Search Details

Word: chiles (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...Builders. Some Latin American lands have bucked the trend of falling U.S. investments. Argentina and Colombia each boasted increases of more than 20% in new U.S. investment last year. New private U.S. investments rose to $70 million in Argentina, an estimated $22 million in Colombia. Chile's share of U.S. investment in the Western Hemisphere has been climbing since 1958, and U.S.-owned copper companies alone plan to invest an additional $250 million there in the next four years. In Brazil, which has more U.S.-owned factory capacity than any other foreign nation save Canada or the United Kingdom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Hemisphere: Investment Going Down | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

...James Symington, 33, guitar-playing, folksinger son of Missouri's Democratic Senator Stuart Symington. Symington's five-man team flew to Venezuela, Colombia and Ecuador to offer grain, seed and other surplus foodstuffs as inducements to get to work on land-reform programs. Other stops: Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina. McGovern. traveling with Brain-Truster Arthur Schlesinger Jr. (along as Kennedy's personal representative), visited food-exporting Argentina to reassure it that the giveaway program is not intended to harm normal markets. "A man who's starving and not in a position...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Americas: Alliance for Progress | 2/24/1961 | See Source »

...game was invented in 1891 in Springfield, Mass, by a gym instructor named Jim Naismith, who wanted to give his bored classes a switch from the daily grind of calisthenics. Today basketball is played with eager enthusiasm and improving skill by some 50 nations from Chile to China, but it has remained a distinctly American game. Its virtues are obvious : any number can play, indoors or out, in all seasons. It requires nothing more than a ball, and a basket that is much the same whether it hangs from a backboard in Madison Square Garden or a barn door...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Graceful Giants | 2/17/1961 | See Source »

Look-Alikes. The clearest sign of growing Chinese influence appeared two months ago at the Red summit in Moscow, when a four-hour Chinese denunciation of Khrushchev's coexistence policies drew its strongest support from the delegations from Cuba, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina and Chile. The basis for such influence is Red China's modulated but persistent argument that the increasingly industrialized Soviet Union bears little resemblance to underdeveloped, poverty-ridden Latin American nations. A much closer lookalike, Latin Americans are told persuasively, is Red China, land of the triumphant peasant revolutionary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Americas: The Quiet Invasion | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

...years ago, when a fast-breaking, aggressive team of Soviet basketbolisty walloped a U.S. quintet 62-37 in a world amateur tournament in Santiago, Chile, Communists everywhere hailed it as another landmark in Khrushchev's campaign to overtake the U.S. in everything from meat production to widget manufacture. "When it comes to shooting at the moon or at the basket, the U.S. cannot keep up with Russia," trumpeted a leftist Chilean paper. "We won," declared Russian Coach Stepan Spandarian loftily, "because we did what we planned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Wither, Oh Wither? | 1/27/1961 | See Source »

First | Previous | 515 | 516 | 517 | 518 | 519 | 520 | 521 | 522 | 523 | 524 | 525 | 526 | 527 | 528 | 529 | 530 | 531 | 532 | 533 | 534 | 535 | Next | Last