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Word: steamships (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Great Swan became a weather station in 1914, but it was 1960 before the real Swan song began. A New York company called Gibraltar Steamship Corp.. which owned no steamships, set up shop on the island with a 50,000-watt transmitter. Gibraltar, of course, was a CIA cover, and Radio Swan was soon booming propaganda to Fidel Castro's Cuba, 350 miles away. It called Castro and his lieutenants "pigs with beards" and accused Brother Raul Castro of being "a queer with effeminate friends." In reply, Havana Radio called Swan "a cage of hysterical parrots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HONDURAS: Swans, Spooks and Boobies | 12/6/1971 | See Source »

...Mexicans-a union rule that now helps Ensenadans earn a total of $40,000 a day-U.S. firms have sent dozens of representatives to oversee the operation. Says Captain D.W. Cowan of Prudential-Grace Lines' San Francisco office: "We have enough people to set up our own steamship agency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Labor: Dead Days on the Docks | 9/13/1971 | See Source »

...Said a Manhattan construction worker: "He's thinking of the overall problem, which he knows and I don't." Moreover, an increasing number repeated labor's ceaselessly argued point: that the Nixon program places an unfair burden on labor. C.L. Dennis, president of the Brotherhood of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks, pointed to perhaps the greatest disparity possible in a period of incomes policy. Says he: "Sure, I've got a few shares of stock myself. But it's wrong as hell to have fortunes made by speculators on the stock market while workingmen's wages stand frozen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Nixon's Freeze and the Mood of labor | 9/6/1971 | See Source »

Since 1965, Japanese steel production and the corresponding coal and iron-ore imports have grown at an average 11% per year. Unable to meet the coal and ore import needs of the mills, Japanese steamship companies began chartering extra tonnage from foreign shipowners. As a result, almost all freight rates were pushed skyward. At the peak of the boom in 1969, the steamship companies were chartering Greek and Norwegian vessels to haul coal from Hampton Roads, Va., to Japan for the hungry steel mills at rates that gave the shipowners profits of as much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SHIPPING: Freight Rates Foundering | 8/9/1971 | See Source »

...emphasis is on technical assistance in agronomy, water and soil development, highway planning, port development, fish breeding, sewage disposal, nutrition and handicrafts. Israeli experts have established citrus plantations in Madagascar and Uganda, a steamship line and a 16,000-acre cattle ranch in Ghana, a beekeeping industry in Senegal and massive poultry farms in Zambia and the Congo. In Togo, Dahomey, Upper Volta and Ghana, the Israelis have shown fascinated governments how to operate national lotteries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Israel's Stake in Black Africa | 5/31/1971 | See Source »

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