Word: walthams
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...Felipe is a master,” Brush said. Felipe Herrera came to America from Mexico and began working at Taqueria Mexico in Waltham. He then worked at Boca Grande, a local chain started by a Japanese brother-and-sister duo. When infighting led one sibling to leave Boca Grande, Herrera left with him to be the first cook at Anna’s Taqueria—a branch of which can be found in Porter Square. Herrera left Anna’s five years ago to start his own taqueria with Brush...
...brought two different musical groups of which he was a member to play at House events, including a square dance. Livingston describes Ketelhohn as enthusiastic about “old-timey and bluegrass music.” As a guitarist, he played with various local bands in the Waltham area despite the fact that he could not read music, according to Livingston. Adam J. Benitez ’07, a government concentrator who worked in the House office with Ketelhohn, also recalls the many passions he brought to Cabot. “He took a lot of pleasure in simple...
Both of Harvard’s fencing teams continued their early season success, defeating the Brandeis Judges on the road in Waltham, Mass. The women’s team (5-1) won easily by a score of 22-5, while the men’s team (5-0) took its match, 19-8. The women claimed victory across the board, winning the epee, foil, and saber. They were led by junior saber fencer Alexa Weingarden, who won all three of her bouts and was only touched twice the entire match. Crimson coach Peter Brand referred to Weingarden...
...that could move researchers closer to a cure for Alzheimer’s disease. Professor of Neurology Rudolph E. Tanzi has thus far been awarded about one-third of the $3 million that has been raised by the Cure Alzheimer’s Fund, a charity based in nearby Waltham. The fund’s leaders believe that targeted research, particularly in the area of genetic mapping, will be more effective in finding a cure than more traditional, broader types of research. Genetic mapping is the process by which researchers determine which genes are responsible for putting people at risk...
Last spring, Polaroid donated decades of company archives to the Harvard Business School’s Baker Library. A special library-moving company hauled 4,000 linear feet (that’s about three-quarters of a mile) of documents, photos, cameras, and sunglasses from Waltham, Mass., to their new home in the newly renovated library, says Tim Mahoney, manuscripts librarian at the Baker Library...