Word: career
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...started down this road as a result of my dad, who is in the pharmaceutical industry,” Ranganathan continued. “I’ve always been interested in health care, and I thought briefly about whether I wanted to be a career academic, but I found that it wasn’t a good fit for me.” Ranganathan expressed confidence that he would remain in the health care industry following business school. “I like the small, start-up, entrepreneurial environment, and my inclination is towards that direction, either...
...bottom line but to also be proud of the name you made for yourself through a reputation in the business community for integrity.”That lesson stayed with Grossman even after his father, who owned a packaging distribution company, died early in Grossman’s business career.“I slowly began to realize that I could stay in my business or potentially see my skills transferred to achieving a different bottom line,” Grossman said. “And I began to wonder if I could use my managerial and organizational leadership skills...
...drive and carried the ball 16 times for 49 yards, but it was junior Cheng Ho who, while playing like he had a chip on his shoulder, made every carry count. The junior rushed the ball 20 times for 108 yards, including a 51-yard scamper—his career long—that set up the Crimson’s only score of the second half. “He’s such an unbelievable competitor, and he’s really hard on himself at times,” Murphy said. “He?...
...that included résumé reviews, mock interviews, lectures, panel discussions on a wide range of topics such as work-life balance, gender dynamics in the workplace, and the economy’s impact on the job search. One theme that emerged from the conference was creating a career that fits one’s passions. In talking about her own experience, Brown said that she never wanted to work in corporate American and never went to business school. “Everything I learned, I learned on the job,” she said. Each participant attended...
...fellows Friday for a day-long symposium addressing what is expected be another critical issue for the next administration: immigration. This year’s fellows—who will spend the academic year studying at Harvard as part of the nation’s oldest mid-career fellowship for journalists—attended three different panel discussions of academic and journalistic luminaries, including Patrick J. McDonnell of the Los Angeles Times, who addressed immigration law, and Nina Bernstein of The New York Times, who focused on immigration’s future. “It?...