Looking to try someplace exotic? How about a ger in Mongolia? (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)

From: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service | Date: March 28, 1994| Author: Severson, Jack | Copyright information
    Mongolia wants you. 
    Not all of you, but a horde or so would do. 
    That's right, that mysterious Asian nation that gave birth to Genghis Khan and remains home to a fiercely independent _ but very friendly _ people, actively is promoting tourism in the U.S. market. 
    To that end, the Mongolian Tourism Corp. of America Inc. opened its first office last month in suburban Princeton, N.J. MTCA is a joint venture of the Foreign Tourist Corp. of Mongolia and New Jersey's Compass Tr...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Looking to try someplace exotic? How about a ger in Mongolia? (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service ; Mongolia wants you. Not all of you, but a horde or so would do. That's right, that mysterious Asian nation that gave birth to Genghis Khan and remains home to a fiercely independent _ but very friendly _ people, actively is promoting tourism in the U.S. market. To that end, the Mongolian Tourism
And now Mongolia. (Asia)
The Economist (US) ; And now Mongolia AT FIRST glance there may be little amid Mongolia's high rolling steppes, snow-clogged mountains and sprawling deserts to remind the traveller of the clamour of Berlin, Budapest or Prague. But listen carefully in this remote, sparsely populated Asian land, and you will hear a
A commitment to Mongolia.(LETTERS)
The Washington Times ; Byline: THE WASHINGTON TIMES J. Peter Pham's commentary on Mongolia and the Millennium Challenge Corp. (MCC) was misleading at best ( Mongolia's challenge, Feb. 21). His prescription - that we cut off the MCC compact to Mongolia before it even begins to work - would undermine U.S. interests in a
Mongolia: China's Canada? Beijing is reaching out to a former satellite of the Soviets
International Herald Tribune ; James Brooke International Herald Tribune 07-10-2004 Two weeks ago, China's largest copper company signed a letter of intent to study investing in Mongolia's largest mining project. This week, Mongolia's president, on a state visit to Beijing, invited China to drill for oil. Next month, zinc
Mongolia Attractive to Korea Investors.
Korea Times (Seoul, Korea) ; The following article was contributed by L. Galbadrakh, ambassador of Mongolia, on the occasion of Mongolia's recent economic reform process and new environment for foreign investmentED. Mongolians are a people with deep traditions of independent statehood and a great history. As other nomadic
MONGOLIA HOPING TO LURE MORE COLO. TRADE ASIAN COUNTRY HAS A WEALTH OF OPPORTUNITIES, LEADER SAYS
Rocky Mountain News ; President Natsagiyn Bagabandi's voice is soft, but his message is clear. He wants to invite Colorado businesspeople to visit his country, Mongolia, and see what it has to offer. After all, the landlocked Asian country between China and Russia has rich deposits of copper, gold, uranium, molybdenum,
Mrs. Clinton praises change in Mongolia
The Boston Globe ; ULAN BATOR, Mongolia -- In the land once ruled by Genghis Khan, Hillary Rodham Clinton stepped back in time yesterday, gamely sipping fermented mare's milk in a nomad's tent on a remote hillside and nibbling boiled cheese curds. "It tastes like what we call yogurt," Clinton said with a diplomatic
Whither Mongolia
Weekend Sunday (NPR) ; 00-00-0000 LIANE HANSEN, HOST: Secretary of State Madeline Albright just completed her four-nation tour of Asia. Designed to lay the groundwork for later visits by President Clinton, her final stop yesterday was Mongolia. During the Soviet era, a Mongolian official once remarked: the concern for us
Seeking a man about a horse: On a quest of international importance, Evan Osnos looks for Montana in Mongolia.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) ; Byline: Evan Osnos May 20--ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia -- On a sunny fall day in 2005, Donald Rumsfeld arrived in Mongolia, which delighted Mongolia, because he was the first U.S. defense secretary to make the trip. To celebrate, Mongolia gave Rumsfeld a horse. Mongolians say they have about 400 words to
Mongolia's democracy a work in progress.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL) ; Byline: Michael A. Lev ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia _ At the country horse races on rolling green steppes that seem to bound forever, a Mongolian pop star with bleached-blond hair explained why he was standing on the sunny crest of a hill with thousands of other city folk and nomads. All Mongolians know,