Word: bom
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...negotiation, and the terms of the sale have not yet been reported. The Atlantic Media Company launched 02138, a bi-monthly publication billed as the “Vanity Fair of Harvard,” in September 2006 and has owned it since then. The magazine was founded by Bom S. Kim ’00, who serves as its current president, and Daniel M. Loss ’00 to report on the lives of Harvard alumni. “Highly educated, sophisticated, and wealthy, the Harvard audience is a lucrative niche for any advertiser...
...Both his passion and his patience in his character are what continue to make him so different from so many people I know,” says Bom S. Kim ’00, the founder of 02138 magazine, who lived with Lanhee from 2000 to 2002. “Politics is not just a diversion—[it’s] an integral part of his life...
...Facebook argued that the documents were under court seal and should not have been released. The company’s lawyers notified 02138 on Thursday morning that they had filed the motions, giving the magazine less than two days’ notice to appear in court on Friday. Bom S. Kim ’00—the founder of 02138, a magazine geared toward Harvard alums—said in a phone interview that the reporter who wrote the story about Zuckerberg simply walked into federal court and asked for the documents. “We obtained them legally?...
...Monday and was celebrated with a launch party at New York City’s Core Club. Financed by David Bradley of Atlantic Media Co., which publishes The Atlantic Monthly, 02138 hopes to gain the favor of the 320,000 graduates of Harvard University. The magazine was founded by Bom Kim ’00, who now serves as its president, and Dan Loss ’00. Kim and Loss could not be reached for comment yesterday. As undergraduates, Kim and Loss founded Current, a student-run news magazine now owned by Newsweek. Noting their work with Current, Aaron...
BOMBAY HAS BRIMMED WITH COCKY entrepreneurs since the Portuguese took possession of seven malarial islands off the west Indian coast in 1534 and called them Good Bay, or Bom Baia. Big talk attracts big crowds, and five centuries of migration have made Bombay the largest commercial center between Europe and the Far East. Nobody actually comes from Bombay. Even families who have lived there for generations still refer to an ancestral village 1,000 miles away as home. That sense of a place apart is reinforced by geography and architecture. You cross the sea or an estuary to reach downtown...