Word: kim
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...celebrated with a launch party at New York City’s Core Club. Financed by David Bradley of Atlantic Media Co., which publishes The Atlantic Monthly, 02138 hopes to gain the favor of the 320,000 graduates of Harvard University. The magazine was founded by Bom Kim ’00, who now serves as its president, and Dan Loss ’00. Kim and Loss could not be reached for comment yesterday. As undergraduates, Kim and Loss founded Current, a student-run news magazine now owned by Newsweek. Noting their work with Current, Aaron D. Chadbourne...
...first place, while Harvard finished in third with a record of 7-3. Although Connecticut College had the same record, the Crimson took third thanks to a tie-braker based on points. Flynn, Garrity, Nathanson, and Brants sailed for Harvard, in addition to freshmen Drew Robb and Hyungin Kim. “We were happy with our performance,” Flynn said. “It was a competitive day of racing, and we were pleased that we beat some good teams.” —Staff writer Malcom A. Glenn can be reached at mglenn@fas.harvard.edu...
...Originally, he loathed an off-screen character named Osama, a "rich, oily guy who acts all holier than thou," but when audience interest waned, he seamlessly retargeted his ire at "Saddam," whose unflattering pictures he posted for all to see, and occasionally invokes the name of a third antagonist, Kim, whom he finds "funny-looking." Many viewers acknowledge they have now conflated the multiple villains in their minds; in the words of one, "Lonelyboy43 has so many bad guys on that show, it's hard to keep track...
...Though Koizumi all but anointed abe as his successor, another leader may bear even more responsibility for boosting Abe to the premiership: Kim Jong Il. As deputy cabinet secretary, Abe accompanied Koizumi on his historic trip to Pyongyang in 2002. After Kim shocked Japan by admitting that North Korea had kidnapped Japanese nationals, including Megumi Yokota, Abe became the face of Tokyo's response. When a group of surviving abductees visited Japan, Abe insisted they not return to the North. "From then on he was very popular on TV and among the general public," says Jun Iio, professor of government...
...Washington hasn't resumed the food aid it suspended last year. Pyongyang remains equally defiant and shows no signs of returning to talks aimed at ending its nuclear program. Unknown millions of North Koreans might be struggling to survive, but Kim Jong Il is still sitting pretty...