Word: stores
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...fireworks to the U.S., Li & Fung is the leader among middleman companies, fashioning the world into a smooth-running assembly line in which buttons produced in Sri Lanka and velvet milled in Italy are sewn into a vest at a Shenzhen factory and shipped on time to a store near you. Leading an army of 7,162 workers in nearly 40 countries, Li & Fung is the world's largest consumer-products sourcing company, last year managing the manufacture of more than $6 billion worth of toys, clothes, memorabilia and even auto parts for the likes of Abercrombie & Fitch, Advance Auto...
...days before Harvard Square became a prime breeding ground for banks and storefronts filled with eyeglass frames, window displays were dressed with another kind of intellectual accessory. Books used to be abundant in the Square in the 60s, readily available at more than 20 independent book stores. Now, as 2007 draws to a close, Harvard Book Store celebrates the end of its 75th year in business. Its ability to hold its ground while its fellow locally owned bookstores have fallen prey to corporate outsiders means that the bookstore is now Harvard Square’s premier independent center...
Officers Sean Russell and Robert Disario of the Brookline Police Department were on their way to the 7-Eleven in order to buy refreshments when they noticed a crowd outside of the store, Russell said...
...stairs leads visitors up to a room crowded floor-to-ceiling with books. The bookstore was founded by the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP), USA, an organization whose agenda is to overthrow the capitalist system, guide society through socialism, and implant communism. “The mission of the store is to bring revolutionary politics to the people,” said Ben O’Leary, the middle-aged volunteer who was manning the bookstore Saturday evening. Wearing an anti-George Bush message on his t-shirt, O’Leary described the bookstore as a “place...
...campus rep Ravi K. Manglani ’08.In the fall of 2006, after responding to a listing on the Harvard Student Employment Office website, Manglani began work as the first official Harvard campus rep for Kiehl’s cosmetics. And if the sparsely attended store event at Keihl’s Newbury Street boutique was any indication of campus initiatives to come, then Manglani was sure to have a tough task at hand. “Our turnout wasn’t as high as we wanted,” Manglani says. “It was cold...