Nov 05, 1994
Another ballgame. (the status of professional basketball)
Nov 05, 1994
Disgruntleds have it. (November 1994 election)(American Survey)
Nov 05, 1994
The weirdest year. (1994 elections)
Nov 05, 1994
God, gays and guns: the Oklahoma Senate race. (American Survey)
Nov 05, 1994