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The 300 million yen robbery (三億円事件, San Oku En Jiken), also known as the 300 million yen affair or 300 million yen incident, was an armed robbery that took place in Tokyo, Japan, on December 10, 1968. A man posing as a police officer on a motorcycle stopped bank employees transferring money and stole 294 million yen. [1]
The following is a list of the highest-grossing films in Japan.This list only accounts for the films' box office earnings at cinemas and not their ancillary revenues (i.e. home video sales, video rentals, television broadcasts, or merchandise sales).
Stockholders' equity was 6,073,000,000 yen (about $60 million) and company capital amounted to 45 million yen (about $450,000). Sales for the fiscal year ending February 2007 were 28,366,000,000 yen (about $283 million) with sales for the 2008 fiscal year extrapolating to about 30 billion yen (about $300 million). [1]
Japan signed the peace treaty with 49 nations in 1952 and concluded 54 bilateral agreements that included those with Burma (US$20 million 1954, 1963), South Korea (US$300 million 1965), Indonesia (US$223.08 million 1958), the Philippines (US$525 million/52.94 billion yen 1967), Malaysia (25 million Malaysian dollars/2.94 billion yen 1967 ...
Pay: $300 to $400 per article. Categories/Topics: Personal essays and reported articles with a narrative, human-interest approach. 4. Reader’s Digest. Reader’s Digest needs no introduction ...
Flash Crash of Japanese Yen on January 2, 2019 [6] [7] Flash Crash of European Stock Markets on May 2, 2022. ... dropped from more than $300 to as low as $0.10 in ...
Lim Por-yen(21 December 1914 – 18 February 2005) was a Hong Kong industrialist. ... (US$28.6 million), an estimated NT$300 million above market value. He is ...
[10] [11] [12] Among the individuals the organization funded were Frederick Vincent Williams, who was paid $300 monthly to make pro-Japanese articles, speeches, and radio broadcasts, [13] David Warren Ryder, who wrote a series of pamphlets entitled "Far Eastern Affairs", and Ralph Townsend, who also printed pamphlets with the Committee's support.