Word: directs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...today most upscale outlets employ a small cadre of image consultants. Macy's even offers them in the children's section. Alternatively called style advisers or wardrobe consultants, personal shoppers go to a client's home and offer advice on what to keep and what to toss. They gently direct buyers toward the most hip-slimming trousers. What makes Rich's job unique?besides the fact that a disproportionate number of his subjects are thin and gorgeous?is that the looks his clients choose often end up splashed on the pages of magazines...
Soon after the November press release announcing the Harvard gift, New York Congressman Anthony D. Weiner wrote a letter to University President Lawrence H. Summers insisting the prince had direct ties to terrorism by virtue of his membership in a government that preaches reactionary Islam. “It seems like this money has Jewish blood on it” Harvard Students for Israel President Amy M. Zelcer ’07 told The Crimson in December...
Several professors said they find accusations against the prince ludicrous. Professor of Arabic William E. Granara explains that the Saudi royal family comprises thousands of individuals, and that while Alwaleed’s distant relatives may have direct ties to the PLO or even terrorism, they are simply that: distant. “Are we guilty by association?” says Granara.“Is every American responsible for what happens at Abu-Gharib...
...Allen] Counter,” Farid says. No community advisory was sent out by the administration, and for a couple of days after the incident, Farid wore hoodies to hide the head scarf, or hijab, she wears. Although recent attacks against Muslims on the Harvard campus have not been directly perpetrated by students, Islamophobia exists in less overt forms at Harvard. Many Muslim students have experienced moments when they said they have felt surprised or offended by others’ assumptions about followers of Islam. A DOUBLE STANDARDA few months after Farid’s encounter, The Harvard Salient published...
...India would allow delegates to understand the unique challenges that Indian businesses face and consider how India’s growing economy and affluence will play out on the international stage. The forum in Mumbai will feature six different panels—entrepreneurship, brand building, pharmaceuticals, outsourcing, foreign direct investment, elite education and the competition for talent—and will also feature four case studies and a recruiting fair. Around 400 students are expected to attend, organizers say. This year’s HCABF will be held in conjunction with students from the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad...