Word: haye
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...RICHARD HAY, tax havens lawyer
...Hong Kong, aren't even part of the talks. The Swiss from the beginning refused to have any part in the entire havens initiative; while they cooperate on cases of tax fraud, they don't recognize tax evasion by non-Swiss as an offense. Tax havens, says Richard Hay, a lawyer at Stikeman Elliott in London who represents tax havens and some investor groups, "don't want to commit commercial suicide by moving ahead of international standards." He adds: "We are not willing to jump into the volcano if others are not ready to follow." Corporations feel the same...
...were sequestered in a camp as part of the U.S.'s wartime internment of the Japanese, and Setsuo missed his Stanford graduation. "We could only take what we could carry," Norma, 77, says of their experience. "We brought one suitcase and stayed in a horse stable, where we used hay as our mattress," she says. After their release, Setsuo went on to study at Harvard and had a long career as an electrical engineer. To move to the new Palo Alto residence, the Dairikis are giving up a nearby 6,000-sq.-ft. home with an indoor swimming pool...
...ease but is also always up for a game of Boggle, a screening of The Simple Life or a trip to Dunkin’ Donuts. Though her name will soon be off the FM masthead, Haybay won’t be going far. As the incoming design chair, Hay is charged with the daunting task of making every section exquisite in color—and after a year of creating gorgeous magazine covers using only one lonely color each week, we’re confident Hayley will adeptly harness the thrills of technicolor with her creative genius...
...teach at a Karachi school and visited Afghanistan for a week in October. I went by car, without a guard, and traveled in an area around Kabul. Everywhere I saw people going about their lives, harvesting wheat and putting up hay for the animals to eat in winter. I visited some schools, including one with 5,700 students who come to classes in shifts starting at 7 in the morning. At no time did I feel threatened. I would say the majority of Afghans simply want to get on with living. RUTH DEIBLER Karachi...