THE KEY TO SUCCESS MIGHT BE UNDER YOUR COCKTAIL GLASSThe latest publishing minitrend: books that teach the art of problem-solving. On napkins. Penguin Group (USA)'s Portfolio has published The Back of the Napkin napkin See Sanitary napkin. : Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures, by management consultant Dan Roam. It's a right-brain book that urges people to imagine their way out of business challenges by drawing--everything from pie charts to stick figures. Then there's Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research FacilitiesPress' Guesstimation: Solving the World's Problems on the Back of a Cocktail Napkin, by physicist Lawrence Weinstein and mathematician John Adam There have been several notable people called John Adam:
The university was recently named one of the best colleges in the Southeast by The Princeton Review. , in Norfolk, Va. It's a left-brain book that helps you approximate answers to the types of questions actually asked in some job interviews today. (Example: "How many golf balls would it take to circle the Earth at the equator?")
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