Word: lites
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Foundations of Physical Chemistry,” sounds like it might satisfy the requirement much more easily than Chem 161, “Statistical Thermodynamics,” don’t swoon for the lower course number. Chem 161 is something of a physics-lite course, replete with a handful of physics concentrators. Give it a chance if you can hack a few Taylor expansions, or just appreciate the easy-to-follow full-color lecture handouts. The biological applications will at least keep your ears up, and Prof. Xioawei Zhuang is one of the perkier members of the department...
...Nature of Light and Matter” is most likely to entice you to actually show up. Each lecture features a fun demonstration, usually concerning how light reacts under different circumstances. A-35’s science component is essentially “Physics-lite,” though if you haven’t taken physics before you will have significant catch-up work to do. The course goes quite in-depth at seemingly random times, and the weekly problem set will keep you up to speed but could cramp your style. Science A-50, “Invisible...
...successful French fashion retail chain. Eight years later, eager to do more than ready-to-wear, he started BCBG. "I decided to combine my two paths and challenge the leadership of the designer of the moment," says Azria. "When I entered the market, I was rejected because the lite say that you have to sell things at a certain price point. My position was that the consumer is smarter than that. Who cares...
...always have to be right, but you have to be focused on the customers' needs. We do a lot of marketing research." All of which has produced three "customer profiles": the connoisseur, a sophisticated woman with a discriminating and chic sense of style; the socialite, the enviable lite fluent in the latest must-have culture; and the visionary, an original and unprecedented trendsetter with inspirational expressions of fashion. Connoisseurs make up about 50% of BCBG's clientele, whereas visionaries are a "very little" slice of the pie and socialites fall somewhere in between. "Customers shop by taste level...
...sins than celebrated as God's children. "Who would want to get in on something where you're miserable, poor, broke and ugly and you just have to muddle through until you get to heaven?" asks Joyce Meyer, a popular television preacher and author often lumped in the Prosperity Lite camp. "I believe God wants to give us nice things." If nothing else, Meyer and other new-breed preachers broach a neglected topic that should really be a staple of Sunday messages: Does God want you to be rich...