Word: emilio
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Says the host of the conference, Mexico's Foreign Minister Emilio Rabasa, "We will have a dialogue as equals, forgetting the past and thinking of the future." Intangible as it is, a change in mood may be just enough to make the conference...
...Emilio Collado, an Exxon executive vice president, says that any tightening of the rules that permit foreign taxes to be subtracted from U.S. taxes would hurt Exxon worse than many of its competitors, partly because the company's foreign operations are so extensive. Collado insists that critics of the industry should look at not just the U.S. taxes but also the worldwide taxes that it pays. Exxon last year, he asserts, paid 60% of its global taxable income to various governments. The industry's defenders argue further that tax rules have given it no profit bonanza. Until last year...
...never had a chance against the country's ruling military dictatorship and its candidate, General Ernesto Geisel. Though the generals tried to give the election the trappings of democracy, they had no intention of losing. Portly, white-haired Geisel was hand-picked last summer by Outgoing President General Emilio Medici...
...panel should consider sponsoring a U.N.-wide agreement on international investment. Under such a plan, he said, investment funds might be governed in much the same way that the independently organized General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) lays out rules for the movement of goods between nations. Emilio G. Collado, executive vice president of Exxon Corp., favored the notion of a proposed voluntary U.N. code of conduct for multinationals, under which, among other things, corporations operating abroad would pledge not to seek political leverage from their home governments...
...began, Pope Paul Vl's "hobby"-as his entourage was calling his collection of contemporary art-was unveiled in 55 rooms of the Vatican Museum, the refurbished Borgia Apartment near the Sistine Chapel. Much of the show consisted of Italian paintings and massive sculptures by Giacomo Manzu and Emilio Greco. But there were also two rooms full of American paintings, one devoted entirely to works by Ben Shahn...