Word: zambia
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...group comprises 96 companies, including the world's second largest tea business (Tata Tea); Asia's largest software firm (Tata Consultancy Services); a steel giant (Tata Steel); a worldwide hotel chain (Indian Hotels); and a sprawling vehicle-manufacturing arm (Tata Motors) that includes a bicycle factory in Zambia and a project to make a car selling for $2,200. Since Ratan Tata became chairman in 1991, he has multiplied Tata group revenues seven times to an annual $22 billion. Since 2000, the group's market value has multiplied almost 18 times to $49.1 billion. For the past six years, Tata...
...night of really amazing comedy for Harvard students and we can make a serious effort to raise both money and awareness.” Proceeds from the event will go to Deep Roots, a charity that offers scholarships to underprivileged youths, especially women, in Guatemala, Namibia, Nepal, and Zambia. “We at Harvard take for granted every now and then that we do have an education, a fantastic education,” said HCC Production Chair Samantha H. Fink ’07. “There are people across the world who never get basic schooling...
...went on a college tour, traveling to campuses to create awareness about Darfur. He became a regularly requested keynote speaker, appearing at forums and conferences in cities like Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C. And he continued to serve as a spokesperson for Right to Play and traveled to Zambia in the summer, with Jim Caple and an ESPN camera crew tagging along.“[ESPN was] interested only because Jenny Thompson and I, who were two Olympic athletes, were going to Africa to see this program,” Cheek says. “But if that?...
...books bought on CrimsonReading.org, sources (except The Coop) will donate a five to eight percent referral commission to a charity called Living Compassion, which will use the funds to build a school in Kantolomba, Zambia...
...part of a Western strategic move to drive China out of Sudan" so that the West can get at its oil. The latter view is likely to win out for now. China's foreign policy in Africa is driven by economics. When a local paper in Zambia reported last week that China's ambassador to Lusaka warned that Beijing might cut off diplomatic relations with that country if its voters elected a Taipei-leaning opposition candidate in upcoming presidential elections - an allegation Beijing denied - it seemed obvious China was looking out for its growing mining interests in the copper-rich...