• Angela Merkel has a message for American companies: Germany is open for business.

    FORBES

  • On May 1st Germany must also open up to eastern construction firms and industrial-cleaning companies.

    ECONOMIST: Germany's labour market

  • That is how some peddlers of Germany's open-ended property funds have responded to reactions, verging on panic, to the closure of two such funds since early December.

    ECONOMIST: The peculiar flaws of German open-ended property funds

  • Last year Allianz announced plans to build an army of 2, 000 financial planners who would sell Allianz (and other asset managers') funds in Germany on an open platform-may the best product win.

    FORBES: Schulte-Noelle Scores

  • German officials were warning on Wednesday that Germany would not simply open its chequebook to solve the budget talks.

    BBC: EU budget: Another battle looms

  • The Federal Reserve chairman, speaking in Germany on Friday, left open the door to new interest rate cuts as U.S. retail sales data offered a desultory view of the American economy.

    FORBES

  • Nadal will open proceedings against Germany's Daniel Brands, but a potential third round match would pit him against Lukas Rosol, who shocked him at last year's Wimbledon ahead of his lengthy injury layoff.

    CNN: SHARE THIS

  • He left open the chance that Germany might contribute financially to Iraqi reconstruction.

    ECONOMIST: American diplomacy

  • Diks is aiming for 1, 000 Beter Bed stores by 2003, which means expanding the company from locations in Austria, Germany, Holland and France to open stores in Italy, Belgium and Poland.

    FORBES: 20 FOR 2000

  • Important for the market place is also reports that Germany has indicated it is more open to providing funds to any mechanism implemented to get the EU debt crisis under control.

    FORBES: A.M. Kitco Metals Roundup: Comex Gold Firmer On Corrective Bounce From Thursday's Losses

  • The commission, strongly supported by such countries as Germany and France, considers this an open invitation to tax evasion.

    ECONOMIST: Bye-bye Eurobonds?

  • After a week, he was moved to the Army hospital in Germany, where doctors kept the wound open to avoid infection.

    WSJ: When the Fighting Stops: Troops Coming Home from Afghanistan

  • But it remains an open question whether countries - Germany especially - will one day get to a point where they cannot credibly do what it takes to save the euro.

    BBC: One step back from the abyss

  • Frankfurt, Germany's financial capital, hopes to open a European energy-futures exchange next year.

    ECONOMIST: German conglomerates

  • Sotheby's started selling photographs in 1971, and galleries devoted only to photography began to open in America, France and Germany.

    ECONOMIST: Snapping up the past

  • These days he would be unlikely to address a similar open-air rally in France or Germany.

    ECONOMIST: Feelings about the United States are warm but changing

  • Since then, a number of countries, including Britain, Germany, Spain and Italy, have agreed to open diplomatic relations with North Korea, and Madeleine Albright, Mr Clinton's secretary of state, visited Pyongyang.

    ECONOMIST: Bush's Korean scepticism | The

  • He is scheduled to play his fourth-round match against 16th-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany on Monday, when seven-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal hopes to celebrate his 27th birthday with a win against 13th-seeded Kei Nishikori.

    NPR: Djokovic's Day At The French Open Ends In Despair

  • Although the winter months showed little change for most retailers, Germany's bakeries, which are now allowed to open on Sunday mornings, announced recently that they had employed 5, 000 new workers in the past six months.

    ECONOMIST: German jobs

  • "The clearly political intent to fix a final and irreversible end-date for German nuclear energy with such unprecedented haste gives me increasing worry, " Hans-Peter Keitel, head of Germany's BDI business lobby, wrote in an open letter to German business leaders Monday.

    WSJ: Germany to Forsake Its Nuclear Reactors

  • Without that rebellion, say those once involved (many of them now respected public figures), Germany would never have confronted its Nazi past or become so open, tolerant and democratic.

    ECONOMIST: Charlemagne

  • Germany's interior minister proposed an immigration law intended to open the door to the many thousands of foreign workers, mainly skilled ones, that the country may need in the decades ahead.

    ECONOMIST: Security in Germany

  • But former US Open champion Lee Janzen missed out on 140, Germany's Alex Cejka failed to qualify on 138 and former US Ryder Cup player Steve Pate missed out with a 145.

    BBC: SPORT | Golf | Swedes clinch Open spots

  • But although popular with tennis fans for her cheerful manner and skilful play, Hingis did court controversy, most notably in the French Open final in 1999, where she lost to Germany's Steffi Graf and infuriated the crowd by arguing line calls and them making a graceless and tearful exit.

    CNN: 'Swiss Miss' so popular with fans

  • It will be shown in the open air at Spicherer Hoehen, near the border with Germany.

    BBC: Lost Lloyd George film gets showing

  • Sixth seed Angelique Kerber of Germany ended Venus Williams dreams of a third U.S. Open title with a 6-2 5-7 7-5 win over the American.

    CNN: Stosur next in line for giant-killer Robson

  • Pinewood, which makes the James Bond movies, already has studios in Canada, Germany and the Dominican Republic, with facilities in Malaysia due to open in the next couple of months.

    BBC: Pinewood studio agrees deal with Chinese media group

  • In 1989, East Germans on foot and in cars began arriving in West Germany and West Berlin only hours after the East German government threw open its border to the West.

    CNN: Saturday,

  • Williams, who reached the Australian Open final in 2003, will play 30th seed Andrea Petkovic of Germany in the next round after she beat British number two Anne Keothavong.

    BBC: Australian Open: Venus Williams labours to victory

  • With the company's core rural consumers saturated with stores, union-pandering urban politicians making it tough to impossible to open big city locations, and overseas missteps in key markets like Germany and South Korea, there's reason to believe Wal-Mart's growth phase is near its end.

    FORBES: A Whole New Wal-Mart

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