Word: fuji
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Felipe and Adianes met seven years ago, when they worked together after school at Roy Rogers. They were still working together, at Fuji Bank's offices in the World Trade Center's south tower. They rode the bus together each morning. She would go to the 82nd floor, where she supervised the payroll; he went one floor below, to run the mailroom. One floor can make all the difference...
...time I spend in each country, I always tell them I have no idea," she says. "Because my parents have taken me back and forth ever since I was a baby." Her father Teruzane Utada is a producer and musician who now runs her management company. Her mother Keiko Fuji was a popular enka (Japanese ballad singer) in the 1970s who broke her fans' hearts by giving up her career and moving to the U.S. to find a little peace. ("I don't sing anymore," is all Fuji says now, smiling.) Hikaru says she got her start when she followed...
...Corp., 866-256-4154 Bank of America, 877-441-3723 Cantor Fitzgerald and eSpeed, 866-326-3188 Carr Future, 800-755-7620 Deutsche Bank, 410-895-2029 Empire Cross/Blue Shield, 866-761-8265 Fiduciary Trust Co. International, 1-800-632-2350, ext. 22578 Fuji Bank, 1-888-537-FUJI (3854) Keefe Bruyette & Woods, 800-223-3810 Kemper Insurance Co., 800-622-9966 Lee Hecht Harrison, 201-782-3704 Marsh & McLennan (includes related businesses of Mercer, Guy Carpenter, Seabury & Smith and MMC Enterprise Risk), 1-212-345-6000 Maxcor Financial Group, 212-317-1000 Morgan Stanley, 888-883-4391 Pitney Bowes...
...cares about." Minoru Chino, president of a Nagano bank and a Tanaka campaign booster, recently told a national news magazine: "I've got the impression Tanaka is now becoming the Emperor who has no clothes." Even some loyalists are turning heel. "Governor Tanaka is like Mount Fuji," says Yoshitaka Sugihara, an aide who recently quit. "If you see it from a long distance it's very beautiful, but once you climb it, there are lots of rocks and rubbish...
...They were going to turn silver-halide powers like Kodak and Fuji into dinosaurs, not to mention the local photofinishers. That, at least, was the typically outrageous hype surrounding online photo sites when they hit the Web more than a year ago, offering consumers an easy way to store, share, edit and, yes, even print their digital photos?often for free. Like most dotcoms, they've had to get a life...