East Africa and Rhodesia 1955 no. 1588
Item Overview
- Title
- East Africa and Rhodesia 1955 no. 1588
- Uniform title
- East Africa and Rhodesia
- Date Created
- March 17, 1955
- Date
- 1955-03-17
- Place of Origin
- Nairobi (Kenya)
- Publisher
- East Africa Ltd.
- Language
- English
- Collection
- McMillan Memorial Library Newspaper Collection
- Program
- Modern Endangered Archives Program
Notes
- Description
- ENGLISH: East Africa and Rhodesia issue 1955 of March 17, 1955 Strong protests against the 10% increase on freight rates between the United Kingdom and East Africa has been made by the Dar es Salaam chamber of Commerce .In a letter to the Association Of chambers of Commerce and Industry of Eastern Africa , the letter stressed that those who would be hardest hit would be the East Africa exporters who had to sell in a climate of falling prices; importers could at least pass on the charges.Marginal producers would have to go out of business altogether, for unlike the large sisal and maize producers whose rates had risen by only 5% , the small man could not bring pressure to bear on the shipping companies.
Physical Description
- Extent
- 44 pages
- Dimensions
- Height 30.8 cm, Width 21.5 cm, Depth 0.4 cm
- Medium
- Ink on paper
Keywords
- Genre
- newspapers
- Subject Geographic
-
Kenya
Nyasaland
Britain
Uganda|Somalia
UK
Ethiopia
Tanganyika - Resource type
- text
- Subjects
-
Law and legal affairs
Accounting and finance
Commerce
Social welfare
Utilities
Agriculture
Politics and government
Colonialism
Materials and products
Administration
Find This Item
- Repository
- McMillan Memorial Library (Nairobi, Kenya)
- Local Identifier
-
Year 1955, Issue no.1588
m036816 - ARK
- ark:/21198/z1jx1vfq
- Archival Collection
- East Africa & Rhodesia Newspaper Collection (m036816)
- Manifest url
Access Condition
- Rights statement
- public domain
- Rights Holder
- archive@bookbunk.org
- Funding Note
- Digitization for the McMillan Memorial Library Newspaper Collection was sponsored by the Modern Endangered Archives Program with funding from Arcadia.