Word: lee
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...House community. The challenge, then, lies not in deriving some ideal definition of blocking, but rather, in successfully integrating these diverse groups into a larger whole. Meeting this challenge requires the collective efforts of everyone who belongs--or will belong--to a House. --Jenny E. Heller '01 Richard S. Lee...
...singles play, Blake, Doran, Green, and Lee--then playing No. 6--each won in straight sets. Only Passarella and Clark needed a third set in their singles victories. Clark's match went to a tiebreaker in the final...
PAMELA ANDERSON LEE is best known for three things: videotaping her honeymoon and having large breasts. But last week, Lee's spokeswoman confirmed that the remarkably cantilevered actress had her breast implants removed. "She wanted her body to go back to its natural state," said Marleah Leslie. She stressed that Lee is unconcerned that the move may negatively affect her career, founded on Playboy pictorials and a role on Baywatch. It seems that interest in Lee's breasts does remain high. Ripley's Believe It or Not has requested the orphaned implants for an exhibit on beauty...
Just as FBI counterespionage agents were drawing a bead on Los Alamos nuclear weapons scientist Wen Ho Lee, the files disgorged a curious fact: Lee's wife, Sylvia, had been an FBI "informational asset" at the very time Lee was suspected of passing classified warhead data to the People's Republic of China. From 1985 to 1991, according to well-informed sources, Sylvia Lee, a native Chinese speaker who held a support-staff job at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, reported to FBI agents about visiting delegations of PRC scientists. She was not an "operational asset," jargon for paid informant...
...Lee's modest relationship with the FBI complicates the already murky case of her husband, Wen Ho Lee, a Taiwanese-born computer scientist who worked on nuclear warhead design programs at Los Alamos. In 1995 U.S. intelligence officers learned that China had somehow stolen classified information about the W-88 miniaturized nuclear warhead program. The ensuing FBI investigation found Wen Ho Lee had violated a number of lab security rules, including failing to report contacts with PRC scientists -- lapses for which Department of Energy secretary Bill Richardson fired him last month. So far, the FBI has not been able...