10/14/2002
Paid access archiveFinland Shocked by Deadly Mall Blast
Police probing Finland's worst peacetime bomb attack have found material for making bombs at the home of the only suspect.
Observers Call Pakistan Vote Flawed
A party loyal to Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf emerged on top Saturday in elections that saw shock gains for hard-line Islamists but were dismissed as flawed by European Union observers.
Congress Approves Use of Force
The U.S. Congress gave President George W. Bush the go-ahead on Friday for a possible war with Iraq.
U.S. Dismisses Iraqi Offers as 'Word Games'
The United States dismissed the latest Iraqi offer on weapons inspections as ""word games"" and repeated its call for sustained international pressure on Iraq to disarm.
Carter Wins Nobel Prize for Mideast Peace Efforts
Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for his commitment to diplomacy over war.
Extreme Volatility Has Investors Waiting to Exhale
Investors have been holding their breath for more than 2-1/2 years. Now they're waiting to exhale in the final months of the year and early 2003 -- the traditional time for stocks to rebound.
Japan to Buy $16Bln Worth of Bank Stock
Moving to avert a crisis, the Bank of Japan said Friday it would buy $16 billion worth of stocks from Japanese banks over the next year.
Bush OK'd Enron-Type Deal
When George W. Bush served as a director of an energy company 12 years ago, he approved the creation of an off-balance-sheet partnership similar to those that led to the collapse of Enron Corp.
Publishers Race to Print Books on Conflict Areas
Publishers who hit the jackpot last year with volumes on Afghanistan are now scrambling to rush out books on Iraq amid growing speculation of a U.S.-led war.
Power Failure Leaves Soccer Fans in the Dark
The European 2004 qualifying match between Georgia and Russia was postponed Saturday because of power failure late in the first half.
- France, England Win Key Euro 2004 Qualifiers
- Bush's Texas on the Tigris
- Fishy Gag That Nearly Backfired Very Badly
- A New Breed of Business Masters
- Nearly 200 Killed in Bali Bombing
- Russia Taken Off Financial Blacklist
- Blast Rocks Grozny Police Station, 25 Dead
- Russia May Support New UN Resolution
- Putin Holds Cards Close to Chest
- 20,000 Demand Kuchma's Ouster
- Not All Uniforms Can Be Trusted in St. Pete
- Nearly 1,000 Stripped of Estonian Citizenship
- Census-Takers Take On Dogs, Siberian Protesters and a Goat
- News in Brief
- Bashkir President Tries to Shift Powers
- Fiancees Stuck in U.S. Visa Backlog
- 2 First Ladies Throw a Book Bash
- AvtoVAZ Plans Two-Week Shutdown
- U.S. Fund Eyes $100M High-Tech Investment
- Finance for World's No. 2 Cargo Plane Halted
- Cabinet to Strip Regions of Oil, Gas Influence
- Slavneft Sale a Safe Bet Against Oil Instability
- Kudrin: Eurobond Not Needed Now
- Shares Close Higher on Thin Trade
- Business in Brief
- Grain Exports to Grow 50%
- Oil Majors Close In on Latvian Refinery
- 'S' Account Plan to Cure 1998 Hangover
- Thailand Wants to Swap Rice for Guns
- Nothing Comes Without a Price
- A Sniper and Saddam
- Mr. Bush the Post-Enron Reformer
- Press Review
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