Word: businessweekã
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...Sanford Kreisberg, an independent admissions consultant who runs a blog about business school admissions on BusinessWeek??s web site, says that “experience, for better or for worse, is pretty overrated...
...vote on a second no-confidence motion. Summers lost the first 218-185. An outspoken critic of Summers and the sponsor of the second no-confidence vote, Weary Professor of German and Comparative Literature Judith L. Ryan, wrote in an e-mail that she was not surprised by BusinessWeek??s ranking. “Leadership, in the sense of being persuasive enough to motivate others to get ‘on board,’” wrote Ryan, “requires patience and a good understanding of human psychology.” While Summers...
...09’s common room don’t exactly scream “entrepreneur.” But Sahagun, with art projects and websites, loves to be creative. Sahagun and his brother Aaron, a 2006 University of California-Berkeley grad, recently earned a spot on BusinessWeek??s list of the 25 Best Entrepreneurs Under 25 for their social networking site, Alumwire.com. The brothers developed the site, which connects college students and recent graduates with job opportunities, as a response to their own need for career guidance. And while Sahagun, a Visual and Environmental Studies concentrator, enjoys...
...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...
...Pajcin organized a “widespread and brazen international scheme of serial insider trading...resulting in at least $6.7 million of illicit gains.” The complaint says that Plotkin and Pajcin paid forklift operator Nickolaus Shuster a flat fee for him to relay the contents of BusinessWeek??s “Inside Wall Street” column. Shuster had access to advance copies of BusinessWeek because he worked at a Wisconsin plant where the weekly magazine is printed. The analysts helped Shuster get that job, acting as professional references in his application to the printing...