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Thursday, 12 August 2010 11:00 |
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London Business School is celebrating the graduation of the Full-time MBA class today. Students are joined on campus by friends and family from all over the world to reflect on their achievements from the last 15-21 months. Staff and faculty... Readmore... London Business School |
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Sunday, 04 July 2010 11:00 |

Hi all. My internship in Nepal was a great experience. Before anything, I would like to encourage you to travel there. It is a beautiful country with very nice people and it is also very safe. You find there the highest mountains on Earth in the North of the country but also tropical jungles in the South with a very rich variety of fauna, elephants, rhinos, tigers... You can trek the Annapurnas, white river raft amazing rivers, cycle the most remotes valleys, visit beautiful temples and cities, play golf in extraordinary golf courses, stay in luxury hotels or in tents in the mountains and overall enjoy peaceful people and culture. The political situation of the country is slowly improving or at least is not getting worse and this is starting to attract foreign investment. My project as said before was related to water resources and hydro energy. Nepal has a huge hydro energy capacity of at least 40,000 MW but has only 700 MW installed and has blackouts of up to 16 hours in Kathmandu. The Government is trying to find the best way to develop this energy to at least guaranty a good supply to the country and potentially export electricity to India. And my job there was preparing some economic and financial models and write some final recommendations on how the country could develop this hydro energy in the most efficient way. I have to say that this is the project I have enjoyed the most in my entire professional career. Tomorrow I am starting my second internship, in banking in New York and I am very excited. I am a "career switcher" which means that I am trying to switch from construction to banking and honestly, I would not have been able to have this opportunity unless I had come to Tuck. Have a great summer!
Readmore... Tuck Business School |
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Holiday Schedule – Independence Day Weekend 2010 |
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Sunday, 04 July 2010 11:00 |
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Please be aware that the MBA Admissions & Financial Aid Office will close at 2:00 PM (EST) on Friday July 02 2010 for the July 4, Independence Day holiday weekend. The office will reopen at 8:30 AM (EST) on Tuesday July 06, 2010.
Best Regards,
-The Wharton MBA Admissions & Financial Aid Team  Readmore... Wharton Business School |
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Sunday, 04 July 2010 11:00 |

Hope you are having a great summer. Time flies and our first year at Tuck is over. Spring term has been wonderful in Hanover. After the cold winter, spring brings life again to town and Tuck and Dartmouth students do all kind of outdoor activities. We had our final projects presentations last week and after a brief celebration I took a flight towards my first destination this summer, Nepal, where I am going to be working in a project related to hydro energy in the country. Despite Nepal has one of the largest potential hydropower capacities of the World, only 25% of the population is connected to the electric grid and blackouts are common everywhere in the country. Decades of internal conflicts and political instability have prevented Nepal to develop their hydropower capacity. Two years ago and after several years of civil war, a peaceful process ended up in the approval by all the parties of an interim Constitution. This Constitution was drafted by Jenik Radon, a professor at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs who has worked in several developing countries. Professor Radon is currently advising the Nepal Government in how to develop their hydro power capacity in a sustainable way and considering environment and local communities one of the priorities. Professor Radon posted an Internship offer back in February in Tuckstreams, the internal website where job offers are posted for Tuck students. Although I had already secured my “standard internship” in banking in New York for ten weeks, I thought that spending the rest of the summer in Nepal working in this project would be very interesting. I contacted Jenik and things worked out. My background of Civil Engineering and experience in Project Finance helped to get the position and again, studying at Tuck gave me a unique opportunity to work in something that one year ago I could not imagine I would be involved. I arrived to Kathmandu on Tuesday after a two days trip from Tuck. Once here I was overwhelmed with the amount of information I had to obtain and the challenging project to be done only in four weeks. I recalled one of the strategy frameworks we learned with professor Finkelstein this year to organize our job (Yellowtail case, I am sure all Tuck alumni remember this case…). This framework helps to organize your tasks, classifying them in important vs non important and urgent vs non urgent and I moved forward. This week I have been gathering information and interviewing with different people, from Asian Development Bank workers to lawyers and journalists. Next week the Minister of Energy will receive me and I will probably visit a water project near Kathmandu. After several days of hard work I look forward to the weekend and getting myself lost in the narrow streets of this amazing city. I will keep you posted of my activities here. Readmore... Tuck Business School |
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Join a coffee chat in your city! |
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Sunday, 04 July 2010 11:00 |
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We would like to invite you to join us for a current student meet-and-greet in one of 50 cities internationally.
In the coming weeks current MBA students will be returning home and have arranged informal meet-and-greets to share their experiences at Wharton and life in Philadelphia with interested prospective students.
Register today for a meet-and-greet near you (please click on the Coffee Chats tab at the top). Please note that additional dates will be added shortly.
The students look forward to meeting you!
Best Regards,
The Wharton MBA Admissions and Financial Aid Team  Readmore... Wharton Business School |
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