Word: kang
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
John G. Palfrey, Jr. ‘94 is executive director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Wendy M. Seltzer ‘96 is a Fellow with the Berkman Center. Angela Kang is a second-year law student at Harvard Law School...
...police say her son was busy cutting a taxi driver's throat on the night of Aug. 16, 1994, but Yang Shuxia says she knows better. "He was right here lying down next to me with the tube running into his arm," she says, pointing to the kang, a traditional brick sleeping platform found in most farmers' homes in this part of northeastern China. Yang and other family members insist that then 21-year-old Zhu Yanqiang couldn't even get to the toilet without help, much less sneak out to join in the brutal robbery-murder that took place...
...Secret Sunshine. That's the literal Chinese translation for Miryang, a town to which the thirtysomething widow Shin-ae (Jeon Do-yeon) has retreated with her young son Jun. In Miryang, people are friendly and compulsively helpful, especially a garage mechanic (Korean superstar Song Kang-ho) who is clearly, clumsily smitten by Shin-ae. She needs all the help she can get when another tragedy befalls her. She joins a Christian fellowship and indulges the mechanic's devotion. But her mind and spirit spiral into disarray as her behavior becomes more destructive and self-destructive...
...Crimson’s Staff Director, won the “Super Smash Brothers” tournament as well as the Nintendo Wii. Eric Huang ’10 won the “Defense of the Ancients” tournament, and MIT student Stephen Kang won the “Starcraft” tournament. Samuel J. Enumah ’10 won the “Halo” tournament, Decker hopes that events like Multiplay will change people’s perceptions of gaming. “People think of a gamer as the 30-year-old, geeky...
...during a decade of madness not only have gone unpunished but are trying to make a comeback, and partly because a story that so vividly documents the triumph of the human spirit over inhumanity is always relevant. Nien Cheng, 72, born into a wealthy landowning family, met her husband, Kang-chi Cheng, in 1935 in England, where both were studying at the London School of Economics. The husband, a diplomat in the Kuomintang regime, was enough of an optimist to decide to remain in Shanghai with his wife and young daughter after the Communists overthrew Chiang Kai-shek...