Word: aurel
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...editioned prints and original artworks from its authors” are also available for sale. There is also TV Music, a page that, like the art pages, solicit amateur work as well as work by art star photographer Ryan McGinely and up-and-comer Aurel Schmidt. Most of the work received ends up on one TV subdivision or another. This strange approach is why some have termed the site an “editorial project” or “community publication.” It is clear that tinyvices represents a mentality that is finding traction...
...broadcast in the same way. Eight close-up pictures, framed in lurid yellow appear on the screen, one after the other. As they go by, the anchorman says in an understated voice, "Tonight the French hostages, including the members of the Antenne 2 news team--Philippe Rochot, Georges Hansen, Aurel Cornea, Jean-Louis Normandin--have still not been released." Only then does the news begin...
...quick, to diversify holdings, eliminate competition, or even to outsource tasks such as research and development. Then the bubble burst, stock prices plummeted and many firms - and their shareholders - saw their merged dreams vanish. "People bought air," says Jean-No?l Vieille, equity research director at the French broker Aurel Leven. Companies slammed on the merger brakes - which helped shut down an already dragging global economy. Now a new flurry of eye-catching deals is pointing to a recovery. In the U.S., the software company Oracle has launched a $6.3 billion hostile bid for rival PeopleSoft. In Europe, BP and Russia...
...characteristic blast, Aurel Braun and Richard Day, two respected political scientists at the University of Toronto's Center for Russian and East European Studies, recently called Gorbachev a loser who has been "mishandling reforms and desperately trying to cling to power." Variations on that theme, usually delivered more in sorrow than in anger, are gaining currency. A veteran of the U.S. intelligence community last week said Gorbachev's "blunders are plunging Russia into a new Time of Troubles." That is an ominous reference to nearly a decade of Kremlin intrigue, civil unrest and international conflict in the 17th century...
...this landscape of unremitting horror, one bright spot marked the holiday season. As darkness fell on another grim Christmas Eve in West Beirut, a black Mercedes cruised through the seaside district of Ramlet al Baida and halted 200 yards from the Beau Rivage Hotel. Out stepped French TV Journalist Aurel Cornea, 54, who had been kidnaped 9 1/2 months earlier -- along with three colleagues -- by Shi'ite terrorists of the pro-Iranian Revolutionary Justice Organization. As his captors sped off, the dazed sound technician stumbled to the hotel, where French diplomats were waiting...