| RICHARD SINE |
| NEW SERIES!!! From THE NEWS JOURNAL (Delaware): "Imagine a future when everything from running shoes to rocket ships is made from corn....As DuPont and other companies use biotechnology to find better, cheaper ways to manufacture products, they also may revolutionize the economy. 'The grass fields and the cornfields of today will be the oil wells of tomorrow.'" Read Day One |
| My r�sum� |
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| From THE WASHINGTON POST: "At the Mall in Columbia, where time multiplied by space equals money, few things move slower, or cost more, than Ma Ke Lu's pastoral oil paintings." From "Getting Their Foot in the Door" |
| "Technologies for audience measurement are stuck in the 1950s, giving advertisers little clue whether their billions are well spent or wasted." From "Arbitron's Hope for Better Ratings" |
| From THE BOSTON GLOBE: "Taking shelter under the stilts of a thatch-roofed shack, as a monsoon rain pelted the village and the rice paddies, Prom Nat explained why the sorcerer a few doors away had deserved to die." From "In Cambodia, Slayings Beg for a Motive" |
| From THE NEW ORLEANS TIMES-PICAYUNE: "As many of four fifths of Turkish boats entering the United States lose a crewman at some port. They come here in search of a job, an American girl or family." From "Giving a Ship the Slip" |
| "The new ad is rhyme-free, whimsy free, and considerably less special in its special effects." From "AstraZeneca Puts Straight Face on Ads for Crestor" |
| Clips are taken from Nexis or the Web and can be verified through provision of hard copies. This site is under construction. More clips are coming soon! |
| From THE SAN JOSE METRO: "Men cruise the hallways clad in nothing but towels. Some of the doors are open; in bathhouse etiquette, this signals a desire for company." From "Both Sides Now" |
| "Gone are the days when the United States was assumed to have unassailable advantages in developing drugs." From "Offshoring Gains Momentum in Pharmaceutical Industry" |
| I'm an award-winning writer and editor with more than a decade of journalism experience and a business-school education. |
| "For DuPont Co. executives, the little plastic dinosaurs added up to one big insult...They were emblazoned with the word 'Nylonasaurus.' The message was clear: Nylon was dead." Read Day Two |
| "The fact that glues, inks, paints, plastics and fuels can be made with soybeans is for most people merely a fascinating bit of science. For Delmar soybean farmer Martin Ross, it means hope for farming's future." Read Day Three |
| From WebMD: "The $19 billion-a-year dietary supplement industry likes to remind us that we can get all our vitamins from a pill. Which begs the question: Why should we bother choking down bushels of brussel sprouts when we could get the same effect by sprinkling supplement shavings over our Boston cream pie?" From "Vitamins: Separating Fact From Fiction" |
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