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Interview: Lorraine Monroe, author of "The Monroe Doctrine," discusses what it takes to be a great boss
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TAVIS SMILEY
NPR Tavis Smiley
08-14-2003
Interview: Lorraine Monroe, author of "The Monroe Doctrine," discusses what it takes to be a great boss
Host: TAVIS SMILEY
Time: 9:00-10:00 AM
TAVIS SMILEY, host:
From NPR in Los Angeles, I'm Tavis Smiley.
Being someone's boss is one thing, but operating as a good manager is quite another. It takes skills. Lorraine Monroe teaches how leadership is the key to excellence and can be learned through adopting and working by basic truths. She's the author of "The Monroe Doctrine: An ABC Guide to What Great Bosses Do." Lorraine joins us from the studios in ...
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Browser. (View).(web sites for architecture)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review
; ...ferocious web-usability guru, Jakob Nielsen, would approve. Ictinus at last - and Callicrates too Some sites we have looked at...from prehistory to now. Back in January 2000 we tried the Ictinus test and failed to find any reference to him or to Greek architecture...
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Browser: Sutherland Lyall nimbly swings through the forests of architectural cyberspace. (View).
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review
; ...as good as the Shorter Oxford Dictionary offers. Before those PADDI librarians write in again, I did try Callicrates and Ictinus. To no effect. There were lots and lots of words based on icon but nothing approaching the Greeks. Not a word about 'metope...
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Letters.
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review
; ...mighty Libeskind. I cannot believe that anyone can understand that message unless they have read the script beforehand. Did Ictinus and Callicrates or Palladio require people to read a textbook before visiting their work? Can it be that both these buildings...
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Sliced toast.(Browser)(Adrian Welch architecutral websites)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review
; ...interiors, dining, unbuilt design, links and a search page. No, since you were going to ask, there's no Callicrates or Ictinus which is just as well since this is about contemporary Edinburgh architecture and not the old stuff. There are a few slow...
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Beauty secrets of the Parthenon.
Magazine article from: World and I
; ...did not think so--my beauty is classic, my artistry classless. Those in charge of my upbringing (the famous Pheidias, Ictinus and Callicrates) took great pains that I grew properly. Even now, I look gorgeously straight and symmetrical only because...
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Athenian glory.
Magazine article from: Calliope
; ...Athens was especially sacred to Athena, the patron of Athens and the goddess of wisdom and war. Together with the architects Ictinus and Callicrates, Phidias created a vision of the Acropolis as a religious and cultural center. Thematically and visually...
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Ancient treasure - Athens rises above the crowd - and smog - as a center of history and culture.
Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald
; ...Doric-style building, made entirely of white pentelic marble and surrounded by freestanding columns. It was designed by Ictinus and Callicrates, with sculptures by Phidias. There is a continuous frieze band inside the colonnade depicting the entire...
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`ARCHITECTURE FOR DUMMIES' IS AN INTELLIGENT READ.(BOOKS)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)
; ...Dummies'' (John Wiley & Sons; 308 pages; $21.99) from one of the world's first known architects, a Greek called Ictinus who designed the Parthenon in the mid-400s B.C., to the modern Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, by America's Frank...
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The Digital Imaging Project.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review
; ...This seems to he a lively site which is acquiring new material rapidly, but it has heavy biases. For instance a query about Ictinus raised no responses: in fact there are as yet no Greek buildings at all. The great majority of buildings are from the US...
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COMPUTING ART.(philosophical questions about nature of art raised by influence of digital technology)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Odyssey
; ...narrowing. The two disciplines have always been fraternal philosophies, formalized by ancient Greeks such as Erathosthenes and Ictinus long ago. Today, computer graphics and other technology are reuniting these philosophies by providing scientific ways to...
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