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Knowledge@Wharton May 7, 2003 |
What Can Risk Management Do for You, Me and Argentina? Irrational Exuberance author and Yale economist Robert Shiller is back with another book, this time cautioning investors and non-investors to think long and hard about the broader risks they face in life. The New Financial Order is a bold plea.  |
Reason May 2003 Julian Sanchez |
The Mystery of Mary Rosh How a new form of journalism investigated a gun research riddle  |
Reason May 2003 Matt Welch |
Velvet President Why Vaclav Havel is our era's George Orwell and more.  |
Reason May 2003 Leigh Jenco |
Property Wrongs Can property exist without the state? That question is posed in The Myth of Ownership: Taxes and Justice, by Thomas Nagel and Liam Murphy.  |
Reason May 2003 Tim Cavanaugh |
Standard Issue: The dot-com tragedy denied A review of Starving to Death on $200 Million: The Short, Absurd Life of The Industry Standard, by James Ledbetter  |
CRM May 1, 2003 Ginger Conlon |
Required Reading The Sales and Marketing Experience Challenge: Changing How the Game is Played is overflowing with insights from leaders in numerous industries. Over the past year the authors interviewed hundreds of sales and marketing executives about what they're doing to survive and thrive now.  |
CRM May 2003 Frederick Newell |
Who's the Boss? In Why CRM Doesn't Work: How to Win by Letting Customers Manage the Relationship, the author reminds us who should really be in charge. An excerpt.  |
ONLINE May/Jun 2003 |
Hardcopy Recommended Reading on the Technical Aspects of Librarianship  |
Reason April 2003 Brian Doherty |
Obscene Prosecution It is easy to forget, but you can still be convicted for selling a periodical to an adult in the U.S. A Dallas comic book retailer was found guilty in August 2000 of distributing obscene material after selling a copy of Demon Beast Invasion: The Fallen #2 to an undercover cop.  |
Reason April 2003 Sara Rimensnyder |
Disturbed Minds Joe Bob Briggs, a.k.a. John Bloom, is the nation's premier reviewer of B movies and exploitation cinema -- the blood-soaked, sex-laden fare that turns off genteel critics while arousing moralizing politicians.  |
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