Word: motorola
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...line of defense-and the real thorn in North Korea's side-is the continued strength of its economy. Despite the disruptions of war, the South Korean economy continues to grow at a rate of 12% a year. Foreign investors are flocking into Seoul and the countryside, including Motorola (electronic circuits), IBM (computers), and Fairchild Camera (transistors). Though U.S. aid still braces the Korean budget, the aid figure has dropped from $110 million in 1966 to $70 million last year. Within the next two or three years, South Korea expects to be economically...
POINTS OF VIEW about business are exchanged in this fourth of a continuing series of dialogues between Fred W. Sayre, University of Arizona student, and Robert W. Galvin, Motorola chairman. Similar dialogues in campus newspapers and on campus radio stations are taking place between Mr. Galvin and other university students...
Chairman, Motorola...
Chairman, Motorola Inc. Dear Mr. Galvin...
...Fred Sayre, University of Arizona student, is one of four college students invited by Mr. Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Chairman, to debate the pros and cons of business. Letters exchanged between Mr. Sayre and Mr. Galvin and the other dialogists are being published throughout the school year in this and 20 other college papers. The other three dialogists are students at Northwestern, Princeton, and Stanford. Mr. Sayre describes a two-year course he took at a Diocesan Seminary as full and valuable. Football, baseball, drama, and student/national government are among his interests. He is majoring in government, minoring in speech...