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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 March 2017
[Reproduced from an unofficial translation. The official Spanish text of Decree No. 1771 is published in Diario Oficial de la República de Chile, No. 26,658 (February 2, 1967), pp. 5–8, as corrected in Diario Oficial, No. 26,682 (March 2, 1967), p. 2. The Chile Exploration Co. is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chile Copper Company, which in turn is a wholly owned subsidiary of The Anaconda Company.
[Decree No. 1770 of December 23, 1966, authorizing the andes Copper Mining Co., a wholly owned subsidiary of the Anaconda Company, to make an investment of U.S.$10,304,000 in the El Salvador mine and supplemental facilities, has not been reproduced. The official Spanish text of Decree No. 1770 is published in Diario Oficial, No. 26,658 (February 2, 1967), pp. 2–5, as corrected in Diario Oficial, No. 26,682 (March 2, 1967), p. 2. A translation has been placed in the Library of the American Society of International Law.
[Decree No. 215 of February 13, 1967, authorizing the Compañía Minera Exótica S.A. to make an investment of U.S.$38,000,000 in the Exótica mine, appears at page 454.]
* [Reproduced from an unofficial translation. The official Spanish text of Decree 215 is published in Diario Oficial de la República de Chile, No. 26,678 (February 25, 1967), pp. 1–4, as corrected in Diario Oficial, No. 26,682 (March 2, 1967), p. 2.
[The Chile Copper Company, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Anaconda Company, holds 75 per cent of the shares of Compañía Minera Exótica S.A and the copper corporation (Corporacíon del Cobre) of the Government of Chile holds 25 per cent of the shares.]