Word: kt
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Looking back over the article, I guess he was probably right. But for me the article was interesting because it underscored the dramatic rise of that year’s top pair, KT (last names Klinger and Tarloff), for whom the horizon was rapidly expanding, with the national championships imminent, and great things about to come...
...loosens us up. 4. FM: Who’s next? Anyone you’d like to work with in the future? SBB: Lots of people. I’d love to do something with Counting Crows at some point. I’m also a big fan of KT Tunstall. There are so many cool artists out there. 5. FM: If you weren’t obscenely talented (we know you were voted “Most Talented” in high school) and you couldn’t be a singer, what would you be doing...
...indigenous people in Ecuador protested against a proposed free-trade agreement with the U.S. that they thought would deliver their economy and culture to the colossus of the North. In Seoul, the attempt by U.S. corporate raider Carl Icahn to get a seat on the board of tobacco company KT&G has, says Jang Hasung, dean of Korea University's business school, "reignited anti-foreign-investor sentiment." The sale of a controlling interest in Shin Corp., owner of Thailand's leading telecommunications company, to Temasek Holdings of Singapore has been one of the catalysts for the Bangkok demonstrations against Thai...
Already, this was an incredible turn of events. KT, as they are known in the community, were the No. 2-ranked team in the country, and for them to lose on the first stage of elimination rounds was a monstrous upset. More surprisingly, Luxemburg and his partner Christine A. Malumphy ’05 had made it to the semis, and they would face Northwestern, Harvard’s biggest rival, for a chance at the finals...
Meanwhile, Brilliant threw himself at the question of how exactly Cometa was going to make money. It wasn't 1999 anymore. The company had to be able to show skeptics a return on investment. Signs from abroad weren't good: in 2001, KT Telecom spent more than $14 million setting up 8,900 access points across South Korea. Two years on, only 123,000 out of a country of 45 million--most of them tech sophisticates--have signed up. (One reason is that South Korea's cell-phone data technology and service offerings are vastly superior to those...