| Old Articles: <Older 1951-1960 Newer> |
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CRM January 1, 2006 Colin Beasty |
Required Reading: Why Customers Do What They Do An interview with Marshal Cohen, one of the world's foremost authorities on consumer behavior, about his new book Why Customers Do What They Do.  |
Financial Planning January 1, 2006 Marshall Eckblad |
Bookshelf Rick Ferri's new book All About Asset Allocation shows investors how asset allocation and rebalancing into fixed asset classes can render consistent long-term results.  |
Geotimes January 2006 Alan Cutler |
Time Out of Mind The author's biography of 17th-century geologist Nicolaus Steno makes it clear that the age of Earth is not a cold, technical fact, but an idea woven through science and through modern culture -- and idea that people will always struggle to accept.  |
Geotimes January 2006 Philip J. Curie |
Fine-Feathered Adventures in China Unearthing the Dragon: The Great Feathered Dinosaur Discovery by Mark Norell is as fine a dinosaur book as it is good travel literature.  |
Energize January 2006 Susan J. Ellis |
The Implications of History Volunteering lessons gleaned from the newest edition of By the People: A History of Americans as Volunteers.  |
Seasoned Cooking January 2006 Ronda L. Carnicelli |
The South Beach Diet Quick & Easy Cookbook South Beach Diet author Arthur Agatston is back -- with a 200-recipe cookbook that focuses on quick and easy recipes.  |
BusinessWeek January 9, 2006 Steve Hamm |
Keep Making It New "Dealing with Darwin: How Great Companies Innovate at Every Phase of Their Evolution" is a often down-to-earth look at how companies must innovate continuously.  |
BusinessWeek January 9, 2006 |
The BusinessWeek Best-Seller List Top-selling business books include The World is Flat, Freakonomics, and Getting Things Done.  |
Reason January 2006 Kerry Howley |
I, T-Shirt The Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy: An Economist Examines the Markets, Power, and Politics of World Trade, by Pietra Rivoli posits that to see what we are sacrificing by embracing protectionism while preaching free markets, Americans need look no further than their closets.  |
Scientific American January 2006 George Johnson |
Getting a Rational Grip on Religion Daniel C. Dennett hopes that his book Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon will end the conviction that details based in religion are off-limits to scientific inquiry.  |
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