Word: abroader
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...more than just image polishing. Stefano Caselli, professor of banking and finance at Milan's Bocconi University, expects the new governor to encourage bank consolidation across borders. "Draghi will be open to the entry of foreign banks in Italy, but will also look for Italian banks to acquire interests abroad. Italy needs both." Thanks to a new law, Draghi will serve a once-renewable, six-year term; if he's going to overcome decades of banking insularity, he may need...
...what would happen if we left Iraq before the new government was ready to take over all the duties we now perform. Would the Middle East situation worsen or not? Would the U.S. be seen as weak and thereby become more vulnerable to attack both at home and abroad? We must see our mission through in Iraq. And I say this as a father whose son will be entering the Army in 2007 and could go to Iraq before the war is over. We are making progress, despite what the spineless members of both parties in Congress want to acknowledge...
When they arrived in Washington last January to take on the tsunami job, the Bush-Clinton task was fairly limited: tour the region, collect information about how to help foreign governments, direct Americans to the right charities and send a signal at home and abroad that the U.S. takes the relief effort seriously. It didn't take long for the ice to break: both men discovered that they hated repeated rehearsals of television spots and tried to entertain each other between takes. During a round of joint interviews, Clinton put his former rival at ease by changing the subject when...
...politics. Before Koizumi took office in 2001, the country had churned through 10 Prime Ministers in 12 years. In the last four and a half years, however, Koizumi has sounded a remarkably consistent message that has both kept him popular at home and elevated his?and Japan's?profile abroad. Thanks in large part to the efforts of the government he leads, the economy is on a more solid footing than it has been in years, and the nation is riding a long-overdue wave of optimism. Overseas, Koizumi has led the most serious postwar movement yet to transform Japan...
...what would happen if we left Iraq before the new government was ready to take over all the duties we now perform. Would the Middle East situation worsen or not? Would the U.S. be seen as weak and thereby become more vulnerable to attack both at home and abroad? We must see our mission through in Iraq. And I say this as a father whose son will be entering the Army in 2007 and could go to Iraq before the war is over. We are making progress, despite what the spineless members of both parties in Congress want to acknowledge...