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'''<u>''<span style="font-size:large;"></span>''</u>'''
'''<u>''<span style="font-size:large;">Stanford Undergraduates:</span>''</u>'''
'''<u>''<span style="font-size: large;">Stanford Graduate School of Business:</span>''</u>'''
*'''<span style="font-size:medium;">GSB Entrepreneur Club</span>'''*'''<span style="font-size:medium;"><span style="font-size:small;"></span></span>'''The GSB Entrepreneur Club is one of the oldest student-run entrepreneur's clubs in the nation. The current incarnation of the club has its roots in the late 1970s, when many of the individual student initiatives around small businesses and entrepreneurialism coalesced into a single student-led club. In 1993, the e-club under the leadership of Ken Hawk sponsored the first E-Conference on Entrepreneurship, with 150 people attending the day-long event. The conference has since grown to be the largest annual conference dedicated to entrepreneurship in the world. Today the Entrepreneur Club is the most active student-run club within the GSB community. We have over 300 members and last year the club organized more than 50 events for over 1,100 attendants. The goal of the current GSB Entrepreneur Club is to stimulate interest in entrepreneurialism among GSB students and other members of the Stanford community. Its members are passionate about building sustainable ventures and maximizing success in ventures. The club promotes an entrepreneurial mind-set both as a founder or manager of a start-up and in the roles of investor, advisor, or corporate partner. '''<span style="font-size:medium;">Stanford Institute for Innovation in Developing Economies</span>'''*'''<span style="font-size:medium;"><span style="font-size:small;"></span></span>'''SEED was formed to bridge a critical gap in global efforts to address prosperity around the world. Despite impressive progress achieved through the Millennial Development Goals, it is estimated that by 2015, there will still be more than 1 billion people on earth living in poverty. SEED's ambitious goal is to transform the lives of people living in poverty on a massive scale. Its approach is to leverage Stanford's resources and culture of entrepreneurship and innovation and work with local and global thought leaders and practitioners to catalyze positive change that will reach all citizens of a given region. The SEED mission is to stimulate the creation of economic opportunities through innovation, entrepreneurship, and the growth of businesses that change the lives of people who live in poverty around the world. '''<span style="font-size:medium;">Stanford Program on Regions of Innovation and Entrepreneurship</span>''' The Stanford Program on Regions of Innovation and Entrepreneurship (SPRIE) is dedicated to the understanding and practice of the nexus of innovation and entrepreneurship in the leading regions around the world. Current research focuses on Silicon Valley and high technology regions across Asia, including in China, India, Japan, Korea, Singapore and Taiwan. SPRIE fulfilles its mission through interdisciplinary and international collaborative research, seminars and conferences, publications and briefings for industry and government leaders.