Word: palmers
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Lecturer on the Study of Religion Brian C.W. Palmer ’86 says his course on “Personal Choice and Global Transformation,” dubbed “Idealism 101” by The New York Times, “looks at how individuals can make a difference in a troubled world.” That means your guard should be up. Almost every single one of Palmer’s guests espouses the same model for making a difference in a world where the popularity of people who disagree with them is evidently troubling: hysteria...
Global transformers this spring include, according to Palmer’s description, “renowned historian Howard Zinn,” who is mostly renowned for his socialist screed A People’s History of the United States. MIT professor Noam Chomsky, euphemistically described by Palmer as a “social critic,” compared President Bush’s counter-terrorism efforts to Nazism. Among other idealist guests is “Alfie Kohn, the nation’s leading critic of ‘standardized testing as ethnic cleansing...
...continuously updated, but the recording area hasn't changed since the Beatles made it a rock shrine. Make your own Sgt. Pepper for about $2,580 a day. Tokyo: The ultra-stylish, Marc Newson-designed Syn Studio (pictured) has been used by Janet Jackson and the late Robert Palmer; it can style your sound for $277 an hour. Muscle Shoals: Bob Dylan, Paul Simon and the Rolling Stones have all visited this small town in Alabama to record at Muscle Shoals Sound, where for about $100 an hour "we treat everybody the same," says manager Suzanne Harris. Chicago: Considered...
...Tokyo: The ultra-stylish, Marc Newson-designed Syn Studio has been used by Janet Jackson and the late Robert Palmer; it can style your sound for $277 an hour...
...pointed out that it does not need the attention - half-year profits rose 21% this year. Dubbed "Suburberry" for spreading beyond its niche, the brand may be getting too familiar. Burberry - majority-owned by retailer GUS - needs to broaden its look "and reinforce its price and distribution," says Andy Palmer, account director at London-based ad agency St. Luke's. The company is trying to wean itself off the plaid; less than 15% of its wares now carry it. But will that stop thugs from buying counterfeit items that rip it off? A new floral print planned for next year...