Word: exporting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...having the strength to penetrate all of Africa, Soviet and Chinese agents are trying to establish a beachhead in Guinea. Ethiopia and Morocco are also being probed. Peking may possibly have a long-range plan in the next two decades to export some 5,000,000 Chinese to Latin America, Cuba and North Africa as a prelude to a global revolutionary thrust...
...does not intend to levy emergency taxes on foreign companies, Chilean corporations or the Chilean rich. And foreign aid is pouring in. West Germany has offered to rebuild Valdivia; Argentina will aid Chiloé Island; Sweden will help Puerto Saavedra. The U.S. has given most of all. The Export-Import Bank of Washington has lent $10,770,000. Private citizens have donated $5,000,000, and President Eisenhower last week approved a $20 million gift as the "first step" of a broad aid program to Chile's homeless and desperate people...
...Japanese government's invitation to President Eisenhower." He pointed out that Japan sold more than 5,000,000 transistor radios in the U.S. in 1959, charged that jobs have been lost as a result of Japanese imports. Recently, the Japanese government announced plans to limit the export of transistors...
...overcome the reputation for shoddiness formerly attached to the "Made in Japan" label. Says an official of Chadwick-Miller Importers Inc. of Boston: "Since the war, we find Japanese quality is excellent, considering price." Besides, points out Seiki Tozaki, president of C. Itoh & Co., a Japanese import-export firm in Manhattan, "international trade is a two-way street. If you buy from us, we will buy from you." Japan is the second largest consumer of U.S. exports (after Canada), last year took $930 million worth of U.S. goods...
...Eppert of Detroit's Burroughs Corp., which shifted its entire output of calculators from Detroit to Scotland: "As additional products are transferred abroad on a competitive basis, we will be able to produce new products here. We will import from foreign subsidiaries, thus protecting the American market, and export to them products involving the new technology. The net result will be to continue to create additional jobs both here and there." Since 1950, Burroughs has hiked the number of its jobs overseas from 1,923 to 7,244, and its U.S. jobs from...