Word: sumita
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...visiting Reagan in Washington three weeks ago, the Prime Minister seemed to promise that Japan would stimulate its economy to boost imports. But at the same time, Japanese officials are trying to bolster the country's exports through intervention in the currency markets. Says Bank of Japan Governor Satoshi Sumita: "We strongly hope the market will stabilize." Despite those politely phrased misgivings, the official Japanese presummit position, from Foreign Ministry Spokesman Yoshio Hatano, is a bland assertion that "the economic conditions in the summit countries are good. We should try to maintain and promote this situation...
...control where or when the rains come, of course. But India has the power to alleviate its water woes, according to Sumita Dasgupta of the independent, New Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment. "India has a lot of water," she says. "Even in drought years, we get enough. We just don't manage it." P. Chengala Reddy of the Indian Farmers and Industry Alliance lobby group goes further: "There is absolutely nil long-term planning." What management there is, says Dasgupta, ignores traditional methods of water storage in dry areas-such as the now disused network of channels...
...were landing their freight of men and guns. As the troops arrived, Governor General Jean Decoux hardly looked up from the conference table in Hanoï, where he was having a long serious talk with the chief of Japan's military mission, Major General Raishiro Sumita...
...cruisers and two torpedo boats. Planes from the carriers cruised low over the city. At an appointed hour six French and six Thai delegates were taken aboard the Natori, where seven white-uniformed Japanese officers headed by Chief of the Japanese Military Mission in Indo-China Major General Raishiro Sumita received them with bows and toothy smiles...
Late in the week came a clue to the withdrawal. General Raishiro Sumita, chief of the Japanese "military mission" to Indo-China, called on pro-Vichy Governor General Jean Decoux and told him that Japan was gravely concerned over "increasing activity of anti-Japanese elements" in southern Indo-China. " 'Free Frenchmen' . . . Anglo-American agents . . . Jewish financiers have resumed activities prejudicial to the New Order." The Japanese professed themselves particularly "disturbed" about the south Indo-China port of Saīgon. Saīgon is only 650 sea miles from Singapore...
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