Word: bordered
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...deal with New England Telephone. They offer metropolitan service, which takes in 44 exchanges in the Boston area at $16.75 a month for a touch-tone dial tone and $16.15 a month for a rotary-set dial tone. For contiguous service--access to Cambridge and all the cities that border on Cambridge--studdents pay $11.20 for touch-tone at d $10.60 for rotary...
...they continued, the road grew more treacherous and the sky more turbulent. The trucks were abandoned, and the fugitives continued on foot. On the second night three children died of cold and exhaustion; the following dawn, as the weary procession reached the border, two pregnant women and a teen-age girl lay down and died. Nonetheless, the group was relatively fortunate: only a few hours after the villagers arrived safely in Pakistan, the first blizzard of the winter obscured the horizon. Dozens of people from neighboring villages who had left just one day later died in the driving snow...
...beige brick structures bearing the logos of RCA, General Electric and GTE. Inside a Honeywell building, hundreds of women wearing red smocks hunch over an assembly line as they put together tiny electronic devices. Ten million parts a month are turned out here and then trucked across the border to U.S. plants, which ship them off to be used in Apple computers, Xerox copiers and instrument panels for the space shuttle...
...assembling the components in Mexico rather than in the U.S. just a few miles away, Honeywell saves about 50% on production costs. That kind of bargain is creating a manufacturing boom along the 2,000-mile Mexican-U.S. border and is also boosting the ailing Mexican economy. Like Detroit's automakers, who are moving an increasing amount of production to foreign countries, many other manufacturers are also building factories outside the U.S. More than 600 assembly plants have been lured to the Mexican border region to produce everything from electronic components to clothing...
...little cotton. But in 1965 the Mexican government decided to stimulate jobs in the northern region by relaxing its laws against foreign ownership of factories and reducing import taxes on raw materials. This has enabled U.S. companies to build so-called twin plants, one north of the border and the other south. A typical company manufactures its materials in the U.S. plant, sends them to the Mexican factory for assembly and then returns them to the U.S. for packaging. The Mexicans have given the plants the name maquiladoras, meaning golden mills, because of the economic benefit they bring. The biggest...