Word: lees
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...reduce their dependence on exports. Now that need has become urgent. Export-led Asian countries must diversify their economies by promoting domestic consumption, expanding service sectors and strengthening and extending trade links beyond the U.S. and Europe. Some moves are already under way. Shortly after South Korean President Lee Myung Bak took office last year, he launched a program to improve the service sector by increasing financial aid to targeted businesses and reducing red tape. Singapore is making strides in attracting biotechnology and private-banking businesses to the city-state...
...Harrison R. Greenbaum ’08 was declared funniest comedian overall. Despite their certified status as a humor group, many at Harvard are not aware of HCSUCS’s tournament ventures, let alone their campus performances. “H what?” said Rachel E. Lee ’10, when asked about the group’s existence. She is certainly not the only one in the dark. “Our performances haven’t been excellently attended,” said David R. Rhein ’09. “Publicity...
According to Lee Ann Custer, Crimson Key’s president who is also a Crimson arts writer, “Junior Parents’ weekend is certainly one of the CKS’s favorite weekends because it gives us a chance to welcome parents when their students are in a different stage of life at Harvard...
...Crimson editorial writer. “[The campaign] was initiated by alumni in order to show solidarity and express that alums are watching the layoff issues too,” she said. The protest outside of the Harvard Club of New York was organized by recent graduates Kelly L. Lee ’07, Michael A. Gould-Wartofsky ’07, J. Claire Provost ’07, and Kyle A. Krahel ’08. Both Provost and Gould-Wartofsky were members of SLAM during their undergraduate careers at Harvard. “We are aware that...
...that light, the staffing woes look particularly bad. Treasury isn't empty - Ted Truman, a former assistant secretary for international affairs, started last week, and Lee Sachs and Gene Sperling, top officials under Bill Clinton, have been on the job for weeks. But in the midst of an economic crisis, the demands on staff are so great - work frequently goes all night and during weekends - that a lack of bodies and minds more than looks awful: it's irresponsible...