Word: brandsã
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...Kimberly-Clark board member Robert W. Decherd ’73 is not a target of the activists, said Tyga J. Hunter, a Greenpeace volunteer. According to a report commissioned by Greenpeace, Kimberly-Clarke relies on recycled sources for just 19 percent of its wood pulp. Common Kimberly-Clarke brands??such as Kleenex, Viva, Scott, and Cottonelle—come from 100 percent non-recycled sources, according to the report. Greenpeace activist Hunter said that other companies—including Staples and CVS—use much larger shares of post-consumer wood pulp in manufacturing their products...
Wexner, the billionaire who founded Limited Brands??whose empire now includes Victoria’s Secret, Bath & Body Works and Express—is also a longtime Harvard benefactor...
...time. 10 o’clock is a tad on the early side, too,” he explains…Melissa T. Epstein ’05 thinks Adams dining hall interhouse regulations are too strict…Gerald C. Hoover ’03 has changed toothpaste brands?...
...biting narrative that begins with a cockfight ends with a saturation of whiny phrases of adulation at gravesite. Brands?? attempt to make Franklin into a believable, fallible man dies once America is born. Lost is Franklin the pragmatist and born is the Franklin of elementary school boredom, a man worthy of reverence because he is dead, white and a founding father...
...Franklin’s mysterious early life fades into the Franklin we know—the politician and statesman of Early America—Brands?? narrative becomes stale and overdrawn. The last third of Franklin’s life is dry and stuffy, just like the summer chambers of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia...