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September 11 Web Archive Collection

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Archived: 10/02/2001 at 20:40:40

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Forbes Global 10.15.01
Warfare's new face
The weapons of capitalism--money and technology--will be as important as guns and bombs.

Sections
Life During Wartime
Companies & Strategies
Private Banking & Business Schools
Capital Markets & Investing
The Adventurer

Departments
Sidelines
Readers Say
Another Look
Fact and Comment, by Steve Forbes
Other Comments
Commentary, by Caspar W. Weinberger



Life During Wartime

Spotting evil
Scott Woolley
New technology can spy on terrorists--and others--in a crowd.

We Hear You
Nicole Ridgway
The supersecret Echelon network listens in on the world's villains.

We See You
Jonathan Fahey
New spy planes track moving targets from above the clouds.

Secret messages
Victoria Murphy
Cheap encryption software makes code nearly impossible to crack.

Toughening Up
Daniel Lyons and William P. Barrett
High-tech scanners and bomb-sniffers can beef up airport security in the U.S.

Terror insurance
Carrie Coolidge
London's lesson: specialized policies will be very expensive.

Total Recall
Tomas Kellner
Recall Corp. scrambled to help New York customers recover precious data.

Economic warfare
Forbes Staff
Terrorism's tangled financial network--and how to shut it down.

Business as usual
Richard C. Morais
Ireland's Michael McLaughlin has learned to live with terrorism--eight times.

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Companies & Strategies

Gone flat
Daniel Fisher
Once the great American growth stock, Coca-Cola has lost its fizz.

The phoenix play
Phyllis Berman
Investing in distressed companies such as NextWave is risky, but can pay off big.

Out of the Blue
Erika Brown
Larry Ellison's toughest rival isn't Bill Gates--it's a former schoolteacher at IBM.

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Private Banking & Business Schools

The El Dorado of Japan
Justin Doebele
Citigroup's private bankers unlock the country's $11 trillion of household savings.

The fruits of an MBA
Kurt Badenhausen and Lesley Kump
Our ranking of the top business schools in the U.S. and overseas.



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Capital Markets & Investing

The worst is yet to come
Benjamin Fulford
The rot in Japan's banking system is more extensive than you think.

Think small
Peter Brimelow
If historical patterns hold, small-cap stocks will beat large caps over the next few years.

Columnist David Roche
David Roche
In the wake of disaster, the U.S. market looks attractive.

The "R" word
Robert Lenzner and Victoria Murphy
The U.S. is already in a recession. How deep? When will it pull out?

You have to be there
Neil Weinberg
Wall Street's faithful still want to be in the heart of the action.

Columnist Kenneth L. Fisher
Kenneth L. Fisher
Still bearish, but not because of the terrorist attacks. Blame HP and PaineWebber.

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The Adventurer

Survivor's tale
James M. Clash
How Marilyn White escaped from one of the towers of the World Trade Center.

Thoughts on the Business of Life
Edited by Lydia Forbes




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