The Economist (US) back issues from September 1995:
Force majeure.(NATO air raids on Serbian positions in Bosnia; failed assassination attempt of Edward Shevardnadze in Tbilisi, Georgia; Finance Minister Alain Madelin resigns in France)(Politics and Current Affairs)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
On the block.(Governor Pete Wilson announces his presidential candidacy; murder retrial of Erik and Lyle Menendez; Senator Bob Packwood asks for public hearings on his misconduct investigation)(Politics and Current Affairs)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Regress and progress.(the prime minister and three other Hutu ministers are removed from office in Rwanda; Southern African Development Community is planned, with hopes of a free-trade zone)(Politics and Current Affairs)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Beijing's foreigners.(the United Nations World Conference on Women gets underway in Beijing, China; Foreign Minister Yohei Kono will resign as president of Japan's Liberal Party)(Politics and Current Affairs)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
House of cards.(Japanese credit union Kizu collapses; includes other world business news)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Splicing and splitting.(Time Warner Inc. negotiates to buy 81.6% of Turner Broadcasting; includes other international business news)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Stubborn Volk.(Volkswagen laborers hold warning strikes in Germany; includes other international business news)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
NATO gets tough.(air strikes on Bosnia Herzegovina)(Editorial)(Cover Story)
Sep 02, 1995
Big, boring and dangerous.(American banking industry)(Editorial)
Sep 02, 1995
Whither the dearer lira?(Italian lira's membership in the exchange-rate mechanism)(Editorial)
Sep 02, 1995
A mad way to run a policy.(British mental health services policy)(Editorial)
Sep 02, 1995
The ties that grind.(casual clothing invades City of London, the city's business district, London, UK)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Attack of the killer blockheads.(planned budget cuts in Medicaid and welfare)(American Survey)
Sep 02, 1995
That N-word and its echoes: the Simpson trial.(O.J. Simpson murder trial)(American Survey)
Sep 02, 1995
Stink, Inc: pig-farming.(American Survey)
Sep 02, 1995
The brown lagoon.(rapidly-growing pig-farming industry in North Carolina)(American Survey)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Double jeopardy? Sex offenders.(a ruling that the Washington State practice of sending sex offenders to a treatment center after their release from jail constitutes two prison terms for the same crime)(American Survey)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Have water, will grow: Phoenix. (controversy over development in Phoenix, Arizona)
Sep 02, 1995
The arms race: guns in Virginia. (a new law that allows state residents to carry concealed weapons has spurred thousands to apply for the permits)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
The cost of a vote. (a study by economist Steven Levitt on political pork-barrel projects determined that the average vote costs about $14,000)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Fact and fiction. (Japanese politics)
Sep 02, 1995
The prospects for T-day: China and Taiwan. (possible military aggression against Taiwan)
Sep 02, 1995
A broad agenda: China. (China moved the location of the United Nations' Fourth Conference on Women from Beijing to Huairou to avoid chaos)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Punjab blows up again. (the assassination of Punjab minister Beant Singh on Aug 31, 1995, could be a sign that terrorism is on the rise in the Indian state)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Political party: Tibet. (festivities celebrating the 30th anniversary of Tibet)
Sep 02, 1995
Manoeuvres: Thailand. (another coup may be in the offering as the military becomes restless over high food cost under the Chart Thai party)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Stop the clock: Cambodia. (Marshall Perry, an American wants to turn Cambodia into a world national park)
Sep 02, 1995
Malaysia's edifice complex. (under Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, the country has built giant skyscrapers, dams, highways and an airport, with a new capital city planned by 2000)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Southern Africa dreams of unity. (Southern African Development Community of 12 nations)
Sep 02, 1995
Pinprick diplomacy: Israelis and Palestinians.
Sep 02, 1995
And now? Rwanda. (plight of the refugees in Zaire and power struggles at home)
Sep 02, 1995
Divorced today, lovers tomorrow? Canada. (Quebec referendum on sovereignty)
Sep 02, 1995
Centre and states: Mexico.(governors' scandals)
Sep 02, 1995
Still defiant: Colombia. (Pres. Ernesto Samper and the drug-money scandal)
Sep 02, 1995
A taste of Venezuela's past. (cacao industry)
Sep 02, 1995
NATO declares war on the Bosnian Serbs. (air strikes)
Sep 02, 1995
Reform on hold: France. (Finance Minister Alain Madelin fired)
Sep 02, 1995
Groping ahead: Russian law. (legal reform)
Sep 02, 1995
Grass and the drum of discord. (writer Gunter Grass, a critic of German reunification, publishes novel 'Ein Weites Feld')(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Reformers anonymous: Ukraine. (economic reforms)
Sep 02, 1995
If only trees could vote.(Denmark proposes central ecological planning)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
A heartbeat from anarchy.(some Georgians blame Russia for attempted assassination of Georgian leader Edward Shevardnadze)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Club Med: Europe and the Maghreb.(European Union develops Euro-Med strategy)
Sep 02, 1995
From Bedlam to bedsit.(problems in mental health care in the United Kingdom)
Sep 02, 1995
Stalemate.(peace process stalls in Northern Ireland)
Sep 02, 1995
More puff, less smoke.(building dedicated bicycle paths in the United Kingdom could cut pollution and traffic congestion)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Sir James's British crusade.(James Goldsmith finances Referendum Party to force a vote on European union in the United Kingdom)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
The other Michael Forsyth.(United Kingdom secretary of state for Scotland)(Bagehot)(Column)
Sep 02, 1995
Slugs or caterpillars?(European defense and heavy-engineering firms prefer alliances to mergers)
Sep 02, 1995
The mergers that never came.(European automakers cooperate but do not merge)
Sep 02, 1995
Vanity, insanity and fear.(Time-Warner Ted Turner and Barry Diller attempt to build media giants in opposite ways)
Sep 02, 1995
News of the world.(marketability of international TV news broadcasting)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
All aboard: privatisation in Canada.
Sep 02, 1995
The new El Dorado: South American mining.
Sep 02, 1995
Cottoning on.(Mercosur trade pact leads to growth of Paraguay's textile industry)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Muck and morals: raw materials.(Basle Convention against export of hazardous waste now attacked by poor countries)
Sep 02, 1995
Britain's boring new bosses. (chief executives)(Column)
Sep 02, 1995
Finding the right chemistry. (US banks)
Sep 02, 1995
Clearing up the mess: banks in trouble.
Sep 02, 1995
And then there were 2,500. (Russian bank failures should help speed needed consolidation in the industry there)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Testing Europe's economic motor: the German economy.
Sep 02, 1995
A letter to Warren Buffett. (Berkshire Hathaway chairman)
Sep 02, 1995
Sell before September. (University Of Pennsylvania report indicates that September has been a bad month for the stock market in 63 of the 104 years since 1890 worldwide)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995
Twins at the top: reinsurance. (Munich Reinsurance Co, Swiss Reinsurance Co)
Sep 02, 1995
California quakin'.(state legislature and insurance commissioner propose new earthquake insurance pool)(Brief Article)
Sep 02, 1995