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Word: nippon (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...knows, the places referred to both in the titles of the movements and in the music itself are not in the Fat Fast at all, but rather in the Middle East Iran and India-places such as Amad, Istahan, Agra and Delhi. Only the last movement. "Ad Lib on Nippon" is a musical reaction to an East Asian region. Geographical discrepancies aside, the synthesis of Duke Ellington's traditional sound with the musical emanations from the Middle Last and India is a glorious one. The band on Friday night was able to bring out some of the richness of Ellington...

Author: By Eric D. Plaks, | Title: Alvin Batiste: Joining the Jazz Band On an Exotic Journey | 12/14/1995 | See Source »

...roots in the 1920s, when we had the Decatur Staleys, owned by Staley's starch company, which later became the Chicago Bears. There was the Oorang Indians, Jim Thorpe's team named for the Oorang Airedale Kennels. In Japan today there are many corporate teams, including the Nippon Ham Fighters, owned by a pork producer, but that's baseball. Back in our country, maybe someday we will get the Hormel Spams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On the Money: Rooting for the Federal Expresses | 5/30/1994 | See Source »

This latticework of contracts may seem isolated in a kind of financial cyberspace, but it produces real victims. In Japan the accounting director of Nippon Steel Chemical leaped to his death beneath a train last May after he lost $128 million of the company's money by using derivatives to play the foreign-exchange market. In Chile a derivatives trader named Juan Pablo Davila lost $207 million of taxpayers' money last fall, instantly earning himself a place in Chilean infamy, by speculating in copper futures for the state-owned mining company. In Germany the giant conglomerate Metallgesellschaft dwarfed even those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Secret Money Machine | 4/11/1994 | See Source »

...While analysts were debating whether this global network was feasible, Microsoft announced a deal with Japan's Nippon Telegraph & Telephone, the world's second largest telephone company, to design business applications for CD-ROM and facsimile machines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Is Bill Gates Getting Too Powerful? | 4/4/1994 | See Source »

Richard Liebhaber, MCI's chief technology strategist, notes that the company is not alone in its support of Nextel. In addition to MCI, Nextel is backed by Motorola, Comcast, Northern Telecom, Nippon Telegraph & Telephone and Matsushita. "We're part of the telephone version of a dream team," says Liebhaber, dismissing Nextel naysayers. After all, once there was another start-up company that began as a radio dispatcher for truckers and also defied the odds: MCI itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: War of the Wireless | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

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