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Japan Victor

After Japan s crushing defeat in 1945, Konosuke Matsushita reestablished his enterprise in the 1950s. First, in 1950, the Allied Occupation authorities required that he spin off part of his enterprise as Sanyo Electric Industrial. Two years later, he acquired technical capabilities by negotiating a joint venture with Philips to form Matsushita Electronics, of which Philips held 35 percent. His next step in 1955 was to acquire control of the Japan Victor Company (JVC). RCA had sold JVC to a Japanese company under pressure from Japan s government in 1937. This move provided Matsushita with an integrated learning base in electronic equipment. [Pg.299]

Prof. Helmut Ringsdorf, Institut fur Organische Chemie, Johannes-Gutenberg-Universitat, J.-J.-Becher Weg 18-20, 6500 Mainz, FRG Prof. Takeo Saegusa, Department of Synthetic Chemistry, Faculty of Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan Prof. Gunter Victor Schulz, Institut fur Physikalische Chemie der Universitat, 6500 Mainz, FRG... [Pg.227]

Figure 5.17 GALDI mass spectra of (a) Japan wax and (b) a dark blue paint sample from Jean Francois Raffaelli Le defile devant la maison de Victor Hugo pour ses 80 ans (1902, Musee Victor Hugo, Paris) [59], Both spectra are dominated by tripalmitin (m/z 830) and higher homologues (see Table 5.8)... Figure 5.17 GALDI mass spectra of (a) Japan wax and (b) a dark blue paint sample from Jean Francois Raffaelli Le defile devant la maison de Victor Hugo pour ses 80 ans (1902, Musee Victor Hugo, Paris) [59], Both spectra are dominated by tripalmitin (m/z 830) and higher homologues (see Table 5.8)...
Saji, T. Hiraga, T. Moritani, T. Tanaka, N. Yanagimoto, H. Ueno, I. Tsujita, K. 2001. Production method of organic thin film and optical component. Agency of Industrial Sciences and Technology, Japan Dainichi Seika Kogyo K. K. Victor Co. of Japan. Japanese Patent 2001-003195, pp. 1-20. [Pg.469]

Victor N. Nemykin was bom in 1968, received his M.S. in organic chemistry from Kiev State University, Kiev, Ukraine, in 1993, and his Ph.D. in inorganic chemistry from the Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry, Kiev, Ukraine, in 1995. He was awarded a Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science Fellowship and worked in the laboratories of Professors N. Kobayashi and then K. Sakamoto at the Tohoku and Nihon Universities, Japan. He then accepted a postdoctoral position at Duquesne University in the research group of Professor P. Basu. Since fall 2004, he has been assistant professor at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Minnesota Duluth. He has co-authored more than 60 publications including several patents. His research interests include the chemistry of porphyrins and phthalocyanines, bioinorganic chemistry of molybdenum, and computational chemistry. [Pg.737]

Victor T. Wyatt, USDA, Agricultural Research Service, Eastern Regional Research Center, 600 East Mermaid Lane, Wyndmoor, PA 19038 Edivaldo Ximenes Ferreira Filho, Departamento de Biologia Celular, Uni-versidade de Brasilia, CEP 70910-900, Brasilia, DF, Brasil Rie Yamazaki, National Food Research Institute, 2-1-12 Kan-nondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8642 Japan... [Pg.2]

Noboru Kawai et al. (Victor Company of Japan, Ltd National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology) tackled the Chemical Recovery of bisphenol-A from waste CDs or other polycarbonate resins. [Pg.37]

R. Naslain (France) Takashi Goto (Japan) Pavol Sajgalik (Slovakia) Victor Gusarov (Russia)... [Pg.3]

This was, after all, less than twenty years after catastrophically losing a war and only about ten years after the end of occupation by the American victors of that war. Most adults still had clear memories of the war and wartime conditions, and all would have thought seriously about their attitudes toward the principle representative of the outside world, the United States. In 1962, as Dr. No was being released in England, Japan... [Pg.440]

The Victor Company of Japan, in collaboration with the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Technology and Clean Japan Centre (CJC), is developing a process to recover high-purity bisphenol A from waste optical disks, typically CD, CD-ROM and DVD. The new process decomposes PC resin at around 200 °C in a nitrogen atmosphere under 2 MPa pressure, using sodium carbonate in cyclohexanol as a catalyst. In CJC simulations it was shown that was possible to secure an 80% yield of 99.9% pure bisphenol A. [Pg.80]

VIL. The VIL (Victor Interconnected Layers) HDI technology was developed by Victor of Japan. It utilizes FR-4 prepreg materials that are laser-drilled and sequentially laminated after the vias are filled with a conductive paste. Figure 23.26 shows the typical manufacturing sequence for this HDI technology. [Pg.526]


See other pages where Japan Victor is mentioned: [Pg.464]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.364]    [Pg.1181]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.427]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.749]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.299 ]




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