The MMTC and
NABOB recognizes the need for more innovative approaches to encourage access to capital, as well as technical, operational, and management training, "for those new entrants and small businesses that, without assistance, would not be able to own broadcast stations.
Caption: HMS
Nabob (D77) was torpedoed by German submarine U-354 in the Barents Sea on August 22, 1944.
It is this explicit and transparent ambition of Clive's that marks him out as the exemplary and feared "
nabob," the Englishman who returned to England from India with immense wealth and used that wealth to subvert the familiar political order.
The plant roasted and packaged coffee for the foodservice industry under Kraft brands such as Maxwell House and
Nabob, as well as the Dickson's and Melrose banners.
I hate to be a 'nattering
nabob of negativity," but after years of talking about win-win we are facing a no win scenario in terms of commodity prices.
National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters (
NABOB) 24th Annual Communications Awards Dinner.
The title "
Nabob" was a corruption of the native appellation nawab (official rank-holder in the Mughal occupational and social hierarchy).
Andrew James, The
Nabob: a Tale of Ninety-eight, Ulster and Scotland 5, notes and afterword by John Wilson Foster (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2006, 174 pp., 30.00 [euro] hardback)
The deep red bells of abutilon '
Nabob' are stunning.
But Agnew was using the words written for him by that nattering
nabob of political PR, Bill Safire, before Safire became legit and Agnew un-lelgit.
The chapter on Samuel Foote's The
Nabob and the credit crisis of 1772 invites us to see the villain of the farce, Sir Matthew Mite, not only as a figure for Robert Clive, defending himself before Parliament against charges of corruption in Bengal, but also as a figure for Alexander Fordyce, the Scottish banker whose fraudulent dealings led to a banking crisis of enormous proportions.