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...corporations' $17 billion of direct investment in Canada. Perhaps some of that feeling will dissipate when the surcharge is removed, if it does not remain in effect too long. In addition, Nixon plans to visit Ottawa next spring; the trip could serve, as did his meeting with Emperor Hirohito in Anchorage, as a symbolic reaffirmation of U.S. good will. But such is the disrepair of the once easy relationship between Ottawa and Washington that it will take more than symbols to convince Canadians that the U.S. is not out to improve its trade at the direct expense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: Canada: Coping with a Twitchy Elephant | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

...Republicans. The new mood stems from Nixon's revelation of an impending journey to Peking and his New Economic Policy, generating a momentum he has tried to sustain since then. The pace continued last week, beginning with his flight to Alaska for his meeting with Japan's Emperor Hirohito, which may have slightly soothed that nation's bruised feelings over both Nixon's Peking and economic ventures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The White House: The President in Motion | 10/11/1971 | See Source »

Imperial Tourists EMPEROR Hirohito and Empress Nagako of Japan flew on to Copenhagen after their meeting with President Nixon in Anchorage last week, and began their seven-nation good-will tour of Europe in Denmark. Then it was Wednesday, and that must have been Belgium, where Hirohito signed the Livre d'Or at the unknown soldier's monument in Brussels. Hirohito was handed a ritual sword with which, according to custom, visiting dignitaries fan the eternal flame. Obviously unsure what he was supposed to do with the thing, Hirohito gave a military salute instead. When he visited Waterloo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Imperial Tourists | 10/11/1971 | See Source »

More than a century ago, when Commodore Perry's warships steamed into Tokyo Bay to "open" Japan to American commerce, Emperor Komei passionately resisted the invasion, but in vain. So it was that Hirohito eventually "inherited from his great-grandfather a mission, which was to rid Asia of white men." As early as 1921, when Hirohito became regent for his ailing father, he organized a cabal of young officers notably including Major Hideki Tojo, to undertake any mission the throne desired. Bergamini insists that two years before the fighting broke out, Hirohito personally "directed his General Staff to plan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Is Hirohito the War's Real Villain? | 10/4/1971 | See Source »

...Hirohito was a formidable war leader," according to Bergamini, "tireless, dedicated, meticulous, clever and patient." But when the war came to an end at Hiroshima, the Emperor and his vassals began plotting to "convince outside observers, especially Americans, that the sacred Emperor had been a victim rather than villain of Japanese militarism." This suited the Allies admirably; without at least some semblance of the imperial system, General MacArthur estimated, he would need 20,000 American administrators to govern Japan and a million troops to police it. "There is no specific or tangible evidence," said MacArthur, "to connect the Emperor with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Is Hirohito the War's Real Villain? | 10/4/1971 | See Source »

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