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...brochure? It’s hers. She likes both creating and watching animations as well. Her bow, in fact, was inspired by a character in a Miyazaki animated film named Kiki, a 13-year-old witch-in-training who flies away from home with her talking cat named Jiji and a large red bow. Indeed, she seems to have as many interests as she has bows on her bow shelf. This year she is taking classes to get her license for ham radio, a type of radio communications popular amongst hobbyists. After graduation, she plans to work in a nanotechnology...

Author: By Alexander J. Ratner, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sabrina Chou ’09 | 5/1/2009 | See Source »

...more money in the long run by jeopardizing efforts to reduce the U.S. share of the U.N. peacekeeping tab from 30% to 25%. (The U.S. expects a $320 million bill this year.) "Countries would have been willing to lower the U.S. portion," says U.N. information officer Jessica Jiji, "if they had paid their dues." And if the U.S. loses its General Assembly vote, it may also forfeit its moral strength in the battle to restrain the growth of the U.N. budget. Says U.N. Under-Secretary-General Joseph Connor: "Somebody sitting on the bench isn't throwing the balls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Superpower Stiff | 11/15/1999 | See Source »

...successful, to seek a special session of the U.N." Mansfield added that if the Russians did not bow to the protest. President Eisenhower should reconsider his decision to attend the mid-May summit meeting in Paris with Russia's Khrushchev. In Japan, Tokyo's Sankei Jiji Shimbun key-noted: "Russia's shooting rockets into Britain's and America's sphere makes one dubious about notions that the cold war is melting." In Hong Kong, the Communist Ta Kung Pao blazoned a Red rocket across its front page and rejoiced: "The harder the U.S. tries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Pacific Challenge | 1/18/1960 | See Source »

...stiff-necked, German-born G-2 officer Brigadier General Charles A. Willoughby (who changed his name from Von Tscheppe-Weidenbach) sat in his Dai Ichi Building office late one night, scanning proofsheets of the English-language Nippon Times, his eye lit on an editorial reprinted from the Tokyo daily Jiji Shimpo. "Japanese teachers," he read, "have the habit of blind worship for . . . the man in power. . . . They used to endeavor to instill in the minds of their pupils that the Emperor was God. Now they claim that General MacArthur is the Savior.. .. Until the Japanese are cleansed of this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Holy Mac | 10/21/1946 | See Source »

Lawed from the Beat. Reporters or papers that won't play ball are turned down for membership, are then denied admission to press conferences because they don't "belong." All but one or two of Japan's 50-odd new postwar papers have been kept out. Jiji, Japan's second-biggest news agency, with membership in only two clubs, has to feed its clients unofficial, secondhand yarns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Old Japanese Customs | 8/19/1946 | See Source »

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