Word: clubbings
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APRIL 1996 The conservative sports and media mogul--he controls Italy's most successful soccer club and some of its largest television stations--runs for re-election. He loses...
Nearly 750 people came to Harvard Business School on Saturday to participate in the 10th annual Latin American Conference, hosted by the school’s Club Latinoamericano. The event, which was entitled “New Horizons for Opportunities,” gave audience members the chance to hear from Latin America’s top economic and business leaders through a series of keynote speeches and panels on topics including private equity, health care, and energy. The conference opened with a keynote session, moderated by Business School Senior Lecturer in Business Administration Michael Chu, which discussed...
...world’s fastest growing markets will take center stage this Saturday as Harvard Business School hosts its 10th annual Latin American Conference. The conference, hosted by the Club Latinoamericano at the Business School, will feature eight panel discussions with elite Latin American business leaders. The panels will focus on Latin America’s presence in fields like energy, real estate, and private equity, while also addressing the current macroeconomic status of the region. Alejandro Rocha, an MBA candidate and one of two co-chairs for the conference, cited a number of reasons for hosting the event, including...
...Brien says that stepping is more than just a hobby. After competitions, he says, “I always come away with a renewed feeling of how much I love dancing.” To spread their love for dancing, the two started a club at Harvard for new fans and experts alike. Both believe that dancing will remain a significant, even professional, part of their lives. Though she is considering studying the sciences at Harvard, O’Brien plans to continue dancing and eventually get a teacher’s license. Fallon hopes to follow a similar path...
...insider that they preferred Tata over rival bids from private equity firms because Tata understands the heritage of Jag and the motoring culture that produced it. "Buying this kind of thing builds a kind of permanent bridge between us," says Lt. Gen. M.R. Kochhar, president of the Delhi Gymkhana Club, a repository of colonial-era rules and British class-system etiquette in the heart of the Indian capital. "Both of us love the products, or at least the history of the products...