Word: exportable
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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More explicitly Mr. McKelvie said: "It would not be fair to the members of this Conference, or to the world at large, to leave the misapprehension that the United States is out of the export market. Many wish that we were, but we emphatically...
...moral side, Russia's Lubimov pointed out that Tsarist Russia exported nearly twice as much wheat as her nearest competitor, and that no one called this morally wrong. Today Soviet Russia cannot by the wildest excess of dumping export as much wheat as her largest competitor, which, of course, is Canada.* Therefore, in Moscow's view, whatever Soviet Russia does or can do in the way of wheat exportation, she will be not less, but more generous to her competitors than Tsarist Russia...
...anti-Soviet answer to this is: "Times have changed." While Russia was out of export wheat production during the War and her revolution, the U. S., Canada, Australia and Argentina greatly increased their acreage "spurred by high prices, patriotic appeals, or both" as Sam McKelvie put it last week. Having increased their acreage these nations now have "a vested interest" of which only cruelty could deprive them and cruelty would be wrong...
...Poland, Hungary, Jugoslavia, Bulgaria and Rumania. 1930 export figures for the "Little Five" are not yet available. *See table above: Canada exported in 1930 twice as much wheat as Russia. Recipe (TIME, Dec. 8): two parts of whole wheat and one of whole rye cooked in a double boiler until the kernels of wheat burst open. Cooking requires from four to five hours...
Died. Edmund Arthur Stanley Clarke, 69, secretary since 1923 of the American Iron & Steel Institute, onetime (1904-18) president of Lackawanna Steel Co., president of Consolidated Steel Corp. (export firm for independent steel makers) until it was dissolved; of pneumonia; in Rumson...