Word: wynn
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Maybe it makes perfect sense that Steve Wynn would turn into the Mister Rogers of Las Vegas. Sitting in his new hotel in a red V-neck sweater and gray wool pants, Wynn, 63--famous for yelling at employees, taking up steer roping and accidentally shooting off his index finger in his office--is talking about building neighborhoods in his latest land of make-believe. Explaining that his hotel will be a mellow retreat, without the glitz and campy themes that have made him such a sensation in the past, Wynn breaks into a rendition of Bali Ha'ifrom South...
...public relations chair, M. Elysia Baker ’07 as public service chair, Chaz M. Beasley ’08 as political action chair, Christina S. Wells ’08 as publications chair, Lori M. Adelman ’08 as alumni representative, and Jennifer N. Wynn ’06 as the incoming senior representative...
U.F.C.W. President William Wynn says that the ads mark the first time that a union has used a television character to help sell its views. Frustrated by his organization's inability to reach the public, Wynn thought that the humorous character of Mama would attract the right audience and be able to simplify complex issues. "We're going to go where the public is," says Wynn, "and that's in front of the television set. Every one can relate to Mama." MERGERS Two Healthy Get-Togethers...
Student organizer Jennifer N. Wynn ’06 said she hoped that the Harvard Corporation would see that “the student body has surpassed all racial, ethnic and special interest divisions to make the genocide in Darfur a humanitarian issue with which we want Harvard to be connected only in a constructive...
Your story about the exhibition of Ralph Lauren's vintage autos [Feb. 28] referred to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts' loan of 21 Monets to "the gallery at Steve Wynn's Bellagio hotel and casino in Las Vegas." You said Wynn paid the museum a "reported $1 million" in exchange for the loan of the Monets. Wynn sold the Bellagio in 2000 and today has no connection to it or to the Monet exhibition, a collaboration between our gallery and the Boston Museum that required significant investment of time and money on both parts...