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Topic: Yale University

  
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If Your Goal Is Success, Don't Consult These Gurus

For years, motivational speakers have celebrated a Yale study on why people succeed. It's powerful! Compelling! Too bad it doesn't exist.READ»

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Yale University Selects Entourage Yearbooks To Create Memorable Graduate Yearbook

Top graduate schools like Columbia and Yale choose Entourage Yearbooks for their school yearbook needs. Entourage Yearbooks is well known for their superior commitment to customer service and high quality yearbooks.READ»

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Can Carbon Credits Slow Global Warming?

Legal limits on greenhouse-gas emissions are coming fast, with a $1 trillion carbon market emerging. At the core: A cadre of young, idealistic Yale forestry grads. But will carbon offsets do anything to slow global warming?READ»

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The Treehugger's Ivory Tower Gets Plantinum LEED

Yale's high-performance Kroon Hall also pulls off the near-impossible feat of looking at home on a campus with legendary Gothic architecture.READ»

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Yale University Panics, Gets Cold Feet About Switch to Gmail

You'd think a college campus would be thrilled about switching from a proprietary email system to Gmail--but Yale has delayed that very switch over a variety of mostly ridiculous fears.READ»

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Editor's Letter: Market Manipulation

When the founding fathers of the New York Stock Exchange (and, yes, they were all men) gathered under a buttonwood tree on Wall Street, in lower Manhattan, 216 years ago, they could not have imagined that their efforts would help ...READ»

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Mistakes Were Made. Now Recover.

Rebounding from a career crisis.READ»

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Almost Genius: Spokeless Bike Wheels

A wave of spokeless bike designs (more renderings than reality) prompts one question: why?READ»

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Notes from the Book Desk

Just received a copy of John C. Bogle's The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism (November, Yale University Press). The Pitch: "There is no one better qualified to tell us about the failures of the American financial system and the ...READ»

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Using Effective Hand Gestures In Public Speaking

Your hand gestures and your body language help enable an audience to better understand your meaning.READ»

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Under Pressure; What a Long, Strange Game It Was; Feng Shui Goes Out the Window

Very Short List delivers one excellent item to your inbox, daily: Books, films, music, web-things, and dispatches on science and technology. Today, check out a riveting documentary, see 100 of the world’s smallest apartments, and learn about living longer.READ»

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ECOWEEK 2010 in the Middle East Brings Leading Architects Together

A cross-border collaboration, ECOWEEK makes "green" its priorityREAD»

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Fast Talk: Stanford University Makes Academic Research Accessible

Lisa Lapin Director of University Communications Stanford University Palo Alto, California Lapin, 45, helped start Futurity, a Web site that aggregates highlights of the latest research from more than 55 universities, from ...READ»

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Collaborating in the Pipeline

This week's Economist has a fascinating article that explores whether or not the open-source software movement can be applied to pharmaceutical drug development. The piece highlights two areas where such collaboration might be ...READ»

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Editor's Letter

Reveling in rivalry.READ»

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Brand Yourself

You should be writing this column. Keith Ferrazi outlines five steps to get you here.READ»

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Does the Kindle Make Good Brain-Food?

Do we learn differently from electronic paper than real books? The New York Times set out to understand the question by polling a group of experts. Does e-paper make it harder to focus? Harder to think and learn? "Initially, any ...READ»

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Does the Kindle Make Good Brain-Food?

Do we learn differently from electronic paper than real books? The New York Times set out to understand the question by polling a group of experts. Does e-paper make it harder to focus? Harder to think and learn? "Initially, any ...READ»

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The True Sustainability Potential of Cloud Computing: Smarter Design

To hear experts tell it, cloud computing is “the new dot-com,” the “biggest shift computing shift in two decades” or even technology era’s “Cambrian explosion.” But it's also a way to address the enormous need for energy ...READ»

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Visualizing the Economic Stimulus

The Washington Post recently created an essential visualization of the stimulus bill before Congress. Granted, it was created before the trimming that just occurred in the House, but it's illuminating nonetheless (see a portion ...READ»

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Stage Fright Hurts your Presentation Skills

Effective public speaking and coaching tips from Sims Wyeth, Executive Speech Trainer.READ»

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Information Design is Cool

Josh Rubin, who practices the erratic and ephemeral art of cool hunting, has a, well, cool post on his blog today about 10x10, an interactive tool that gives an arresting snapshot of the most relevant words and images of the moment. ...READ»

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For Lasting Salary Damage, Get Hired in a Recession

New grads entering the job market have come to expect that during touch economic times -- like the present -- they may have to settle for a lower salary to get a job. But that flexibility may result in income damage that could take ...READ»

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Readers' Choice: No Leading Without Reading

This month, we turn over Readers' Choice to three of our favorite leadership experts for their book recommendations on leadership and change.READ»

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Want To Stay Healthy After Retirement? Keep Working

Since the Great Depression, a commonly held perspective on the good life is that we can all look forward to retirement, when we didn't have to work any more. We would be more relaxed and healthier away from the stresses of work. There's a couple of flaws in that argument. For one thing, retirement, like pensions, was an invention of the depression, intended to deal with the problem of unemployment. Prior to the depression the concept of retirement didn't exist. And for the most part, people are viewing retirement in a very different way today. AARP in the U.S., report from a survey done in 2008 that 70% of workers plan to continue working past their retirement age.Now recent research questions the assumption that not working anymore will improve your health. READ»