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...three speakers—who currently work at advertising companies Arnold Worldwide and Leo Burnett—told students some of their strategies for local ad campaigns...

Author: By Eda Pepi, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Advertising Experts Share Secrets | 10/16/2002 | See Source »

...Orange-sponsored Arrows is likely to follow suit, Formula One has to bite the bullet, now. Archive: Schumy the Great THE BOURSE Insolvency, She Wrote Deutsche Bank paid €667 million for a 40.3% share in Axel Springer, Europe's top publisher, once owned by fallen media baron Leo Kirch. The bank then sold 10.4% of the stake to Friede Springer, giving her control. Turning Each Other On The U.K.'s two largest commercial broadcasters, Carlton and Granada, agreed on merger plans to create a new company worth over $4 billion. The deal will face strict regulatory scrutiny. There...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Putin Has the U.N. over a Barrel | 10/13/2002 | See Source »

...four different silly creation myths, written out with such overcooked prose as "Time, a leaf, a life, a cloud, was forgotten." Skip them and go right to the comix. Here McKean's visual prowess justifies the metaphysical themes. "Cages" mostly takes place in an apartment building that Leo Sabarsky, a painter, has just moved into. There he meets Jonathan Rush, a secretive, Salman Rushdie-like writer whose latest book incites riots. Completing the traditional arts, Angel, a musician who can make stones sing, lives there too. Mixing Ingmar Bergman with Monty Python, strange, vaguely metaphorical characters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life, the Universe and Sequential Art | 8/27/2002 | See Source »

...Leo Sabarsky considers his art in Dave McKean's "Cages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life, the Universe and Sequential Art | 8/27/2002 | See Source »

...fledgling company. Later, he arranged to sell the stake back to AOL for a $7 billion profit. The deal helped land Middelhoff the CEO job in 1998. He profitably sold off a stake in the German pay-TV service Premiere World long before the company, owned by media tycoon Leo Kirch, went bust. Middelhoff also persuaded Bertlesmann to buy the giant U.S. publisher Random House for $1.2 billion. His contract, reportedly paying him j8 million a year, was extended for five years only last month. (His payout is expected to be suitably generous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Expectations | 8/4/2002 | See Source »

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