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Where did this leave the Cincy crew? With 75% of the clients--if they could keep them--but no identity at all. "As president of Tom Peters Co.," says Gregg Thompson, Bluepoint's president, "I could walk into any executive office and be welcomed." On the other hand, prospects could feel threatened by Peters' destroy-to-create anthem and confused by his welter of enthusiasms...
Aside from the proudly displayed photo of herself as a toddler in a Best & Co. coat, Gregg Renfrew's New York City office isn't what one might expect for the CEO of a company that prides itself on traditional Fair Isle sweaters and wool toggle coats. Think modern orange Eames chairs and a big red lacquer table. Renfrew, 38, officially joined Best & Co. in January (she had previously done consulting work there), but has already taken steps to solidify its status as the top tier of the fast-growing high-end children's-wear business...
...latest candidate? Television. Author Gregg Easterbrook stirred the blogosphere last week with an article on Slate provocatively titled "TV Really Might Cause Autism." The piece cited an as yet unpublished study from Cornell University, although not from its medical school. Economist Michael Waldman, of Cornell's Johnson Graduate School of Management, got to thinking that TV watching--already vaguely associated with ADHD--just might be the culprit that tips vulnerable toddlers into autism. That there was no medical research to support the idea didn't faze him. Nor was he deterred by the fact that there are no reliable large...
...presented Friday at a health economics conference in Cambridge, Mass., is constructed from an analysis of reported autism cases, cable TV subscription data and weather reports. Yes, weather reports. And yet, it all makes some kind of sense in the realm of statistics. And it makes sense to author Gregg Easterbrook, who stirred the blogosphere this week with an article about the study on Slate, provocatively (and perhaps irresponsibly) titled "TV Really Might Cause Autism...
...begin looking for a lab to work part time in for course credit. Don’t limit yourself to Mallinckrodt Hall, either: opportunities abound in other chemistry-related departments, at the technical school down Mass. Ave., and at the Medical School. The department’s undergrad advisor, Gregg Tucci, can help you match your interests to a professor, but do your own research, too. Make sure you talk to other undergrads or grad students in the lab try to get a sense of what the work atmosphere is like, because some labs—particularly Prof. David...