Word: founds
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Boston Police Department helps to make this motorized dream come true with their "public auction," a once-a-month showcase showdown for leftover goods found in the tow lot. Buyer beware: Vehicles come "as is," and may lack keys, registration information or warranty papers: All bidders must be over the age of 18 with proper identification and all purchases must be removed within two days. Cash only...
...broadcast you certainly want people listening, so you have to keep that in mind without compromising your own integrity. You definitely want to play what you love, and hopefully, if you're lucky, other people will like what you're playing and everything works out. I think I've found that formula well enough to have some success...
...problem I have found at Harvard is that, unlike Sherri, Harvard students focus on the what instead of the who. Not only are we eager to know if someone plays lacrosse, acts in the Ex or is a Fox man, we thrive on knowing. Knowing if someone sports a Crimson Key T-shirt or sings with the sexiness of an Opportune, we can easily group them into superficial categories of cool or uncool. Are they worthy of a nod, a quick hello or an invite to the next HPC cocktail party? The coolness factor is everywhere, and I am guilty...
...Shemmer lived in New York growing up, but was born in Tel Aviv--there's an Israeli flag in his bedroom and a military uniform in his closet. A psychology major at Penn, his only real business experience in college came almost by chance: one summer he found a job at an Israeli Internet start-up, as a secretary, but the strapped company promoted him on the second day. Shemmer's job at Broadview was equally unplanned. Unlike better-known investment banks, Broadview limits its business to the high-tech sector--Internet start-ups, Web-based companies, computer firms. Broadview...
...promotion, go to a venture capital firm, to private industry, or to business school. Industry is the most popular choice, especially with 25-year-old Internet millionaires cropping up everywhere--some analysts even leave early for Silicon Valley. And more and more graduates are skipping finance altogether to found their own Internet companies; some college students try to found start-ups while taking semesters...