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...withdrawal, moreover, is making for huge windfalls. U.S. officials are investigating reports that when four Special Forces camps were phased out last year, U.S. officers and men at one camp sold $5,000,000 worth of Jeeps, lumber, weapons, ammunition and wire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Viet Nam: A Cancerous Affliction | 6/7/1971 | See Source »

Other profiteering can be traced to U.S. bureaucratic indifference. Scrap lumber in Danang was formerly donated for use by homeless refugees. Today it is sold by contract to a wealthy Vietnamese trash collector, who then sells it to refugees at inflated prices. In one refugee village, where the average daily wage is less than 200 piasters (73?), a 4-ft. by 8-ft. sheet of scrap plywood costs 800 to 1,000 piasters; a cardboard carton brings 200 piasters. Under the system that has evolved, the refugees pay rich Vietnamese for the privilege of living under cast-off American crates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Viet Nam: A Cancerous Affliction | 6/7/1971 | See Source »

...Japanese products in order to offset the undervaluation of the yen (which some high officials calculate is 20% below its prospective free-market value) or stopping Export-Import Bank financing of exports to Japan. That move could cut shipments of some U.S. raw materials, such as coal and lumber, that the Japanese badly need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: A Yen for Revaluation | 6/7/1971 | See Source »

...salesmen swarm over the globe?inspecting, surveying, planning, advising, bargaining, buying and selling. One group is now in Hanoi, working on an agreement to help the North Vietnamese set up a shipping firm, textile plant and garment factory. In Zambia, geologists are surveying copper fields. On Vancouver Island, lumber men are demonstrating a new technique for cutting timber that used to be considered waste. Other groups are supervising production of Honda motorbikes in Brussels, studying sites for a hotel in Alaska and building a steel mill in South Africa, where the Japanese are considered honorary-whites. In any market that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Japan, Inc.: Winning the Most Important Battle | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...Japan bought more than it sold in U.S. trade. Since then, the popularity of Sony TVs, Nikon cameras, Panasonic radios, Toyota and Datsun cars, and Honda and Yamaha motorbikes has turned the picture upside down. Materials-short Japan is a big and growing consumer of American coal, lumber and even soybeans, but in each of the past three years its sales to the U.S. have exceeded its purchases by more than $1 billion. The American shoe, textile, electronics and other industries have not only lost sales and profits to the Japanese but jobs as well. A member of the Nixon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Japan, Inc.: Winning the Most Important Battle | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

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