Word: hui
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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These members include Maggie Y. Loo '01, secretary of the association; Albert M. Hui '01 and Jeremy L. Kwan '01, co-chairs of the business committee; Kristen H. Day '01 and Chanda K. Ho '01, educational and political committee co-chairs; Jessica A. Eng '01 and Wei Zhou '01, cochairs of the public relations committee, and Davin J. Chew '01 and Tzyy Ming Yeh '01, social and cultural committee...
...CHINA THREAT With Hong Kong in hand, is Taiwan next? Global risk managers believe Taiwanese President Lee Teng-hui will soon move aggressively to gain independence for his country. That would cause China's leadership to rattle its sabers at the island, as it did in 1996, almost certainly drawing the U.S. into a conflict. Next shoe: Beijing, which holds about $100 billion in U.S. Treasury securities, largely as a result of its huge trade surplus, could threaten to unload them, causing a major downturn in U.S. financial markets...
...Globe also printed speculation that Jiang wanted to visit Harvard to one-up Taiwanese president Lee Teng-hui, who visited his alma mater, Cornell University...
...longer the Cold War, and China is no longer the Communist country it once was," says Hui Kuok '00, who is from Hong Kong...
...years Beijing has envied the popularity that Taiwan enjoys in Congress. But it resisted advice to imitate Taiwan and hire pricey Washington lobbyists to make its case. That changed in May 1995, when Taiwan's President Lee Teng-hui was granted a visa to visit the U.S. to attend an alumni gathering at Cornell University. It was a step that followed a nearly unanimous vote in both houses of Congress. The Chinese were stunned by what appeared to be a departure from the U.S. policy of not having official contacts with Taiwan. "The Lee visit was a failure of their...