Word: ikeda
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...reassure the Japanese that the attack in no way changed his "deep regard" for them. But Reischauer's diplomatic nonchalance was not enough to reassure the mortified Japanese government: the Home Affairs Minister, who had lost more face than Reischauer had blood, resigned. Next day Premier Hayato Ikeda so-sorried in Japanese (with English subtitles) directly to the U.S. via Relay II satellite. As far as Ambassador Reischauer was concerned, the whole affair was just another opportunity to cement Nipponese-American relations. The blood transfusions during surgery, he insisted, had made him a "true son of Japan, a mixed...
...states: "For once, I will not follow General de Gaulle." Eying the enormous market for its goods on the Chinese mainland, Japan was torn between commerce and political loyalty. "Our policy, in accordance with the principle of separation of economic from political matters, is quite clear," said Premier Hayato Ikeda...
...their own that they are unable to handle Japan's growing foreign trade. Japan must thus use foreign ships and pay out in shipping fees the foreign exchange that it earns by selling ships. Since the shipping lines' trouble stems chiefly from financial weakness, Prime Minister Ikeda is trying to strengthen them by encouraging mergers. Already two of Japan's largest lines have agreed to consolidate, and Ikeda hopes others will follow suit so that the lines will be able to buy more of the ships that Japan's shipyards are so busy turning...
...uproar over procedures, the election amounted to an important vote of confidence for precapitalist, pro-Western Premier Hayato Ikeda...
...Socialist opposition zeroed in on the nagging inflation that has accompanied Japan's phenomenal economic boom. Economist Ikeda, whistle-stopping across the nation, retorted that incomes have risen 52% in the past three years, while prices have risen only 14% . At a Kyoto rally, he asked: "Which do you think is better? The Socialists' advocacy of dividing three eggs among four people? Or Ikeda's policy of dividing eight eggs among four people?" On election day, amid the shriek of sirens that reminded people to vote, Ikeda's Liberal-Democratic Party won control...