Word: tapes
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...firm seldom ignores administrative guidance because other companies would consider that firm a pariah, and the government can easily tie up an offender's business in red tape. The whole system is made smoother because Japanese business and government chiefs understand one another: the flick of an eyebrow, the yes that is not really a yes, the small nuance of conversation that can never be written down. Comprehension comes because these leaders usually have the same roots of culture and class. Often, they have gone to the same elite schools and universities. Says Norishige Hasegawa, chairman of Sumitomo Chemical...
...Crimson attempted to come back but in the last 500, stroke Courty Gates caught a crab which killed the effort and the squad crossed the already broken tape at 6:09.6. Penn finished last...
...hearings on the silver collapse and its effects on other financial markets. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which has earned a reputation for being the Keystone Kops of federal regulators, came under heavy criticism for doing little to restrain silver speculation before the market's collapse. On a tape of a CFTC meeting played at last week's hearing, Commissioner David G. Gartner blithely queried: "Do you think there's any possibility the Hunts are just having fun, just horsing around? Like playing Monopoly like you and I might do, or nickel-and-dime poker...
Stoppard's protagonist George Riley is a middleaged inventor whose inventions, like a tape recorder thay plays "Rule Britannia" when the clock strikes twelve, never seem to grab the public's fancy. As a result, he lives off ten shillings a week provided by his rambunctious 18-year old daughter Linda, who works in Fancy Goods at Woolworth's. He refuses to collect unemployment compensation; that is for the masses, not for an inventor. With a new ten-bob note every "Meatless Saturday," George heads for the pub, where the locals indulge his fantasies. He is a man lost...
...then there was the old man of the boards, Ronald Reagan, a show business artifact whose time has come round again through video tape and the minicam. Reagan kept his eyes on the lens and himself under control, and he appeared on the screen as just about the only public figure of the moment who could both understand and tame the crazy world...