Word: drew
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...that give them the right to purchase a horse and have it stabled in the Jockey Club's ritzy training facilities. This is how Lo, the Hong Kong fashion executive, became an owner. One of Lo's friends had been trying for years to land a horse, but repeatedly drew blanks in the lottery until linking up with Lo and two others. In 2001, they won ownership rights and went in search of their champion...
...Sakong, who is the political chair of the Korean Association, which helped organize the event. Speaking for close to four hours, Kim traced the personal arc of his life—his professorship in North Korea, his tutoring, and his stint as a visiting professor in Russia. His accounts drew both laughs and gasps from the crowd. He recounted one occasion when he was tutoring Kim Il Sung’s nephew—“one boisterous youngster, not the most obedient type.” He said Kim Il Sung, who was trying to reform the national...
...continue its partnership with HSA after their contract expires in 2009. HSA came under fire from students this past year for offering summer storage through the storage and shipping company Collegeboxes. In 2006, the company lost belongings of Harvard undergraduates who had used the service. The University and HSA drew ire from some students when they contracted with the service again this summer. Creamer said after the problems in 2006, HSA changed the administration of the program, realizing more oversight was needed. He said the number of problems was very low this year. “It?...
...First Dog. I do my business in the digging site in the Yard. Respect me. 2) One of the archeology kids smacked me in the head with a shovel today. No respect at all. 3) Everyone knows Clio is spelled C-L-E-O, Drew. Nobody thinks I know how to spell my own name. 4) Sometimes, when we’re by ourselves, Drew and I dress up in matching business suits. This make us feel powerful. 5) Drew ordered too much doggie food so she gave the leftovers to Annenberg. We laughed, and then went to go have...
Students who are drawn to a field of study by their ethnic background may also find themselves limited by their lack of objectivity. Erika L. Solomon ’08 comes from a Jewish family—an ethnic tie to the Middle East that drew her to the study of Arabic culture. “A lot of Jewish people study the Middle East and Arabic as a kind of counterbalance to their ethnic identity,” she says. “They want to understand this culture they see themselves in conflict with...