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There are still many of us who loved our country so much that we wanted to bring back the ideals of human dignify and compassion which were once part of our national purpose While Nikon spoke of new weapons George McGovern spoke of the need for new schools and hospitals while Nixon scorned the poor and exconated the welfare cheats who are less than 1/2 of I per cent of those on welfare. George McGovern exposed the Corporation Cheats who often find enough loopholes to avoid paying any taxes, and further pointed out that corporations now pay only...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE AFTERMATH | 11/16/1972 | See Source »

...increase the awareness of photography as a creative medium because his cameras are designed for the amateur." Yet few golden ages can occur without first exciting the interest of amateurs, whether as onlookers or as the sources of real artistic talent. Takateru Koakimoto, design chief at Japan's Nikon Inc., recalls that after the original Instamatics were marketed in the mid-'60s, "we began to see so many Americans graduate from their Instamatics and in no time at all switch to our more advanced cameras...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MARKETING: Polaroid's Big Gamble on Small Cameras | 6/26/1972 | See Source »

French Painter Ghislain ("Jicky") Dussart has been faithful to Film Star Brigitte Bardot in his fashion; during the past 15 years he has taken some 60,000 photographs of her. A hundred of them are now on exhibition in Paris at the Left Bank Nikon Gallery, and BB herself -false freckles and all-turned up for the opening, urging the press to take plenty more pictures ("What do you think I came here for?"). Anyone would have been a fool not to. "The only way you can mess up a picture of Brigitte," says Dussart modestly, "is to forget...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Dec. 20, 1971 | 12/20/1971 | See Source »

...mockery of the yen's official value of little more than a fourth of a U.S. cent. The Japanese are understandably pleased with this situation, but their trading partners are furious. An undervalued currency gives Japanese goods an exaggerated price advantage in foreign markets; Toyota and Datsun cars, Nikon cameras and Sony TVs, for example, all cost less in the U.S. than they would if the yen had a higher dollar value. Last month's international monetary crisis strengthened this Japanese advantage by triggering increases in the values of several European currencies, notably the West German mark...

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

...protectionist reaction in the U.S.?Tokyo's wartime conqueror turned No. 1 trading partner (see Symposium, page 90). Fully 30% of Japan's exports go to the U.S. As recently as 1964, 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...

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

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