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...Harvard undergraduate made the ranks of Businessweek’s “Best Entrepreneurs under 25?? list yesterday for his role in the creation of a Web site designed to help college students enter the workforce. Allan P. Sahagun ’09 and his brother Aaron Sahagun, a University of California-Berkeley graduate, are the founders of alumwire.com, a “professional network with the mission to effectively consolidate important career resources,” according to the Web site. The site, which is available to invitees and anyone with a college e-mail address...
...Cambridge, and Harvard students will do the same in Asia, Einkauf said. Last year, the visiting students from Harvard met with the Beijing Olympic Committee and were given a private tour of the Taiwanese Parliament. During the upcoming summer program—running from July 17 to August 25??Harvard students will teach English during the day and attend cultural activities at night. Airfare, food and lodging are provided by CCCEF and students incur almost no costs associated with the program. Einkauf said that the program does not offer “a traditional, go-to-the-beach...
...ranked No. 14 in the nation, put the Crimson on the scoreboard with an 8-3 decision against Cesar Grajales. Following sophomore Matt Button’s (149 lbs.) loss in a major decision to Matt Dragon of Penn, Flanagan pinned No. 20 Gene Zannetti in 3:25??his second win of the season against the ranked Penn Quaker. After freshmen Patrick Ziemnik (165 lbs.) and Wesley Walker (174 lbs.) lost by a technical fall and a pin, respectively, Caputo continued his success against Dustin Wiles in a 9-7 decision, having beaten him at Las Vegas earlier...
This is the 35-year-old Agassi’s 20th year in the New York tournament—Blake himself is only 25??and for all the adoration Agassi garners as the game’s elder statesman, there’s no denying that the feel-good-story of this Open belongs to the younger...
...track and field legends. Herb Elliot, Roger Bannister, Harold Abrahams, and Lord Burghley all competed for the British while William Schick Jr., ’05, Aggrey Awori ’65, Wendell Mottley, and Ned Gourdin ’21—who set a world record (25??3”) in the long jump at the 1921 contest—all represented the United States. Roger Bannister—who won the mile in 4:11.9 for Oxford-Cambridge in the 1949 contest—had found memories of representing not only his school...