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Chemistry World January 8, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
US--Cuba accord expected to be boon for science The new year has brought a new era in US -- Cuba relations that is ripe for scientific cooperation between the two countries, after President Obama announced an easing of restrictions on 17 December. |
Wired June 22, 2009 Clive Thompson |
Clive Thompson on Cuba's Potential Tech Boom In sheer human potential, Cuba is an economic and technological miracle waiting to happen. |
BusinessWeek February 29, 2008 Geri Smith |
When Will Cuba Be Open for Business? It's unclear whether a new U.S. President would lift the 45-year trade embargo, but public opinion favors improved relations between the countries. |
BusinessWeek August 14, 2006 Frederik Balfour |
Cuba: Visit To An Island Frozen In Time One reporter finds scant evidence that Cuba is poised for change after Castro. |
Reason February 2002 Sam MacDonald |
Cuban Confusion How well has the decades-old U.S. embargo of Cuba worked? The official story is that the 39-year-old time-out imposed on our island neighbor to the south of Florida has successfully isolated Fidel Castro and friends from the rest of the world. Cuban officials are all too happy to agree... |
Salon.com October 10, 2001 David Lipschultz |
Havana online In Cuba, black market Internet access makes it easier for prostitutes to get connected than doctors... |
Reason May 2009 Katherine Mangu-Ward |
Connecticut vs. Cuba The Cuban government took a surprising step forward regarding taxis, loosening the strict rules, even going so far as to let taxis set their own rates, while Connecticut taxi drivers aren't as lucky. |
Salon.com February 6, 2002 Damien Cave |
Tourism apartheid in Cuba Many of the island nation's most beautiful areas are off limits to its citizens. Will Fidel's tourist policy be his undoing? |
BusinessWeek June 13, 2005 Catherine Arnst |
Biotech, Finally The past 30 years of biological discoveries, insights into the human genome, and exotic chemical manipulation have unleashed a wave of biological drugs, many of them reengineered human proteins. |
Reason June 2002 Matt Welch |
Foul Ball How a communist dictatorship and a U.S. embargo has silenced a revered Cuban baseball historian... |
Inc. October 2003 Anton Piech |
Small Biz Barges into Cuba Get this: Fidel Castro hates dissent, yet he appears to like American entrepreneurs. |
Reason May 2008 Brian Doherty |
Artifact: Castro Shrugged The Bush administration's reluctance to change its ill-conceived embargo against Cuba, even post-Fidel, shows that Castro isn't alone in misunderstanding "the essence of this new world" or the role of relatively unrestricted international trade in spreading wealth and liberty. |
InternetNews April 14, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
U.S. Promotes Telecom Expansion Into Cuba New policies aiming to spur Cuban-American communications could be a boon for U.S. telecom providers. |
Reason August 2003 Damien Cave |
Havana Hustle Cuba's New Socialist Man learns to wheel and deal |
The Motley Fool September 14, 2010 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
6 Stock Ideas for a Free Cuba Herzfeld Caribbean Basin Fund is a wild and crazy closed-end fund that may be ready for another run, due to loosening restrictions of Cuba's private sector. |
Reason March 2007 Glenn Garvin |
Fidel's Favorite Propagandist How a New York Times reporter's passion for Castro led him astray. Book Review: The Man Who Invented Fidel: Cuba, Castro, and Herbert L. Matthews of The New York Times, by Anthony DePalma. |
Inc. April 1, 2003 Norm Brodsky |
Viva La Revolucion! Cuba may have a new revolution -- an entrepreneurial one. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 3, 2007 Jill Wechsler |
Washington Report: Vaccines for Everyone New vaccines can be good business and a huge boon to public health. But the challenge is to establish prices that ensure global access, and to bring necessary medications to third-world countries. |
Home Theater April 3, 2008 Mark Fleischmann |
Semi-Liberated Cubans Buy Electronic Goods The new government in Cuba will allow the purchase of electronic goods such as TVs, DVDs and computers, but prices are aimed at the wealthy population. |
Inc. May 2007 Sarah Goldstein |
Perestroika Continues Will Cuba, post-Fidel, be ready for U.S. trade? |
Chemistry World August 18, 2015 Rebecca Trager |
Cuban and US chemists hopeful amid warming relations Tensions between the US and Cuba have begun to thaw after 50 years. Scientists now have new opportunities to collaborate |
Smithsonian August 2007 Jorge & Diana Rodriguez |
Book Excerpt: "On Cuban Wings" The rise and fall of Cuban aviation, as explored in "The Country Where Nobody Flies," is one of the most dramatic in the Americas. |
Salon.com January 25, 2001 Carina Chocano |
The people's Cuba Thierry Le Goues' new collection of photos, "Popular," reveals Castro's lush and decaying secret... |
Entrepreneur November 2006 Kristin Ohlson |
Connect with Cuba The embargo is still in place, but it's not too early to dream. |
Salon.com June 28, 2000 Max J. Castro |
After Hurricane Elian Miami is a city asunder, divided by race, but the Cuban exiles' stranglehold on local and national power has unmistakably eased. |
The Motley Fool May 2, 2008 Todd Wenning |
A Rice Cartel? The week in world stock market news. |
The Motley Fool November 11, 2004 Marko Djuranovic |
Take a Shot on CancerVax? The company still isn't profitable, but big gains may be on the horizon for this biotech. |
Reason September 2005 Matt Welch |
Quien es Libre? The U.S. government tightens its Cuban embargo policy by restricting fringe religion-related travel there. |
Reason April 2008 Michael C. Moynihan |
Shoot Down Over Cuba A bold documentary takes Castro to task for senseless murders. |
Military History Charles W. Sasser |
Invasion Abandoned As the Cuban T-33 jet strafed the insurgents on the beach, a U.S. carrier plane closed to shoot it down. "Don't fire! Don't fire!" cried the carrier's air controller. "Rules of engagement have been changed." |
Reason April 2008 Kerry Howley |
Cigar Bar The Government Accountability Office (GAO) says the effort going into policing Cuban cigars might be reducing the security of the homeland. |
Teacher Magazine August 2000 Jennifer Pricola |
Rolando's Return While the rest of the world debated the fate of Elian Gonzalez in late June, students at St. Paul's Academy in St. Paul, Minnesota, wondered whether a less famous native Cuban would be allowed back on the island---their Spanish teacher, Rolando Castellanos. |
Pharmaceutical Executive June 1, 2005 Seth Berkley |
Backpage: Partnering for Vaccine Victories Public-private partnerships can help engage industry in AIDS vaccine research. Pharma and biotechnology companies should respond with the expertise that only they can offer. |
The Motley Fool July 7, 2004 Brian Gorman |
Crude Near Cuba How will Repsol's findings affect energy reserves, U.S. policies, and the Cuban populace? |
The Motley Fool September 25, 2007 Brian Orelli |
Cold HIV Vaccine Gets Frozen Phase 2 clinical trials of Merck's HIV vaccine were frozen, leaving the door open for other drugmakers that have vaccines of their own in early trials. Investors, take note. |
Sports Central April 24, 2012 Diane M. Grassi |
MLB's Desire For Cuban Players Overshadowed One can only hope that one day MLB will not solely rely upon the almighty dollar to feel right about its decisions, but also will do right, on behalf of not only American baseball community, but for the Latin American community, rather than just bleeding its talent dry. |
The Motley Fool December 12, 2011 David Lee Smith |
Oil Operations Close to Florida's Coast Spanish oil company Repsol will soon drill far closer to Florida than would be permitted of U.S. companies. |