News From the Advertising Industry
Date: 20 September 2010
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
News From the Advertising Industry
19 września 2010 roku była niedziela pod znakiem zodiaku ♍. Był to 261 dzień roku. Prezydentem Stanów Zjednoczonych był Barack Obama.
Jeśli urodziłeś się w tym dniu, masz 15 lata. Twoje ostatnie urodziny upłynęły piątek, 19 września 2025 roku, 274 dni temu. Twoje następne urodziny przypadają na dzień sobota, 19 września 2026 roku, w 90 dni. Żyłeś przez 5 753 dni lub około 138 079 godzin lub około 8 284 770 minut lub około 497 086 200 sekund.
Date: 20 September 2010
By Stuart Elliott
Stuart Elliott
News From the Advertising Industry
Date: 19 September 2010
By Eric Pfanner
Eric Pfanner
In theory, European shields are among the most robust in the world, but there are plenty of gray areas.
Date: 20 September 2010
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
A spokesman for Alibaba said the company had “no intention of raising this issue again.”
Date: 20 September 2010
By Natasha Singer
Natasha Singer
A cardiology advisory panel at the Food and Drug Administration reviews a new heart drug. Insurers must adopt some provisions of the health overhaul law starting Thursday.
Date: 19 September 2010
By Ben Shpigel
Ben Shpigel
After a nine-week layoff because of injury, Andy Pettitte allowed one run in six innings, but Mariano Rivera blew the save.
Date: 20 September 2010
By Jeremy W. Peters
Jeremy Peters
A Utah paper’s sympathy for undocumented immigrants has led to a collision with its conservative readers.
Date: 20 September 2010
By Jeremy W. Peters and Brian Stelter
Jeremy Peters
Howard Fineman’s move from a print medium to online news is a sign that The Huffington Post, which has until now heavily relied on young bloggers, is maturing.
Date: 20 September 2010
By Brian Stelter
Brian Stelter
Critics of Christine O’Donnell, the Tea Party-backed Republican Senate candidate in Delaware, are going to the videotape, and there is plenty of it.
Date: 20 September 2010
By David Carr
David Carr
Media and entertainment figures like Glenn Beck and Jon Stewart are increasingly taking off the studio mikes and grabbing the political megaphones.
Date: 20 September 2010
By John Collins Rudolf
John Rudolf
After a White House adviser suggests that “global climate disruption” is a more accurate term, conservative news outlets suggest that politics is at work.