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Word: buyer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Japanese companies always prefer to sell to other Japanese companies," says Dean Yoost, CEO of a PricewaterhouseCoopers division in Tokyo that advises on mergers and acquisitions. The foreigner is the buyer of last resort. That means the price is often right: Ripplewood paid $130 million for Seagaia (with a commitment to invest $100 million)--a total that is only 8% of the $3 billion it cost to build the resort, which opened in 1994. But Ripplewood faces a turnaround task that is the corporate equivalent of raising the dead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Tech: Foreign Invaders | 2/25/2002 | See Source »

Jacob thought the regulations were ridiculous, since in all his years on the farm, no one had done something so silly as smoke hemp. What's more, the U.S. government had been his biggest buyer of hemp in the '40s. Cannabis-growing permits were plentiful during World War II because imports of other fibers dried up. In 1942 the USDA even produced a film, Hemp for Victory, to encourage farmers to plant hemp to meet wartime demand for rope...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: This Bud's Not For You | 2/18/2002 | See Source »

That attitude is changing, says Ruby Gottlieb, a media buyer for Horizon Media, because advertising firms like hers now realize baby boomers not only are more numerous than young adults but--at the top of their careers, with mortgages paid off and kids grown up--also have more spare change: "I think there's a tremendous spending power and amount of products that they're open to." Magazines for those 50-plus are also getting a boost because prescription-drug firms, whose biggest market is seniors, are redirecting ads from doctors to consumers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boomer Rags | 2/18/2002 | See Source »

...present familiar marketplace images in a way that makes their familiarity painfully evident. Wing is hyper-self-conscious about symmetry and repetition, about pattern and economy of perspective. He uses ambient light to affect a sort of cheapness of color and thus draws attention to aesthetic costs of a buyer-friendly market place—lifeless blues and greens and oranges. The photographs themselves are mechanically arranged on the wall, with the same precision of placement and over-attention to balance and equilibrium. They pit—or at least seem to pit—art and commercial culture...

Author: By D. ROBERT Okada, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: MetaArt: Constructing Self-Criticism | 2/15/2002 | See Source »

...each dollar the stock drops in value, the buyer makes a dollar. With Enron stock now virtually worthless, Highfields could have profited greatly from Enron’s collapse, members of Harv ardWatch said...

Author: By Joseph P. Flood, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Enron Letter Questions Winokur’s Role | 2/5/2002 | See Source »

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