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...Some seniors found the job market this year particularly difficult to navigate. Philip R. Goldfarb ’08 said he competed against recently laid off workers in his job search, and he still does not have employment lined...

Author: By Adam M. Guren and Natalie I. Sherman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Many ’08 grads head for finance and consulting | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...Goldfarb, a history and literature concentrator, plans to work for a year before applying to a graduate program in English...

Author: By Adam M. Guren and Natalie I. Sherman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Many ’08 grads head for finance and consulting | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...majority of seniors depart Harvard with positive impressions of their undergraduate experience, some say that they wouldn’t mind staying longer. “I could do another 12 to 16 years here,” Philip R. Goldfarb ’08 said. “I can’t imagine anywhere else I’d be a better academic or have a better social experience...

Author: By Ying Wang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Seniors satisfied overall; extracurriculars get high marks | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

...nearby Berlin. There he meets Jozef de Heer, an Auschwitz survivor who persuades Andermans to write down his life story, a gripping tale of escape and betrayal in the wartime German capital. Like nearly everyone in the book, De Heer isn't what he seems. Neither is Paul Goldfarb, a Nobel-prizewinning physicist who fled Nazi Germany to help develop the atom bomb at Los Alamos and is now back at Potsdam. Or Donatella, a sexy Italian physicist who comes on to Andermans even as she attains fusion with Goldfarb. Between trysts, she and the Nobelist are pursuing a subatomic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hot Fusion: Omega Minor | 12/5/2007 | See Source »

...Both Lugovoi and Kovtun deny any involvement in the murder. In April, Lugovoi even suggested they might even apply for assistance from the Litvinenko Justice Foundation, established by Marina Litvinenko, family friend Alex Goldfarb and the exiled businessman Boris Berezovsky, who supplied $1 million in start-up funds. The foundation aims to keep up the pressure for Litvinenko's killers to be brought to justice and to help seek compensation for the 200-odd people who came into contact with the polonium 210 . "We have borne considerable financial loss due to medical testing, which I am still undergoing," said Lugovoi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tangling Over a Russian Spy's Murder | 5/22/2007 | See Source »

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