SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 18
Download to read offline
Portfolio
Danos un objetivo. Nosotros aportamos la #imaginación.
La imagen #comercial de una empresa tiene que ser #clara, #práctica y #productiva.
Queremos ser tu constante fuente de #inspiración comercial. Wimit te ofrece
#ideasfrescas e innovadoras para cubrir todas tus necesidades comerciales. Sabemos
que un trabajo bien realizado es siempre un cliente satisfecho. De ahí que nuestros
clientes sean nuestro mejor aval y garantía de #profesionalidad, ofreciéndote un
servicio de #calidad en un gran abanico de posibilidades.
Abarcamos una amplia variedad de productos #offline/#online en función de
tus necesidades comerciales y para todo tipo de clientes: #grandesempresas,
#administracionespúblicas, #PYMES y #autónomos.
Consulta nuestro portfolio en #publicidad, #diseñoeditorial, #branding, #catálogos,
#imagencorporativa, #memorias, #marketingkits, #páginasweb, #packaging,
#PLV, #vallaspublicitarias...
¿Qué es lo que necesitas #promociar?.
Portfolio
Publicidad
The newest way to travel to
Cape Verde: San Pedro Airport
ASA, Cape Verde’s Airports and Air Navigation Company has just
opened Sao Pedro Airport, on the island of Sao Vicente. The fourth
international facility in the islands, it is ready to receive scheduled
and charter flights from European destinations. With an investment
of $32 million, the future-proof project, featuring a new passenger
terminal and improved ground services, aims to welcome 300,000
arrivals by 2012, and up to 500,000 by 2022.
Your destination is taking off
Sao Pedro International Airport
Sao Vicente • Cape Verde
Trinidad and Tobago offers travelers not just one, but two unique destinations. Discover our rich
history, experience our vibrant culture, and explore our amazing biodoversity. Join the party at our
world-famous Carnival and take part in festivals throughout the year. With a extensive choice of places
to stay, from intimate bed and breakfasts to world-class hotels, and endless restaurants and bars to
sample the best of our cuisine, there’s something to suit every taste and budget. And our friendly people
are well-known for their warmth and hospitality. Come discover Trinidad and Tobago and see for yourself.
lots to see, lots to discover
The best choice
The Seychelles Trading Company (STC) is a trading company, created
in March 2008, with its core business being the imports, storage and
distribution of essential and basic foods. In addition, STC engages in trading
ofcertainbrandedFMCGproductsfromreputableinternationalsources,and
operates a retail presence in the domestic market and the duty free sector.
While most manufacturing activities have been privatized, a small presence
in value addition activities remains. STC plays a major role in this area.
w w w . s t c l . s c
www.refidomsa.com.do
Refinería
Dominicana
de Petróleo
A trusted
hydrocarbons
supplier for
40 yearsP wer
to gr w
Building on a proud history of more than 70years as an
effectivelocalutility,SarawakEnergyistakingboldsteps
tosupportthetransformationofSarawakintoamodern,
high income economy. By developing clean power for
new industries at competitive prices, we are creating
new opportunities in Sarawak for generations to come.
Developingandimplementationofthisnationalagenda
requiresaglobalperspective.Withthisinmind,Sarawak
Energy became member of the international Hydro
Association(IHA)in2010.Inearly2011,wecommenced
a formal “Sustainability Partnership” to drawn upon
the association’s expert knowledge concerning the
assessment of the sustainability of hydropower projects.
www.sarawakenergy.com.my
All you need
to let you
touch
tomorrow,
today
Telkom is able to offer flexible
solutiones that can be catered
to suite your exact needs.
Telkom is Africaʼs leading
integrated communication com-
pany. We provide high quality
services to all our customers.
With a diverse and dynamic
array of products, services and
skills. This is backed by the
highest levels of quality and
support.Central (Free State)
(051) 401 6505 / 18
www.telkom.co.za
Leave it in our hands
Making you a winner
Running a successful national lottery has nothing to do with luck and
everything to do with experience, expertise, and technical know-how
www.opap.gr
Publicidad
Trillo
Puerta del Tajo
En Trillo confluyen el Tajo y el Cifuentes, justo bajo el puente viejo. La magia se extiende
a ambos lados de la balaustrada de hierro. Aguas arriba, la indómita naturaleza del
pinar que sólo los gancheros pudieron encauzar, y el Real Balneario de Carlos III. Aguas
abajo, parajes solitarios acercan la corriente unida a Entrepeñas entre mil meandros
que coquetean con frondosos encinares.
En Trillo, cultura y aventura se unen como el gran río y su afluente sin que a partir
de entonces el viajero pueda distinguir cuál es cuál. Ésta es la manera de degustar
Trillo, siguiendo el ejemplo eterno de Tajo y Cifuentes.
www.trillo.es
NVA_ALC FITUR2014 255x341,5.indd 1 16/01/14 23:54
An
Unforgettable
Caribbean
Hideaway
The Caribbean’s
Most Complete Resort
Casa de Campo holds a very special place in the hearts of all who have
visited. An amazing 7,000-acre hotel, resort and residential community,
unlike any other Caribbean destination, Casa de Campo is a tropical
gem on the southeastern coast of the Dominican Republic. Its unique
cache of facilities and impeccable service by a warm Dominican staff
are treasured by people of all ages who come from around the world.
P.O. Box 140, La Romana, Republica Dominicana
Tel: (809) 523-3333 / Fax: (809) 523-8548 or (809) 523-8394
www.casadecampo.com.do
CREATING A GATEWAY
TO THE DIGITAL HIGHWAY
IN BERMUDA
The Ministry of Telecommunications and E-Commerce is responsible for telecommu-
nications, e-commerce an e-government in Bermuda, providing our citizens with
ready answers to their questions, and our investors with ready access to our market.
Pueden participar todos los establecimientos de hostelería de Sigüenza y su comarca. Cada establecimiento
podrá presentar a concurso un pincho (caliente o frío) de un tamaño que permita su degustación en dos bo-
cados. Los pinchos presentados a concurso serán expedidos al público durante los días de celebración del
mismo y durante la V Ruta de la Tapa Medieval (durante el resto de fines de semana de marzo), en un horario
determinado por los propios establecimientos participantes y su precio será de 2,50 € (pincho + caña o vino).
El ganador representará a la Ciudad Mitrada en la gran final que este año va a tener lugar a comienzos del
mes de mayo en Hondarribia (Gipuzkoa). Los establecimientos que deseen participar deberán presentar sus
datos junto con el nombre de su tapa o pincho y los ingredientes utilizados antes del 15 de febrero de 2012
en el Ayuntamiento de Sigüenza.
Para más información: Ayuntamiento de Sigüenza Gabinete de Prensa
Dpto de Prensa Javier Bravo
Tfn: 949 390 850 Tfn: 606 411 053
3 y 4 Marzo 2012
Concurso
Tapas y Pintxos
Medievales
Sigüenza
V CONCURSO TAPAS SIGÜENZA.indd 1 08/02/12 13:56
Diseño Editorial
Diseño Editorial
Branding
Imagen Corporativa
Marketing Kits
“
United World is an independent, international media communications agency,
which has an exclusive agreement with USA TODAY and has been recognized
as a leader in the production of special economic sections on various countries,
regions and sectors worldwide, delivering timely, credible information to a so-
phisticated American audience with the aim to make the changing world more
understandable and to highlight the potential aspirations and opportunities in
established up-coming markets.
We have been working with United World for over 10 years and have found them
to be very good and reliable partners. The reports they prepare are well designed
and they should generate a very favourable response.
The reports produced are known as Our World, constituting an additional sec-
tion to USA TODAY. United World enjoys full independence and is responsible
for the preparation and content of their reports.
As you know, USA TODAY has a highly influential readership, offering an unri-
valled route to the American market.” Bruce Dewar, USA TODAY
F
For almost twenty years, United World has been making a difference in global
communications. Through an exclusive media agreement with America’s number 1
newspaper, USA Today, we produce socio-economic reports, published under
the title “Our World”, that constitute an additional section to the newspaper.
Our reports are an unprecedented communication tool for nations and regions to
voice their opinions on a global scale. Through the representation of the interna-
tional survey, countries are empowered to create their own international image,
sending out the messages that will attract others to their part of the world.
With our extensive experience, from Dubai to Turkey, from Nigeria to Thai-
land, United World offers you a rare opportunity: the ideal environment to
present the best political, economic and cultural aspects of your nation and
your vision of current and future potential to an affluent, influential American
audience. There is no more effective way to showcase your nation and receive
the maximum return on your time and investment.
Our impact
W
We at United World are committed to delivering an insightful analysis of your
country. From concept to publication, our agency offers a complete service.
Our reports provide:
Maximum impact Space for developed content
Professionalism of product In-depth information
ADDITIONAL SERVICES. We provide opportunities for electronic dissemina-
tion of our report on our website, www.unitedworld-usa.com, through animated
banners and links to official websites.
We will provide each client with an agreed number of these special reports for inter-
nal marketing purposes or external distribution.
We formulate a tailored mailing list of over 600 entries. We believe that while our
report receives excellent coverage through its distribution with USA Today it also
deserves specific attention from the world’s leading decision-makers. We therefore
offer you the opportunity to transmit your message to the following entities:
Presidential Offices in Selected Countries,
Major Embassies in Washington, D.C.,
Representatives of Leading International Organizations ,
Influential, Washington, D.C.-based Think Tanks,
U.S. Banks and Financial Institutions,
Chambers of Commerce in Washington, D.C.,
U.S. Stock Exchanges,
This list is constantly updated by our analysts in Washington, D.C and will be
presented to you by our representatives. On publication, our reports are sent to a
selection agreed by the client and United World. A follow-up procedure is carried
out and feedback is registered and passed on to the client.
Welcome to
Our World
About
Summit Communications
Summit Communications is an independent communications
agency dedicated to raising the profile of the world’s most dynamic,
emerging markets through the production of country, regional and
sector-based reports.
Through an exclusive agreement with The New York Times Company,
Summit Communications reaches the most influential decision-
makers in the political, financial and economic communities of North
America. Since 1999, over one hundred independent reports have
been published and distributed with this prestigious media company
and their flagship product, The New York Times.
As an independent agency that works in collaboration with The New York Times, the represen-
tatives of Summit Communications are solely responsible for the content of each report; there-
fore, the editors of The New York Times do not participate in the preparation of our reports.
The Company
Address: 53 Davies Street, London W1K 5JH, United Kingdom
Tel.: +44 (0) 20 7698 4453 • Mob. UK: +44 (0) 75 5147 4568 • Mob. Italy: +39 33 5648 1300
E: info@worldwideportfolio.co.uk • W: www.worldwideportfolio.co.uk
Worldwide Portfolio is a leading property consultancy based in London. We have
been operating for a number of years and have established a wide-ranging network of
contacts covering all sectors of the property industry, including private sellers, estate
agencies and developers.
At Worldwide Portfolio we have a thorough knowledge of the markets in which we
operate. This helps our local staff provide clients with a detailed analysis of the specific
dynamics of each market.
Our competence in these areas, together with the experience gained in our dealings
with the foreign property market, has been acknowledged by investors the world over,
who recognise Worldwide Portfolio’s standing as a professional body to guide them
through all stages of the investment process, from purchase to management.
At Worldwide Portfolio we use the latest systems for researching properties and are
constantly interacting with real estate professionals and companies to ensure that our
clients have privileged access to all opportunities, be they “on market” or “off market”.
Our Company
In order to communicate with the correct audience for our clients,
Summit Communications publishes in the three distinct mediums of The
New York Times: The New York Times Broadsheet, The New York Times
Magazine and The New York Times Digital, all of which reach an affluent
audience with global interests. Targeted editions will be selected for indi-
vidual report distribution.
New York Times Broadsheet. Nationwide:
• Average net weekday circulation of 1,023,852.
(ABC Publisher’s Statement, September 2007).
• 47% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels.
(MRI Fall 2007).
New York Times Broadsheet. In The New York Market:
• The Weekday New York Times is no. 1 in quality of readership
of all competitive city and suburban newspapers.
(Scarborough New York Release 2,2007).
New York Times Magazine:
• Average net Sunday paid circulation of 1,500,394.
(ABC Publisher’s Statement, September 2007).
• Largest Sunday newspaper in the U.S.
• 47% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels.
(MRI Fall 2007).
New York Times Digital:
• 17,177,000 Adult unique users (based on 12 month average) make
NYTimes.com the nº 1 most visited newspaper website in the U.S.
• 48% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels.
• Mean household income of readership is $90,038.
(SOURCE: Nielsen Online NetView December 2007; @Plan Winter 2007/2008).
VOL. CLVI . No. 53,985 Copyright © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 2007
New York: Today, partly sunny, a
shower, high 82. Tonight, cloudy, low
69. Tomorrow, few clouds, much
warmer, high 89. Yesterday, high 74,
low 56. Weather map is on Page 20.
$5 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $3.50
Late Edition
By JASON DePARLE
MINDELO, Cape Verde — Virtually ev-
ery aspect of global migration can be seen in
this tiny West African nation, where the num-
ber of people who have left approaches the
number who remain and almost everyone has
a close relative in Europe or America.
Migrant money buoys the economy. Mi-
grant votes sway politics. Migrant departures
split parents from children, and the most fa-
mous song by the most famous Cape Verdean
venerates the national emotion, “Sodade,” or
longing. Lofty talk of opportunity abroad
mixes at cafe tables here with accounts of
false documents and sham marriages.
The intensity of the national experience
makes this barren archipelago the Galapagos
of migration, a microcosm of the forces
straining American politics and remaking so-
cieties across the globe.
An estimated 200 million people live out-
side the country of their birth, and they help
support a swath of the developing world as
big if not bigger. Migrants sent home about
$300 billion last year — nearly three times the
world’s foreign aid budgets combined. Those
sums are building houses, educating children
and seeding small businesses, and they have
made migration central to discussions about
how to help the global poor. A leading aca-
demic text calls this the “Age of Migration.”
But it is also the age of migration alarm,
as European ships patrol African coasts to in-
tercept human smugglers and new fences are
planned along the Rio Grande. Countries that
want migrant muscle and brains also want
more border control. Many of them see illegal
migrants as a security threat, especially in a
terrorist age, and worry that large-scale mi-
gration, even when legal, can undercut wages,
require costly services and subject national
identities to bonfires of religious and cultural
conflict.
The stakes can be seen here in Mindelo, a
semicircle of barren hillsides that gaze out at
the only sign of natural life, a beckoning sea.
In a country with little rain and a history of
famine, migration began as a necessity and
became part of the civic DNA. You can dine
at Café Portugal, drink at the Argentina bar
and stroll Avenida da Holanda.
Yet Holland — the Netherlands — now
requires would-be migrants to pass a test on
Dutch language and culture. Other countries
InaWorldontheMove,aTinyLandStrainstoCope
James Hill for The New York Times
Stenio da Luz dos Reis, 17, lives in Cape Verde but longs to join his mother in the Netherlands. She left six years ago for a job there.
BORDER CROSSINGS
The View From Cape Verde
Continued on Page 14
WESTERN
SAHARA
MALI
ALGERIA
MAURITANIA
CAPE
VERDE
SENEGAL
GAMBIA
CANARY
ISLANDS
Mindelo
Praia
MOROCCO
Miles 300
The New York Times
TexasTown,NowDivided,Forged
Bush’sFirmStandonImmigration
By JIM RUTENBERG
MIDLAND, Tex. — Late last
spring, Republicans in this West Tex-
as oil town called for a boycott of
Doña Anita’s Mexican restaurant, a
retaliatory step against its owner,
Luz Reyes, for closing shop and
showing up at a rally against pro-
posed new penalties for illegal immi-
grants.
But President Bush’s three best
friends here defied the boycott and
went to the restaurant, Mr. Bush’s
favorite when he lived here, regard-
less. One of them, the president’s
close confidant and former com-
merce secretary, Donald L. Evans,
told Ms. Reyes: “Luz, you didn’t do
anything wrong. We love you.”
The hometown divide helps to shed
light on a broader rift, as Mr. Bush
and like-minded Republicans engage
in an unusually contentious fight
with the rest of their party in the na-
tional debate over immigration.
Mr. Bush has pursued a goal of
providing citizenship for the millions
of illegal immigrants with rare at-
tacks on his conservative supporters,
who have derided his approach as
tantamount to amnesty. There are
various political motivations for Mr.
Bush to push for his plan, including
the rapid growth in the nation’s His-
panic population, a voting group that
he has long considered to be po-
tentially Republican.
But the roots of Mr. Bush’s passion
lie here in Midland, now heavily His-
panic, the city where Mr. Bush spent
much of his childhood and to which
he returned as a young adult after
spending his high school and college
years in the more genteel settings of
Andover and Yale.
As a boy, and later as a young,
hard-drinking oilman, his friends
say, Mr. Bush developed a particular
empathy for the new Mexican immi-
grants who worked hard on farms, in
oil fields and in people’s homes and
went on to raise children who built
businesses and raised families of
George Bush Presidential Library via Associated Press
George W. Bush visiting the oil
fields in Midland, Tex., during his
campaign for Congress in 1978.
0 3 5 4 7 1 3 8 2 5 7 0 7
FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR
Iran is in the throes of one of its
most ferocious crackdowns on dis-
sent in years, with the government
focusing on labor leaders, universi-
ties, the press, women’s rights advo-
cates, a former nuclear negotiator
and Iranian-Americans, three of
whom have been in prison for more
than six weeks.
The shift is occurring against the
backdrop of an economy so stressed
that although Iran is the world’s sec-
ond-largest oil exporter, it is on the
verge of rationing gasoline. At the
same time, the nuclear standoff with
the West threatens to bring new
sanctions.
The hard-line administration of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
analysts say, faces rising pressure
for failing to deliver on promises of
greater prosperity from soaring oil
revenue. It has been using American
support for a change in government
as well as a possible military attack
as a pretext to hound his opposition
and its sympathizers.
Some analysts describe it as a
“cultural revolution,” an attempt to
roll back the clock to the time of the
1979 revolution, when the newly
formed Islamic Republic combined
religious zeal and anti-imperialist
rhetoric to try to assert itself as a re-
gional leader.
Equally noteworthy is how little
has been permitted to be discussed in
the Iranian news media. Instead, at-
tention has been strategically fo-
cused on Mr. Ahmadinejad’s politi-
cal enemies, like the former presi-
dent, Mohammad Khatami, and the
controversy over whether he violat-
ed Islamic morals by deliberately
shaking hands with an unfamiliar
woman after he gave a speech in
Rome.
Mr. Khatami, the lost hope of
Iran’s reform movement, felt com-
pelled to rebut the accusation be-
cause such a handshake is religious-
ly suspect, but contended that the
crowd seeking to congratulate him
for his speech was so tumultuous
that he could not distinguish between
the hands of men and women. Natu-
rally a video clip emerged, showing
the cleric in his typical gregarious
style bounding over to the first wom-
an who addressed him on the orderly
sidewalk, shaking her hand and chat-
ting amicably.
The dispute over the handshake
occurred during a particularly fierce
round of the factional fighting that
has hamstrung the country since the
1979 revolution. Far more harsh ex-
amples abound.
Young men wearing T-shirts
deemed too tight or haircuts seen as
too Western have been paraded
bleeding through Tehran’s streets by
uniformed police officers who force
them to suck on plastic jerrycans, a
toilet item Iranians use to wash their
bottoms. In case anyone misses the
point, it is the official news agency
Fars distributing the pictures of
what it calls “riffraff.” Far bloodier
photographs are circulating on blogs
and on the Internet.
The country’s police chief boasted
Iran Cracks Down on Dissent,
Parading Examples in Streets
Continued on Page 8
By SARA RIMER
The Dominican boys in the back of
the freshman English class at the
high school in Washington Heights
were making fun of the timid Afri-
can-American girl, Queen Bond. One
of the boys got down on one knee in
front of her as if he were Romeo —
they had been studying “Romeo and
Juliet” — and delivered the final
crushing insult.
“He was saying something about
that I smelled,” recalled Queen, now
17. “I just put my head down. I start-
ed crying.”
Then something remarkable hap-
pened, she said: “Cristal stood up.”
Cool, streetwise, 4-foot-11-inch Cris-
tal Pimentel.
“This short, like, two-foot-tall per-
son is standing up to these guys who
are up to the ceiling,” Queen said.
“She’s screaming, getting angry,
waving her arms. She stood up, she
defended me. No one ever stood up
for me in that way.
“I’m, like, ‘Wow, this girl is the
most beautiful person.’ ”
For four years now, Queen and
Cristal have been a team: two teen-
age girls who are striving to make
something of themselves in the face
of tremendous adversity.
They graduated together yester-
day from the High School of Interna-
tional Business and Finance, a duo
who beat the odds in a school system
where despite improvements, only 50
percent of high school students grad-
uated on time last June, according to
state statistics.
Cristal, who is 18, is the first per-
son in her family to earn a high
school diploma. Queen is the first of
seven children — she has two older
brothers — to graduate.
How they did it is a story of two
outsiders who found each other in
one of the small schools the city has
turned to in an attempt to break up
large high schools that, with gradua-
tion rates of 25 to 40 percent, became
known as factories of failure.
Queen and Cristal’s school, with
roughly 700 students, is one of four
The High School Kinship of Cristal and Queen
Ruby Washington/The New York Times
Cristal Pimentel and Queen Bond worked as a team to graduate from
the High School of International Business and Finance in Manhattan. Continued on Page 18
By BILL PENNINGTON
When she moved into her retire-
ment condominium on a golf course,
Eleanor Weiner admired the lush,
pristine views of the fairways and
greens, a landscape she never had to
mow or maintain. Not long after, as
she prepared dinner, a golf ball shat-
tered the kitchen window, whistled
past her head and crashed through
the glass on her oven door. Ms. Wei-
ner retrieved the ball from her oven
and stalked outside to confront the
golfer who had launched the missile.
“He told me that’s what I get for
living on a golf course,” said Ms. Wei-
ner, who has lived for a dozen years
alongside Rancho Las Palmas Coun-
try Club near Palm Springs, Calif.
“That was the first time I heard that,
but it surely hasn’t been the last.”
The intersection of errant golf
shots and private property is not a
new phenomenon. But with new gear
that enables average golfers to hit a
ball 250 yards, and with golf commu-
nities sprouting nationwide — 70 per-
cent of new courses include housing
— it is becoming an increasingly
prominent problem. Most homes
built near this country’s 16,000 golf
courses may not be in the cross hairs
of slicing duffers, but thousands are.
“It’s not only an ongoing problem,
it’s been made worse by technologi-
cally advanced golf equipment that
makes golf balls go farther — and
farther sideways,” said David Mulvi-
hill, a managing director at the Ur-
ban Land Institute, who has studied
golf course development.
“So homes that have been on a golf
A Fairway View,
But the Window
Is Often Broken
Continued on Page 17
INSIDE
By any measure, the “surge” in
Iraq is failing, according to Frank
Rich. What will the Bush administra-
tion do now? OPINION PAGES
A New Propaganda Offensive
New Yorkers may have become
accustomed to the eccentricities of
Michael R. Bloomberg, the billion-
aire information mogul who took an
unorthodox path to the mayor’s of-
fice. But as he has thrust himself
ever more fully into national politics,
even Mr Bloomberg has questioned
whether the rest of the country is
ready for him. PAGE 19
How an independent candidate
could anoint a president in a close
general election. WEEK IN REVIEW
Odd Man In? Bloomberg
As Mayor and ’08 Kingmaker Critics of the official investigation
of the August 2003 massacre of 17 aid
workers in the town of Mutur, Sri
Lanka, point to delays in introducing
findings and to inconsistencies in bal-
listics evidence that they say could
implicate government soldiers in the
killings. PAGE 4
Sri Lanka Faulted on Killings
The will of
Brooke Astor, at
the center of a legal
battle over her
care and her for-
tune, reflects the
devotion of Mrs.
Astor, now 105,
both to her family
and to the many
civic interests that have helped
make her an enduring New York fig-
ure for decades. PAGE 25
A Look at Mrs. Astor’s Will
Continued on Page 22
By DAVID E. SANGER
and THOM SHANKER
WASHINGTON, June 23 — Last
month, Congress set a deadline for
the American commander in Iraq,
declaring that by Sept. 15 he would
have to assess progress there before
billions more dollars are approved to
finance the military effort to stabil-
ize the country. The commander,
Gen. David H. Petraeus, said in re-
cent days that his report would be
only a snapshot of trends, strongly
suggesting he will be asking for more
time.
But even before he composes the
first sentences of the report, to be
written with the new American am-
bassador in Baghdad, Ryan C. Crock-
er, the administration is commis-
sioning other assessments that could
dilute its findings about the impact of
the current troop increase. The in-
tent appears to be to give President
Bush, who publicly puts great em-
phasis on listening to his field com-
manders, a wide range of options.
The assessments are likely to con-
clude that the Iraqi government has
failed to use the troop increase for
the purpose the president intended,
to strike the political accommoda-
tions that he said would stabilize the
country. That and other views ex-
pected in the various reports could
also provide some rationale for be-
ginning a reduction of troops in Iraq
under conditions far short of the “vic-
tory” Mr. Bush, for the past four
years, has said was his ultimate goal.
He has used that word with far less
frequency recently.
American intelligence agencies,
according to senior administration
and intelligence officials, are already
preparing to submit their own as-
sessment of Iraq’s progress. That is
expected to include a judgment
about whether Prime Minister Nuri
General’s Report
On Iraq Progress
Has Competition
Continued on Page 10
News Summary 2
International ........................................... 3-14
Metro ....................................................... 25-29
National .................................................. 16-22
Editorial, Op-Ed ... Week in Review, 13-15
Obituaries ................. 23 Weather ................... 20
TV Update ................ 29
Job Market Listings............. Sunday Business, page 21-29
In New York City and the metropolitan region.
Updated news: nytimes.com
The predictions are increasingly
ominous, but just how bad could a
cyberwar really be? WEEK IN REVIEW
Internet Armageddon
Jeffrey Smith After talks with ABC and NBC fell
through, Paris Hilton has decided to
give her first post-jail interview,
without payment, to CNN’s Larry
King on Wednesday night, a spokes-
woman for the show said. PAGE 22
CNN Gets Hilton Interview
Since reacquiring their shoe com-
pany, the Florsheim family has giv-
en it new life. SUNDAY BUSINESS
Back in Their Own Shoes
VOL. CLVI . No. 53,866 Copyright © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2007
New York: Today, a chance of snow
arriving late, high 38. Tonight, snow,
mixed with sleet, low 29. Tomorrow,
snow ends early, high 36. Yesterday,
high 42, low 20. Details, Page 18.
$3.50
Late Edition
Petty Officer Third Class Dustin E. Kirby, right and above, and
Marine Lance Cpl. Colin Smith were thrown together on a battlefield
in Iraq’s Anbar Province. Lance Corporal Smith was shot through
the helmet and skull by a sniper in late October and Petty Officer
Kirby, a Navy corpsman, worked feverishly to save him. On Christ-
mas, Petty Officer Kirby was also shot through the head by a sniper.
Petty Officer Kirby, 23, is back home in Georgia with his wife,
Lauren, and is progressing steadily toward recovery. Lance Corpo-
ral Smith, 19, below with his mother, Melissa, is undergoing inten-
sive therapy in Minneapolis. By C. J. CHIVERS, PAGE 16
Lives Touched by War
Photographs by Todd Heisler/The New York Times, top and bottom; Joao Silva for The New York Times
0 3 5 4 7 1 3 8 0 8 7 0 7
FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES
By DAMIEN CAVE
BAGHDAD, Feb. 24 — Moktada al-
Sadr, the radical Shiite cleric and
founder of the Mahdi Army militia,
discovered recently that two of his
commanders had created DVDs of
their men killing Sunnis in Baghdad.
Documents suggested that they had
received money from Iran.
So he suspended them and stripped
them of power, said two Mahdi lead-
ers in Sadr City, the heart of Mr.
Sadr’s support here in the capital.
But did he do so as part of his co-
operation with the new security plan
for Baghdad, which aims to quell the
sectarian violence tormenting the
city? Because his men had been dis-
loyal, taking orders from Iran, whose
support he values but whose control
he fights? Or was it just for show —
the act of an image-conscious leader
who grasped the risk of graphic vid-
eos and wanted to stave off direct
American action against him?
Mr. Sadr has been the great desta-
bilizer in Iraq since 2003, wielding
power on the streets and in the ruling
Shiite bloc, thwarting the Americans
and playing out at least a temporary
alliance with Iran.
With the new security plan for Iraq
under way, every question about Mr.
Sadr’s motives touches on a different
facet of Iraq’s complicated struggle.
He now finds himself under pres-
sure from several sources. One is his
popular Shiite base, which demands
protection from devastating Sunni
attacks. Another is Iran, with which
he has had long but difficult ties.
Then there are renegade factions of
his own militia that resent his move
into the political mainstream.
Finally, the Americans, who have
accused Iran of supplying Shiite mili-
tias, including Mr. Sadr’s, with an es-
IRAQREBELCLERIC
REINS IN MILITIA;
MOTIVES AT ISSUE
PRESSED ON MANY FRONTS
Shiite Leader Seems to Be
Cooperating With U.S.,
at Least for Present
Continued on Page 4
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 — A group
of influential Christian conservatives
and their allies emerged from a pri-
vate meeting at a Florida resort this
month dissatisfied with the Repub-
lican presidential field and uncertain
where to turn.
The event was a meeting of the
Council for National Policy, a se-
cretive club whose few hundred
members include Dr. James C. Dob-
son of Focus on the Family, the Rev.
Jerry Falwell of Liberty University
and Grover Norquist of Americans
for Tax Reform. Although little
known outside the conservative
movement, the council has become a
pivotal stop for Republican presi-
dential primary hopefuls, including
George W. Bush on the eve of his 1999
primary campaign.
But in a stark shift from the
group’s influence under President
Bush, the group risks relegation to
the margins. Many of the conserva-
tives who attended the event, held at
the beginning of the month at the
Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island, Fla.,
said they were dismayed at the ab-
sence of a champion to carry their
banner in the next election.
Many conservatives have already
declared their hostility to Senator
John McCain of Arizona, despite his
efforts to make amends for having
once denounced Christian conserva-
tive leaders as “agents of intoler-
ance,” and to former Mayor Rudolph
W. Giuliani of New York, because of
his liberal views on abortion and gay
rights and his three marriages.
Many were also suspicious of for-
mer Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachu-
setts; members have used the coun-
cil as a conduit to distribute a dossier
prepared by a Massachusetts con-
servative group about liberal ele-
ments of his record on abortion, stem
cell research and gay rights. (Mr.
Romney has worked to convince con-
servatives that his views have
changed.)
And some members of the council
have raised doubts about lesser
known candidates — Gov. Mike
Huckabee of Arkansas and Repre-
sentative Duncan Hunter of Califor-
nia, who were invited to Amelia Is-
land to address an elite audience of
about 60 of its members, and Senator
Sam Brownback of Kansas, who
spoke to the full council at its previ-
ous meeting, in October in Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Although each of the three had
supporters, many conservatives ex-
pressed concerns about whether any
of the candidates could unify their
CHRISTIAN RIGHT
LABORS TO FIND
AN ’08 CANDIDATE
CONSERVATIVE DISCONTENT
Doubts Are Raised on Top
Republican Hopefuls
— Recruits Sought
Continued on Page 21
INSIDE
Venezuelan arms spending has ex-
ceeded $4 billion in the past two
years, putting the nation ahead of
major buyers like Pakistan and Iran.
Venezuela says the fighter jets, at-
tack helicopters and Kalashnikovs
are to counter potential aggression
from the United States. PAGE 3
Venezuela a Top Arms Buyer
The New York Times Style Maga-
zine details the trends for spring, from
a new fascination with the future to
graphic prints and ethnic influences.
Also: Cathy Horyn goes behind the
scenes at Yves Saint Laurent.
T: Women’s Fashion
By JOSEPH KAHN
BEIJING — Li Jinsong and Li
Jianqiang are Chinese trial lawyers
who take on difficult political cases,
tangle with the police and seek sol-
ace in the same religion, Christian-
ity.
But like many who devote them-
selves to expanding freedoms and
the rule of law in China, the two
spend as much time clashing over
tactics and principles as they do
challenging the ruling Communist
Party.
The two Mr. Lis are part of a mo-
mentous struggle over the rule of law
in China. Young, well educated and
idealistic, they and other members
of the so-called weiquan, or rights de-
fense, movement, aim to use the laws
and courts that the Communist Par-
ty has put in place as part of its mod-
ernization drive to constrain the par-
ty’s power.
The informal network of rights de-
fenders may be the only visible force
for political openness and change in
China at a time when the surging
economy and the country’s rapidly
expanding global influence have oth-
erwise strengthened party leaders.
The authorities have refrained from
suppressing it entirely, at least part-
ly because it operates carefully with-
in the law and uses China’s judicial
system, as well as the news media, to
advance its aims.
Yet nearly 18 years after the June
4, 1989, crackdown on pro-democracy
protesters in Beijing, China quickly
crushes any organized opposition.
Rights defenders face the delicate
task of coordinating their actions and
expanding their collective influence
when they remain autonomous, rud-
derless and, very often, rivalrous.
The two Mr. Lis have feuded about
how to handle big court cases. When
they met the Bush administration’s
China specialists in the White House
last November, they argued about
whether top leaders like President
Hu Jintao were basically benevolent.
A joint interview on Radio Free Asia
devolved into a shouting match over
whether rights defenders could work
with party leaders or should actively
oppose them.
As their confrontation grew, Li
Jianqiang, the more combative of the
two, wrote a manifesto that called
China a “super jail” and described its
leaders as “ruthless dictators.” He
Rivals on Legal Tightrope Seek
To Expand Freedoms in China
RULE BY LAW
A Shared Vision of Justice
Continued on Page 12
By BARNABY J. FEDER
After more than a decade-long de-
cline, is heart bypass surgery poised
for a comeback?
Some doctors say it may be time to
give bypass operations a second look.
They include even some cardiolo-
gists who specialize in the far more
popular alternative — using stents to
keep coronary arteries open.
No one is predicting a sudden
surge back to bypass, which is still a
far more invasive and initially riski-
er way to treat plaque-clogged heart
arteries, a condition that afflicts mil-
lions of Americans.
But in light of new safety concerns
over the long-term risks of stents, as
well as accumulating data indicating
that the sickest heart patients may
live longer if they receive bypass
surgery instead, some well-known
stent specialists say the pendulum
may have swung too far away from
bypass surgery.
“We as cardiologists have prob-
ably pressed forward on stent tech-
nology a little faster than we should
have,” said Dr. Kirk Garratt, the di-
rector of research into stents and re-
lated heart therapies at Lenox Hill
Hospital in New York, one of the na-
tion’s leading stenting centers.
It is a remarkable acknowledg-
ment, considering the medical and fi-
nancial stakes in play. In the last
Continued on Page 20
In the Stent Era,
Heart Bypasses
GetaNewLook
Nicholas D. Kristof, from Ethiopia,
on what happens when the U.S. cuts
aid to women in the developing
world. WEEK IN REVIEW, PAGE 15
Opinion: Death by Pregnancy
A truck bomb detonated beside a
Sunni mosque and market near Fal-
luja, killing 36 people. Page 6.
Truck Bomb in Iraq Kills 36
NEWS SUMMARY 2
International ........................................... 3-12
Metro ....................................................... 23-27
National .................................................. 14-21
Editorial, Op-Ed ... Week in Review, 13-15
Obituaries ................. 28 Weather ................... 18
TV Update ................ 26
Job Market Listings............. Sunday Business, page 17-25
In New York City and the metropolitan region.
Updated news: nytimes.com
By FELICITY BARRINGER
and ANDREW ROSS SORKIN
Under a proposed $45 billion buyout
by a team of private equity firms, the
TXU Corporation, a Texas utility that
has long been the bane of environ-
mental groups, will abandon plans to
build 8 of 11 coal plants and commit to
a broad menu of environmental
measures, according to people in-
volved in the negotiations.
The roster of commitments came
through an unusual process in which
the equity firms asked two prominent
environmental groups what meas-
ures could be taken to win their sup-
port. The result is an about-face from
the company’s earlier approach to
climate-change issues, and includes a
goal of returning the carbon-dioxide
emissions by TXU to 1990 levels by
2020.
Environmental groups said yester-
day that they had never known of a fi-
nancial deal with such an ambitious
built-in environmental component.
Two private equity firms, Kohlberg
Kravis Roberts & Company and the
Texas Pacific Group, have proposed
to buy TXU in what would become the
largest leveraged buyout ever.
The transaction will be put to the
TXU board for a vote on Sunday.
People involved in the negotiations
said that Goldman Sachs, an adviser
and lender to the buyers, helped bro-
ker peace with environmental groups
and sought their support for the
transaction. Goldman Sachs has been
one of the most aggressive firms on
Wall Street about taking action on cli-
mate change; the company sends its
bankers home at night in hybrid lim-
ousines.
For the investor groups, the effort
Continued on Page 20
Utility to Limit
NewCoalPlants
In Big Buyout
Twenty-three women were asked
to leave Delta Zeta sorority at
DePauw University, including every
member who was overweight or non-
white. Others left in protest. PAGE 17
A Sorority Showdown
Andrew Hancock for The New York Times
The Carpetbagger looks back on
his humbling Oscar season on the
edge of celebrity. ARTS & LEISURE
All Access, No Insight
Internal Justice Department per-
formance reports for six of the eight
U.S. attorneys dismissed in recent
months rated them “well regarded”
or “very competent.” The evalua-
tions, which were not made public
before, raise questions about why the
prosecutors were let go. PAGE 19
Praise for U.S. Attorneys
Dismissed by Justice Dept.
In an unusual move, a federal ap-
peals court is recommending that an
appeals board review immigration
cases involving a New York judge
whose asylum hearings have been
criticized. PAGE 25
Review of Judge’s Cases
Citigroup is expected to name a
top officer of American Express as
its new chief financial officer in a
move aimed at ending weeks of top
management turmoil. PAGE 27
Finance Chief for Citigroup
VOL. CLVII . No. 54,083 © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2007
By CLIFFORD KRAUSS
NEVADA, Iowa, Sept. 24 —
The ethanol boom of recent years
— which spurred a frenzy of dis-
tillery construction, record corn
prices, rising food prices and
hopes of a new future for rural
America — may be fading.
Only last year, farmers here
spoke of a biofuel gold rush, and
they rejoiced as prices for etha-
nol and the corn used to produce
it set records.
But companies and farm co-
operatives have built so many
distilleries so quickly that the
ethanol market is suddenly
plagued by a glut, in part because
the means to distribute it have
not kept pace. The average na-
tional ethanol price on the spot
market has plunged 30 percent
since May, with the decline esca-
lating sharply in the last few
weeks.
“The end of the ethanol boom
is possibly in sight and may al-
ready be here,” said Neil E. Harl,
an economics professor emeritus
at Iowa State University who lec-
tures on ethanol and is a consult-
ant for producers. “This is a dan-
gerous time for people who are
making investments.”
While generous government
support is expected to keep the
output of ethanol fuel growing,
the poorly planned overexpan-
sion of the industry raises ques-
tions about its ability to fulfill the
hopes of President Bush and oth-
er policy makers to serve as a se-
rious antidote to the nation’s
heavy reliance on foreign oil.
And if the bust becomes worse,
candidates for president could be
put on the spot to pledge even
more federal support for the in-
dustry, particularly here in Iowa,
whose caucus in January is the
first contest in the presidential
nominating process.
Many industry experts say the
worst problems are temporary
and have been intensified by
transportation bottlenecks in get-
ting ethanol from the heartland
to the coasts, where it is needed
most. And even if some farmers
who invested in the plants lose
money, most of them are reaping
a separate bounty from higher
ETHANOL’S BOOM
STALLING AS GLUT
DEPRESSESPRICES
30% PLUNGE SINCE MAY
Production Expands but
Distribution Lags —
Blow to Farmers
Continued on Page 26
By JO BECKER
From a political standpoint, it
should have been an easy deci-
sion. The calls flooding Fred D.
Thompson’s Senate office in the
winter of 1999 showed that his
Tennessee constituents over-
whelmingly favored removing
President Bill Clinton from of-
fice. But as the historic impeach-
ment trial neared, records show,
Mr. Thompson agonized over
what he saw as two “bad
choices.”
Years before, as Republican
counsel to the Senate Watergate
committee, Mr. Thompson had
witnessed the proceedings that
led to President Richard M. Nix-
on’s resignation. Now, he pored
over legal tomes on precedent.
He ordered up lengthy staff
memorandums on what the
founding fathers intended when
they said a president could be re-
moved for “high crimes and mis-
demeanors,” scribbling his
thoughts on a yellow legal pad.
Did the president’s cover-up of
an affair with a White House in-
tern justify deposing him
“against the will of the people,”
Mr. Thompson wondered, or
should Mr. Clinton be protected
by the very “baseness of his ac-
tions?” “His office is too high +
the crimes too low,” he mused.
Yet would an acquittal not
“haunt us in the future,” setting
the bar so high that even a “seri-
al perjurer” could not be re-
moved from office so long as his
conduct was “to cover up person-
al wrongdoing?”
“Worse of both worlds,” he
scrawled on a scrap of paper.
“Will be easier if you vote guilty.”
Today Mr. Thompson is cam-
paigning for president, selling
himself as the most devoted con-
servative in the Republican field,
a leader whose vision was
shaped by the Republican revo-
lution of 1994.
But his approach to the im-
peachment case — and his ulti-
mate decision to part with the
Republican majority by voting to
acquit Mr. Clinton on one of two
impeachment counts — under-
scores the concerns now being
raised by many conservative
G.O.P. Hopeful
TookOwnPath
In the Senate
Thompson Agonized
on Bill Clinton Trial
Continued on Page 24
THE LONG RUN
Thompson in Congress
By C. J. CHIVERS
GROZNY, Russia — In the evenings, unex-
pected sights appear in this city, which less
than two years ago seemed beyond saving
and repair.
Women stroll on sidewalks that did not ex-
ist last year. Teenagers cluster under newly
installed street lights, chatting on cellphones.
At a street corner, young men gather to race
cars on a freshly paved road — a scene, con-
sidering that this is the capital of Chechnya,
that feels out of place and from another time.
Throughout the city, local officials, most of
them former rebels who waged a nationalist
Islamic insurgency against Russia, lounge in
cafes, assault rifles idled beside them.
Three years after a wave of guerrilla and
terrorist attacks caused many analysts to say
that Russia’s war against Chechen separat-
ists could not be won, the republic has fallen
almost fully under the control of the Kremlin
and its indigenous proxies, led by Ramzan A.
Kadyrov, the Chechen president.
Mr. Kadyrov’s human rights record is chill-
ing, and allegations of his government’s pat-
terns of brutality and impunity are wide-
spread. Yet even his most severe critics say
he has developed significant popular support,
in part because of the clear changes that have
accompanied his firm and fearsome rule.
Fighting has been sporadic and small in
scale for a second year. A large rebel offen-
sive did not materialize this summer, as the
separatists had predicted. Buoyed by a sus-
tained lull in fighting and flush with cash, Mr.
Kadyrov’s government has rebuilt most of its
capital and outlying areas.
Like Stalingrad after World War II, Grozny,
the Chechen capital, has reappeared from the
rubble. It has done so more swiftly than Euro-
pean cities revived by the Marshall Plan.
As recently as early 2006, Grozny was less
a city than rows of shattered buildings over-
looking cesspools. It now has electricity al-
Under an Iron Hand,
ARebirthofaRepublic
Russia’s Proxy Is a Fearsome Midwife
In the Revival of the Chechen Capital
Then and now: Grozny, Chechnya’s capi-
tal, in 1995, right, and 2007, below.
SHAKH AIVAZOV/ASSOCIATED PRESS, TOP; KAZBEK VAKHAYEV/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY, ABOVE.
Continued on Page 6
U(D5E71D)x+@!;!/!z!/
FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES
By DAMIEN CAVE
MAHMUDIYA, Iraq — On bas-
es big and small south of Bagh-
dad, the scrambled reality of war
has become routine: an unending
loop of anxious driving in ar-
mored Humvees, gallons of
Gatorade, laughter at the absurd
and 4 a.m. raids into intimate
Iraqi bedrooms.
This is Iraq for the 3,300 sol-
diers of the 10th Mountain Divi-
sion’s Second Brigade, and many
have come to the unfortunate re-
alization that it now feels more
like home than home.
No brigade in the Army has
spent more days deployed since
Sept. 11, 2001, and with only a few
weeks to go before ending their
15-month tour, the soldiers here
are eager to go. But they are also
nervous about what their minds
will carry back, given the psychic
toll of war day after day and the
prospect of additional tours.
Heartache can be heard in the
quiet voice of Specialist Gerald
Barranco-Oro, who at 22 is on his
second tour of Iraq and will leave
for home without two close
friends who were killed May 19.
There are other losses, too: for
fathers like Staff Sgt. Kirk Ray,
25, whose 2-year-old daughter
screams when he calls because
“she doesn’t know who I am”;
and for those who must detach to
keep going, like Specialist Jesse
Herb, 20, who casually mentioned
recently that the ceiling above his
bed was dented with the bone
fragments of a lieutenant who
Continued on Page 12
Weary Soldiers
Ready for Rest,
But Not at Ease
NEWS SUMMARY 2
International ................................... 3-14
Metro .............................................. 33-37
National .......................................... 16-27
Editorial and Op-Ed appear
in Week in Review, Pages 11-13.
Obituaries ............ 30-31 Weather ......... 28
TV Update ................ 38
Job Market Listings..... Sunday Business, page 17-25
In New York City and the metropolitan region.
Updated news: nytimes.com
New York: Today, sunny, light
winds, high 71. Tonight, cloudy,
low 57. Tomorrow, mixture of sun
and clouds, high 72. Yesterday,
high 76, low 61. Details, Page 28.
$5 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $4.00
Late Edition
By DON VAN NATTA Jr.
Freedom’s Watch, a deep-pock-
eted conservative group led by
two former senior White House
officials, made an audacious de-
but in late August when it began
a $15 million advertising cam-
paign designed to maintain Con-
gressional support for President
Bush’s troop increase in Iraq.
Founded this summer by a doz-
en wealthy conservatives, the
nonprofit group is set apart from
most advocacy groups by the im-
mense wealth of its core group of
benefactors, its intention to far
outspend its rivals and its am-
bition to pursue a wide-ranging
agenda. Its next target: Iran pol-
icy.
Next month, Freedom’s Watch
will sponsor a private forum of 20
experts on radical Islam that is
expected to make the case that
Iran poses a direct threat to the
security of the United States, ac-
cording to several benefactors of
the group.
Although the group declined to
identify the experts, several were
invited from the American En-
terprise Institute, a Washington
research group with close ties to
the White House. Some institute
scholars have advocated a more
confrontational policy to prevent
Iran from acquiring nuclear
weapons, including keeping mil-
itary action as an option.
Last week, a Freedom’s Watch
newspaper advertisement called
President Mahmoud Ahmadine-
jad of Iran “a terrorist.” The
group is considering a national
advertising campaign focused on
Iran, a senior benefactor said,
though Matt S. David, a spokes-
man for the group, declined to
comment on those plans.
“If Hitler’s warnings were
heeded when he wrote ‘Mein
Kampf,’ he could have been
stopped,” said Bradley Blake-
man, 49, the president of Free-
dom’s Watch and a former depu-
ty assistant to Mr. Bush. “Ahma-
dinejad is giving all the same
kind of warning signs to us, and
the region — he wants the de-
struction of the United States and
the destruction of Israel.”
With a forceful message and a
roster of wealthy benefactors,
Freedom’s Watch has quickly
emerged from the crowded field
of nonprofit advocacy groups as a
conservative answer to the nine-
year-old liberal MoveOn.org,
Continued on Page 30
Big Coffers and a Rising Voice
LiftaNewConservativeGroup
INSIDE
On the eve of parliamentary elections, Prime Minister Viktor F. Ya-
nukovich, once reviled, is arguably Ukraine’s most popular politician,
a transformation helped by an American political strategist. PAGE 8
Ukrainian Prime Minister Reinvents Himself
The getting in, the going, the
memories: a look at the college
experience from every angle of
the quad. MAGAZINE
College From All Angles
Frank Rich on the problem
with Hillary Clinton’s perfect
campaign. OPINION PAGES
Beware the Bloviation
Countrywide Financial faces
scrutiny over its process to help
distressed homeowners avoid
foreclosure. SUNDAY BUSINESS
Hard to Avoid Foreclosure
On the eve of a North American and European tour, Bruce Spring-
steen speaks with A. O. Scott about his reinfatuation with pop and why
he timed his new album to the presidential election. ARTS & LEISURE
Springsteen on Pop and Politics
TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES
Why the monks in Myanmar
can grant, or deny, legitimacy to
a government. WEEK IN REVIEW
Making the Military Sweat
Although its president denies
that homosexuality exists in Iran,
gays there insist that they are nu-
merous, if quiet. PAGE 11
Iran’s Gays Keep Low Profile
Why New Yorkers love side-
walk cafes, despite some not-so
delicious sights, sounds and
smells. WEEK IN REVIEW
The Great Outdoors
In the 45 previous loopy sea-
sons of the Mets, nothing had
ever happened like the sheer
mood swings yesterday. Strug-
gling to stay alive after a ghastly
two weeks, they
had the double ex-
hilaration of a near
no-hitter by John
Maine and a glut of
runs in a 13-0 vic-
tory against the
Florida Marlins.
The Mets could have used
some of this surplus during the
recent horrors — the worst days
in the history of the franchise, if
you think about it. They had
squandered a seven-game lead
with 17 to go, and sometimes
could not hit and usually could
not pitch.
After the game, the Mets all
said they were going out to din-
ner with their families. Nobody
would own up to a sideways peek
at a laptop or a television set to
track the Phillies-Nationals game
later in the afternoon. Therefore,
this may come as news to them
as they report to work this morn-
ing: For all their errors and home
run pitches of the last two weeks,
the Mets enter the last day of the
season in a dead heat with the
Phillies, who lost, 4-2.
“It’s bizarre,” Manager Willie
Randolph said after his own
game was over. “The whole sec-
ond half of the season is bizarre.
You can’t figure it out.”
Here’s what we know: If the
Mets win today and the Phillies
lose, the Mets will win the Na-
tional League East. If both teams
win or both teams lose, they will
play a one-game playoff for the
division title tomorrow in Phila-
delphia. The Mets are also still in
contention for the N.L. wild card
after the San Diego Padres failed
to clinch it yesterday.
In the erratic feast-or-famine
tradition of this team, the Mets
had it all yesterday, mostly from
Maine, a lanky 25-year-old right-
hander who pitched the game of
his life. Maine struck out 14 and
allowed only a few solid outs until
Paul Hoover, a substitute with
eight career hits, dribbled a sin-
gle 30 feet up the third-base line
with two outs in the eighth in-
ning.
Oh, yes, there was also a
bench-clearing rumble after the
Continued on Page 18
GEORGE
VECSEY
SPORTS
OF THE TIMES
From the Deepest Depths, a Moment for the Mets
JOHN DUNN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
Mets starter John Maine did not allow a hit for seven and two-
thirds innings. The Mets finished the day in a tie for first place.
In Mexico City, Viswanathan
Anand of India took over the
world championship from Vladi-
mir Kramnik of Russia. PAGE 37
New Chess Champion
Architecture
Address: 53 Davies Street, London W1K 5JH, United Kingdom
Tel.: +44 (0) 20 7698 4453 • Mob. UK: +44 (0) 75 5147 4568 • Mob. Italy: +39 33 5648 1300
E: info@worldwideportfolio.co.uk • W: www.worldwideportfolio.co.uk
The Tudor architectural style is the final development of Medieval architecture in England,
during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond. It followed the Perpendicular
style and, although superseded by Elizabethan architecture in domestic building of any
pretensions to fashion, the Tudor style long retained its hold on English taste.
Tudor Architecture
Your view
from the top
Special Report Representatives of
VOICES OF LEADERS (VL) is the exclusive Special Report Representative
for Newsweek magazine. We have been commissioned to prepare custom
content reports about rapidly developing economies around the globe. We
conduct in-depth personalised interviews that bring together the constructive
commentaries and insights of the most prominent decision makers and business
leaders that shape these economies.
Interviews are an unique source of information that contribute to our custom
content reports, which are published in the Global Edition of Newsweek, one
of the world’s leading publications.
Our objective is to engage the readers of Newsweek on prospective investment
opportunities available in these promising financial markets while highlighting the
countries’ needs and creating a direct channel of communication with readers
around the world.
Voices of Leaders is now crafting a series of engaging interactive e-books
that allow our interviewees to be seen, read and heard in the print edition
of Newsweek and online–at the same time. E
about us books
meet share&grow
M
72%
W m
28%
41 %
%
%
%66%
MM
MM
about us books
meet share&grow
Rea
p o ess ona s o
Rea
es a e nves o s
Marketing Kits
ABOUT USPM Communications invites you to
play a role on the world media stage
For over 10 years,PM Communications has enjoyed an
exclusive agreement with the United Kingdom’s lead-
ing newspaper The Daily Telegraph through which we
distribute sector-based and country reports,tailor made
to fit our client’s needs and desires.
Through a comprehensive focus on countries, sec-
tors and entities, PM Communications aims to play
an influential role in keeping British business leaders
and decision makers informed of global investment op-
portunities.
Since 1997, PM Communications has maintained a
strong and fruitful relationship with both The Daily
Telegraph and its demanding readers,owing to the high
quality of our reports and the consistency of our edi-
torial. PM Communications’ long-established experi-
ence in the communications industry is matched by the
expertise and integrity of our team.
Our aim is to provide comprehensive coverage on a range
of pertinent issues from countries, specific sectors and
regions which are not afforded an in-depth exposure
within the United Kingdom.
MORE THAN A DECADE
INFORMING THE BRITISH READER
PM COMMUNICATIONS
REPORTING29th July 2007
Modernisatio
n
leads
the way
EgyptEgyptModernisatio
n
leads
the way
TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:38 Página 2 TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:38 Página 3
OUR PRODUCT
PM Communications has developed a dynamic method
of connecting nation to nation, vendor to consumer,
producer to supplier,business opportunity to investor.
For over 10 years, our product has successfully been
used as a tool worldwide to generate awareness, influ-
ence public opinion and provide information in a ded-
icated context.
The real value that our product carries benefits both
parties on the communication chain: the reader and
the client.
PM Communications’ reports are attractive presenta-
tions providing relevant information to the readers of
The Daily Telegraph through targeted distribution.
Through advertising opportunities and editorial con-
tent,we are able to open an invaluable channel of com-
munication for our clients with the newspaper’s affluent
and intellectual audience.
While greatly benefiting all clients,our reports provide
a given entity with an excellent opportunity to access
an international platform. Whereas standalone adver-
tising campaigns only offer unitary exposure,PM Com-
munications’ reports complement an advertisement
by placing it within the scope of the project focus.
Professional reports that
open the doors to opportunity
97
98
99
00
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
TENYEARSDOINGBUSINESS
TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:39 Página 4
THE APPROACHPertinent, first-hand
information
Today,exposure and communication are vital to modern
business. Delivering your story to the audience is key.
For this reason, PM Communications invests the neces-
sary time and effort in acquiring first-hand knowledge from
the personalities at the forefront of the nation,region or
sector in focus. Interviews with influential politicians,
public figures and industry leaders give the resulting re-
ports a concise and invaluable view of the featured na-
tion or sector, portraying its strengths and future
aspirations, its economic reality and the best opportuni-
ties for investment.
TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:39 Página 5
About us
Economy Survey Corp.
Economy SurvEy corporation publishes
special reports which are distributed within the
pages of Smart Money-The Wall Street Journal. Our
reports provide the reader with thought-provoking
articles on topics from economic reform to cultural
issues, and include the contributions of influential
figures in politics and business.
Economy Survey Corp gathers the information where
it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of
correspondents,scatteredacrosstheplanet.Economy
Survey Corp serves as a link between governments
and markets, companies and investors, and nations
and individuals on a global scale. Our interviews and
articles offer a different point of view on matters of in-
terest to the US investor, businessman and politician.
Economy Survey Corp gathers the information where
it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of
correspondents, scattered across the planet.
Investment Opportunities
Economy SurvEy corporation aims to play
an influential role in keeping US leaders and decision
makers informed of global investment opportunities
through reports on those countries which are not fea-
tured in the day-to-day press.
Economy Survey Corp, leader in the industry, is ahead
of the game, keeping up with the changing times, of-
fering another vehicle for nations to show to the world
their strengths, dreams, and future aspirations. Our
representatives invest time and effort in acquiring first-
hand knowledge about a nation. Interviews with influ-
ential politicians, public figures and industry leaders
give us unbeatable information about economic reali-
ties and the best opportunities for investment.
The result is a concise and invaluable view of the
featured country or sector. Our reports are a tried-
and-tested format, the ideal way to connect nation
to nation, vendor to consumer, producer to supplier,
business opportunity to investor.
Our Reports
our rEportS are a tool used successfully world-
wide to influence public opinion, generate awareness
and provide information in a dedicated context. Spe-
cial reports have a guaranteed impact on the target
audience. They have a real value in their own right.
Attractive, graphic presentation with relevant infor-
mation on every page, the special report has a guar-
anteed impact on the target audience.
They provide invaluable sources of data and are often
kept for future reference by the reader. Unlike other
reports, our editorial is independent, advertisements
are clearly separate from editorial content, yet thanks
to positive support from state and private organiza-
tions, we are able to successfully blend objectivity
with persuasive advertising. The dedicated context
also provides a coherent framework for advertising,
linking publicity to editorial analysis.
Our reports
Special reports
in today’S timES, the crisis-driven orientation of
American news outlets results in insufficient coverage
of the extensive reforms and positive developments
taking place in emerging markets. Our reports aim to
redress this imbalance by providing an opportunity
for key public and private sector leaders to address
the positive evolution of their nations’ economic de-
velopment and business environment.
Through extensive research and interviews with top
government officials and key business leaders, Econ-
omy Survey Corp presents balanced and constructive
portraits highlighting legislative reforms, good gover-
nance, improvements in business, and opportunities
for partnership and investment. As an independent
agency with full editorial control, we have found that
our clients enjoy the opportunity to provide greater
input and review of our reports’ content in convey-
ing their message to the influential readers of Smart
money-the Wall Street Journal.
To complement the already substantial distribution
of our reports, we supplement circulation via our in-
house mailing lists - local, international, and targeted.
Copies of our reports are forwarded to local officials
and businessmen within the country that has been
profiled, key staff of The World Bank, The Interna-
tional Monetary Fund, and the majority of the CEO’s
of Fortune 500 companies.
They are a tool used successfully worldwide to influ-
ence public opinion, generate awareness and provide
information in a dedicated context.
A guaranteed impact
on the target audience
thEy havE a rEal valuE in their own right.
Attractive, graphic presentation with relevant infor-
mation on every page, the special report has a guar-
anteed impact on the target audience. They provide
invaluable sources of data and are often kept for fu-
ture reference by the reader. Unlike other reports, our
editorial is independent, advertisements are clearly
separate from editorial content, yet thanks to positive
support from state and private organizations, we are
able to successfully blend objectivity with persuasive
advertising. The dedicated context also provides a
coherent framework for advertising, linking publicity
to editorial analysis.
Smart money-the Wall Street Journal promises
to answer the tough questions of those seeking clarity
in today’s confused times. In doing so, it has estab-
lished a new standard in business finance publish-
ing and virtual redefined upscale service journalism.
With the refreshing clarity and provocative wit that
characterize The Wall Street Journal, Smart Money
presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for in-
vesting. The editorial team, which has won three Na-
tional Magazine Awards, includes three Pulitzer Prize
winters. Smart Money-The Wall Street Journal has
provided the nation’s political and economic leaders
with the most comprehensive coverage as the world’s
most trusted, authoritative source of business news
and analysis.
LIBYA 2007.indd 1 16/5/07 11:15:52
The Media
Magazine review
launchEd in 1992 by The Hearst Corporation
and Dow Jones & Company to service the need for
business finance information among the group of
professional and managerial Americans who, while
affluent and sophisticated, need a quick answer for
their investment needs.
Editorial excellence &
Authority building advertiser
credibility through
Smart money-the Wall Street Journal promises
to answer the tough questions of those seeking clarity
in today’s confused times. In doing so, it has estab-
lished a new standard in business finance publishing
and virtual redefined upscale service journalism.
Withtherefreshingclarityandprovocativewitthatchar-
acterize the Wall Street Journal, Smart money
presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for
investing. The editorial team, which has won three
National Magazine Awards, includes three Pulitzer
Prize winters. Smart money-the Wall Street Jour-
nal has provided the nation’s political and economic
leaders with the most comprehensive coverage as the
world’s most trusted, authoritative source of business
news and analysis.
Withadailyreadershipofover3.7million,Smartmoney-
the Wall Street Journal reaches more C-Suite
decision-makers than any other business publication.
ToTal audience
3.7 million (MRI Fall 2004)
audience reaching
“C-Suite” executives/high-level executives 47%
are Company Leaders (Erdos & Morgan 2004-2005)
(Company Leaders = Chairman / President / C-Level
or Owner / Partner).
Smart monEy-thE Wall StrEEt Journal is
at all times informative, authoritative, engaging, and es-
sential to the decision-makers of our global economy
which has earned it a dedicated and loyal readership.
Economy SurvEy corp gathers the information
where it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified
team of correspondents, scattered across the planet.
Wall Street Journal
With thE rEfrEShing clarity and provocative
wit that characterizes The Wall Street Journal, Smart-
Money presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for
saving, investing, and spending, plus regular coverage of
technology, automotive and lifestyle subjects including
areas such as upscale travel, fashion, fine wine, music,
food and more. In all cases, we stress consumer ser-
vice with action-oriented information. Our editorial team,
which has won three National Magazine Awards and was
a finalist 14 times, includes three Pulitzer Prize winners.
A powerful audience of
influencers and decision makers
78,183 Smart money Subscribers function
as their company’s Chief Planning Officer.
Top Management 59.3%
Serve on any Board of Directors 43.2%
Responsible for Corporate Development/
Planning 19.0%
Responsible for Corporate Real Estate 13.6%
Involved in Acquisition of Real Estate,
Plant Sites, Office Space 21.4%
Source: 2003 WSJ U.S. Subscriber Study
An award-winning
editorial environment
looking to incrEaSE your WEalth and
plan for the future? SmartMoney, published monthly
by the Wall Street Journal, is your key towards un-
locking the full potential of your investments and fi-
nancial planning.
Expert analysis from top journalists and business
professionals give you a leg-up on the tough compe-
tition, better positioning you for the times ahead.
We produce spe-
cial sections for
Smart Money-
The Wall Street
Journal that are
designed to de-
velop interest in
nations world-
wide - economies, people and culture - in which our
journalists have lived and worked.
Nations which Economy Survey Corp believes are
worthy of the kind of coverage that our special sec-
tions provide. We do all of our own reporting and news-
gathering in-country, and prepare sections which are
100% independent from external interests.
50%
29% 28%
25% 24%
22%
19%
8% 6%
SM
WSJ
Busin
Week
Times News
Week
Fortune US
News
Econ FTForbes
2004-2005 PurchaSe inFluence
in aMerican BuSineSS
52.1
48.9 48.5
44.6
43.6
37.0
33.6
31.3
SM
WSJ
Econ News
Week
Busin
Week
US
News
Fortune FTForbes
read 4/4 laST iSSueS oF MagaZineS
and 5/5 laST iSSueS oF neWSPaPerS
Born for Business
WORLD REVIEW publishes special reports which are distributed within
the pages of The New York Post newspaper. Our reports provide the
reader with thought-provoking articles on topics from economic reform
to cultural issues, and include the contributions of influential figures in
politics and business.
World Review gathers the information where it happens and disposes of a
highly-qualified team of correspondents, scattered across the planet. World
Review serves as a link between governments and markets, companies
and investors, and nations and individuals on a global scale. Our interviews
and articles offer a different point of view on matters of interest to the US
investor, businessman and politician.
Investment Opportunities
WORLD REVIEW aims to play an influential role in keeping US leaders
and decision makers informed of global investment opportunities through
reports on those countries which are not featured in the day-to-day press.
World Review, leader in the industry, is ahead of the game, keeping up
with the changing times, offering another vehicle for nations to show to
the world their strengths, dreams, and future aspirations. Our represen-
tatives invest time and effort in acquiring first-hand knowledge about a
nation. Interviews with influential politicians, public figures and industry
leaders give us unbeatable information about economic realities and the
best opportunities for investment.
The result is a concise and invaluable view of the featured country or sector.
Our reports are a tried-and-tested format, the ideal way to connect nation
to nation, vendor to consumer, producer to supplier, business opportunity
to investor.
About us
OuR REpORts are a tool used successfully worldwide to influence
public opinion, generate awareness and provide information in a dedi-
cated context. Special reports have a guaranteed impact on the target
audience. They have a real value in their own right. Attractive, graphic
presentation with relevant information on every page.
They provide invaluable sources of data and are often kept for future ref-
erence by the reader. Unlike other reports, our editorial is independent,
advertisements are clearly separate from editorial content, yet thanks
to positive support from state and private organizations, we are able to
successfully blend objectivity with persuasive advertising. The dedicat-
ed context also provides a coherent framework for advertising, linking
publicity to editorial analysis.
Through extensive research and interviews with top government offi-
cials and key business leaders, World Review presents balanced and
constructive portraits highlighting legislative reforms, good gover-
nance, improvements in business, and opportunities for partnership
and investment. As an independent agency with full editorial control,
we have found that our clients enjoy the opportunity to provide great-
er input and review of our reports’ content in conveying their mes-
sage to the influential readers of the New York post newspaper.
To complement the already substantial distribution of our reports, we
supplement circulation via our in-house mailing lists - local, interna-
tional, and targeted. Copies of our reports are forwarded to local
officials and businessmen within the country that has been profiled,
key staff of The World Bank, The International Monetary Fund, and
the majority of the CEO’s of Fortune 500 companies.
They are a tool used successfully worldwide to influence public opinion,
generate awareness and provide information in a dedicated context.
Our Reports
As the preeminent daily newspaper in the competitive New York market,
the mission of the New York post is to chronicle the triumphs and trag-
edies of this great city through a bold, irreverent and edgy tabloid design
that readers know and love. From breaking news and business national
and international levels, the New York post is committed to being New
Yorker’s source for essential information and entertainment.
The power of the New York post brand extends beyond newspaper
to online content and glossy magazine. These additional mediums bring
the same flavor and style as the original newspaper, while keeping pace
with technology and consumer demands. the New York post knows
its readers, and readers love the Post.
Partner with The New York Post
to give your advertisements that extra advantage
• Increased coverage in the New York market
• A quality, targeted audience with discretionary income
• Unique advertising positions in a compelling advertising environment
• A newspaper that provides an alternative to magazine and outdoor advertising
• Brilliant color with crisp resolution on our state of the art printers
• Multimedia portfolio that fulfills your newspaper, online and magazine needs
Content - relevant news at your fingertips daily
• Breaking News!. Smart, bold coverage from our nationally recognized
journalists. Find exclusive interviews and revealing news features in a clear,
concise format.
• It’s a Bull Market. The Post’s Business section is a staple for Wall Street.
Coverage includes financial analysis, trend forecasting, and media industry
exclusives from award-winning writer Keith Kelly.
• Tell Me What You Really Think… The Post Opinion section includes
insightful commentary on local, national and international issues.
The Media Consistently Connect with New Yorkers
Reach a quality,
targeted audience daily
• Median Age: 47.5
• Age 25-54: 57.7%
• Male/Female ratio: 63.3% / 36.7%
• College Educated (I+yrs): 58.7%
• Married: 56.0%
• Employed: 69.6%
• Median HHI: $84,023
• Median Home Value: $458,415
Post NY DMA Readership — DAILY 2,109,435
Source: 2010 Scarborough (II); Base NYDMA Adults
The New York Post
has more exclusive readers
in the NY DMA than The Times
575,000
550,000
525,000
500,000
475,000
450,000
425,000
400,000
Source: ABC Audit 12 month ending 9/30/1999 - 9/30/2009
1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009
532,484
435,976
NY Post
1,358,548
NY Times
1,305,990
Duplicated
Readers
263,052
Worldwide News
Where It
Happens
Catálogos
Páginas Web
PLV
PLV
VOICES OF LEADERS
is a global business network
for top executives
and companies to
MEET, SHARE & GROW
both locally and worldwide.
www.voicesofleaders.com
Follow us on:
Sonorización de Eventos
Discotecas móviles
Karaokes
Ceremonias Civiles
Coros Rocieros
La Fiesta Perfecta
www.bailando.info
Nuestros Clientes
Nuestros Clientes
C/ José Abascal, Nº 44 l 4ª planta
28003 l Madrid l SPAIN
Tlf: +34 914 417 799
info@wimit-international.com
www.wimit-international.com

More Related Content

Similar to Portfolio WIMIT

Tic 2015 (standard) mag
Tic 2015 (standard) magTic 2015 (standard) mag
Tic 2015 (standard) magGrenada101
 
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company Lookbook
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company LookbookDigital Mission NYC 2014 - Company Lookbook
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company LookbookChinwag
 
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional Edition
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional EditionFamily Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional Edition
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional EditionTy Murphy
 
Tylon brochure
Tylon brochureTylon brochure
Tylon brochureTylon88
 
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals De Micco & Friends Group
 
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADSVeronica Flamo
 
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015Ricardo Silva
 
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015One Cornwall Project Update April 2015
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015Kevin Oliver
 
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_inglesInterlat
 
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.Gonzalo López Martí
 
Canada Media on Barter
Canada Media on BarterCanada Media on Barter
Canada Media on BarterDaniel Evans
 
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An Introduction
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An IntroductionExpobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An Introduction
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An IntroductionDalpatSingh19
 
Steve Ordonez Studio Portfolio
Steve Ordonez Studio PortfolioSteve Ordonez Studio Portfolio
Steve Ordonez Studio PortfolioSteve Ordonez
 

Similar to Portfolio WIMIT (20)

Tic 2015 (standard) mag
Tic 2015 (standard) magTic 2015 (standard) mag
Tic 2015 (standard) mag
 
Michael robert gill cv english
Michael robert gill cv englishMichael robert gill cv english
Michael robert gill cv english
 
2016 ICSC Presentation
2016 ICSC Presentation2016 ICSC Presentation
2016 ICSC Presentation
 
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company Lookbook
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company LookbookDigital Mission NYC 2014 - Company Lookbook
Digital Mission NYC 2014 - Company Lookbook
 
Digital Mission brochure NYC 2014
Digital Mission brochure NYC 2014Digital Mission brochure NYC 2014
Digital Mission brochure NYC 2014
 
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional Edition
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional EditionFamily Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional Edition
Family Office Elite Magazine Special Promotional Edition
 
Tylon brochure
Tylon brochureTylon brochure
Tylon brochure
 
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals
Global residency for entrepreneurs and high-net-worth individuals
 
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS
1511_CWT_Engage_SPREADS
 
INFO AMCHAMDR
INFO AMCHAMDR  INFO AMCHAMDR
INFO AMCHAMDR
 
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015
Miranda Alliance Power Presentation 2015
 
#Ds15 launch
#Ds15 launch#Ds15 launch
#Ds15 launch
 
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015One Cornwall Project Update April 2015
One Cornwall Project Update April 2015
 
TOA PPT
TOA PPTTOA PPT
TOA PPT
 
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles
2.Interlat tarifas patrocinadores #LatamDigital 2016-17_ingles
 
#PR2015: trends and predictions for 2015 from the CIPR
#PR2015: trends and predictions for 2015 from the CIPR#PR2015: trends and predictions for 2015 from the CIPR
#PR2015: trends and predictions for 2015 from the CIPR
 
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.
López Martí Miami's credentials, clients & accolades.
 
Canada Media on Barter
Canada Media on BarterCanada Media on Barter
Canada Media on Barter
 
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An Introduction
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An IntroductionExpobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An Introduction
Expobazaar a B2B Digital Marketplace - An Introduction
 
Steve Ordonez Studio Portfolio
Steve Ordonez Studio PortfolioSteve Ordonez Studio Portfolio
Steve Ordonez Studio Portfolio
 

Recently uploaded

306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media
306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media
306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social MediaD SSS
 
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Service
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts ServiceCall Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Service
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Servicejennyeacort
 
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William Vickery
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William VickeryDesign Portfolio - 2024 - William Vickery
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William VickeryWilliamVickery6
 
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Nightssuser7cb4ff
 
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiVIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiSuhani Kapoor
 
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdf
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdfPassbook project document_april_21__.pdf
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdfvaibhavkanaujia
 
ARt app | UX Case Study
ARt app | UX Case StudyARt app | UX Case Study
ARt app | UX Case StudySophia Viganò
 
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一F La
 
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detail
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detailNATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detail
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detailDesigntroIntroducing
 
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Doux
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai DouxDubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Doux
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Douxkojalkojal131
 
PORTAFOLIO 2024_ ANASTASIYA KUDINOVA
PORTAFOLIO   2024_  ANASTASIYA  KUDINOVAPORTAFOLIO   2024_  ANASTASIYA  KUDINOVA
PORTAFOLIO 2024_ ANASTASIYA KUDINOVAAnastasiya Kudinova
 
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Nightssuser7cb4ff
 
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一lvtagr7
 
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...Narsimha murthy
 
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`dajasot375
 
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdfSwaraliBorhade
 
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝soniya singh
 
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUp
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUpKindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUp
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUpmainac1
 

Recently uploaded (20)

306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media
306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media
306MTAMount UCLA University Bachelor's Diploma in Social Media
 
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Service
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts ServiceCall Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Service
Call Girls In Safdarjung Enclave 24/7✡️9711147426✡️ Escorts Service
 
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William Vickery
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William VickeryDesign Portfolio - 2024 - William Vickery
Design Portfolio - 2024 - William Vickery
 
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Aslali 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
 
young call girls in Pandav nagar 🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
young call girls in Pandav nagar 🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Serviceyoung call girls in Pandav nagar 🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
young call girls in Pandav nagar 🔝 9953056974 🔝 Delhi escort Service
 
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service AmravatiVIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
VIP Call Girl Amravati Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Amravati
 
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdf
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdfPassbook project document_april_21__.pdf
Passbook project document_april_21__.pdf
 
ARt app | UX Case Study
ARt app | UX Case StudyARt app | UX Case Study
ARt app | UX Case Study
 
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
办理(宾州州立毕业证书)美国宾夕法尼亚州立大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
 
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detail
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detailNATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detail
NATA 2024 SYLLABUS, full syllabus explained in detail
 
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Doux
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai DouxDubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Doux
Dubai Call Girls Pro Domain O525547819 Call Girls Dubai Doux
 
PORTAFOLIO 2024_ ANASTASIYA KUDINOVA
PORTAFOLIO   2024_  ANASTASIYA  KUDINOVAPORTAFOLIO   2024_  ANASTASIYA  KUDINOVA
PORTAFOLIO 2024_ ANASTASIYA KUDINOVA
 
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full NightCall Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
Call Girls Bapu Nagar 7397865700 Ridhima Hire Me Full Night
 
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
定制(RMIT毕业证书)澳洲墨尔本皇家理工大学毕业证成绩单原版一比一
 
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Harsh Vihar (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
 
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...
Revit Understanding Reference Planes and Reference lines in Revit for Family ...
 
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`
Abu Dhabi Call Girls O58993O4O2 Call Girls in Abu Dhabi`
 
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf
3D Printing And Designing Final Report.pdf
 
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
Call Girls in Okhla Delhi 💯Call Us 🔝8264348440🔝
 
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUp
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUpKindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUp
Kindergarten Assessment Questions Via LessonUp
 

Portfolio WIMIT

  • 2.
  • 3. Danos un objetivo. Nosotros aportamos la #imaginación. La imagen #comercial de una empresa tiene que ser #clara, #práctica y #productiva. Queremos ser tu constante fuente de #inspiración comercial. Wimit te ofrece #ideasfrescas e innovadoras para cubrir todas tus necesidades comerciales. Sabemos que un trabajo bien realizado es siempre un cliente satisfecho. De ahí que nuestros clientes sean nuestro mejor aval y garantía de #profesionalidad, ofreciéndote un servicio de #calidad en un gran abanico de posibilidades. Abarcamos una amplia variedad de productos #offline/#online en función de tus necesidades comerciales y para todo tipo de clientes: #grandesempresas, #administracionespúblicas, #PYMES y #autónomos. Consulta nuestro portfolio en #publicidad, #diseñoeditorial, #branding, #catálogos, #imagencorporativa, #memorias, #marketingkits, #páginasweb, #packaging, #PLV, #vallaspublicitarias... ¿Qué es lo que necesitas #promociar?. Portfolio
  • 4. Publicidad The newest way to travel to Cape Verde: San Pedro Airport ASA, Cape Verde’s Airports and Air Navigation Company has just opened Sao Pedro Airport, on the island of Sao Vicente. The fourth international facility in the islands, it is ready to receive scheduled and charter flights from European destinations. With an investment of $32 million, the future-proof project, featuring a new passenger terminal and improved ground services, aims to welcome 300,000 arrivals by 2012, and up to 500,000 by 2022. Your destination is taking off Sao Pedro International Airport Sao Vicente • Cape Verde Trinidad and Tobago offers travelers not just one, but two unique destinations. Discover our rich history, experience our vibrant culture, and explore our amazing biodoversity. Join the party at our world-famous Carnival and take part in festivals throughout the year. With a extensive choice of places to stay, from intimate bed and breakfasts to world-class hotels, and endless restaurants and bars to sample the best of our cuisine, there’s something to suit every taste and budget. And our friendly people are well-known for their warmth and hospitality. Come discover Trinidad and Tobago and see for yourself. lots to see, lots to discover The best choice The Seychelles Trading Company (STC) is a trading company, created in March 2008, with its core business being the imports, storage and distribution of essential and basic foods. In addition, STC engages in trading ofcertainbrandedFMCGproductsfromreputableinternationalsources,and operates a retail presence in the domestic market and the duty free sector. While most manufacturing activities have been privatized, a small presence in value addition activities remains. STC plays a major role in this area. w w w . s t c l . s c www.refidomsa.com.do Refinería Dominicana de Petróleo A trusted hydrocarbons supplier for 40 yearsP wer to gr w Building on a proud history of more than 70years as an effectivelocalutility,SarawakEnergyistakingboldsteps tosupportthetransformationofSarawakintoamodern, high income economy. By developing clean power for new industries at competitive prices, we are creating new opportunities in Sarawak for generations to come. Developingandimplementationofthisnationalagenda requiresaglobalperspective.Withthisinmind,Sarawak Energy became member of the international Hydro Association(IHA)in2010.Inearly2011,wecommenced a formal “Sustainability Partnership” to drawn upon the association’s expert knowledge concerning the assessment of the sustainability of hydropower projects. www.sarawakenergy.com.my All you need to let you touch tomorrow, today Telkom is able to offer flexible solutiones that can be catered to suite your exact needs. Telkom is Africaʼs leading integrated communication com- pany. We provide high quality services to all our customers. With a diverse and dynamic array of products, services and skills. This is backed by the highest levels of quality and support.Central (Free State) (051) 401 6505 / 18 www.telkom.co.za Leave it in our hands Making you a winner Running a successful national lottery has nothing to do with luck and everything to do with experience, expertise, and technical know-how www.opap.gr
  • 5. Publicidad Trillo Puerta del Tajo En Trillo confluyen el Tajo y el Cifuentes, justo bajo el puente viejo. La magia se extiende a ambos lados de la balaustrada de hierro. Aguas arriba, la indómita naturaleza del pinar que sólo los gancheros pudieron encauzar, y el Real Balneario de Carlos III. Aguas abajo, parajes solitarios acercan la corriente unida a Entrepeñas entre mil meandros que coquetean con frondosos encinares. En Trillo, cultura y aventura se unen como el gran río y su afluente sin que a partir de entonces el viajero pueda distinguir cuál es cuál. Ésta es la manera de degustar Trillo, siguiendo el ejemplo eterno de Tajo y Cifuentes. www.trillo.es NVA_ALC FITUR2014 255x341,5.indd 1 16/01/14 23:54 An Unforgettable Caribbean Hideaway The Caribbean’s Most Complete Resort Casa de Campo holds a very special place in the hearts of all who have visited. An amazing 7,000-acre hotel, resort and residential community, unlike any other Caribbean destination, Casa de Campo is a tropical gem on the southeastern coast of the Dominican Republic. Its unique cache of facilities and impeccable service by a warm Dominican staff are treasured by people of all ages who come from around the world. P.O. Box 140, La Romana, Republica Dominicana Tel: (809) 523-3333 / Fax: (809) 523-8548 or (809) 523-8394 www.casadecampo.com.do CREATING A GATEWAY TO THE DIGITAL HIGHWAY IN BERMUDA The Ministry of Telecommunications and E-Commerce is responsible for telecommu- nications, e-commerce an e-government in Bermuda, providing our citizens with ready answers to their questions, and our investors with ready access to our market. Pueden participar todos los establecimientos de hostelería de Sigüenza y su comarca. Cada establecimiento podrá presentar a concurso un pincho (caliente o frío) de un tamaño que permita su degustación en dos bo- cados. Los pinchos presentados a concurso serán expedidos al público durante los días de celebración del mismo y durante la V Ruta de la Tapa Medieval (durante el resto de fines de semana de marzo), en un horario determinado por los propios establecimientos participantes y su precio será de 2,50 € (pincho + caña o vino). El ganador representará a la Ciudad Mitrada en la gran final que este año va a tener lugar a comienzos del mes de mayo en Hondarribia (Gipuzkoa). Los establecimientos que deseen participar deberán presentar sus datos junto con el nombre de su tapa o pincho y los ingredientes utilizados antes del 15 de febrero de 2012 en el Ayuntamiento de Sigüenza. Para más información: Ayuntamiento de Sigüenza Gabinete de Prensa Dpto de Prensa Javier Bravo Tfn: 949 390 850 Tfn: 606 411 053 3 y 4 Marzo 2012 Concurso Tapas y Pintxos Medievales Sigüenza V CONCURSO TAPAS SIGÜENZA.indd 1 08/02/12 13:56
  • 10. Marketing Kits “ United World is an independent, international media communications agency, which has an exclusive agreement with USA TODAY and has been recognized as a leader in the production of special economic sections on various countries, regions and sectors worldwide, delivering timely, credible information to a so- phisticated American audience with the aim to make the changing world more understandable and to highlight the potential aspirations and opportunities in established up-coming markets. We have been working with United World for over 10 years and have found them to be very good and reliable partners. The reports they prepare are well designed and they should generate a very favourable response. The reports produced are known as Our World, constituting an additional sec- tion to USA TODAY. United World enjoys full independence and is responsible for the preparation and content of their reports. As you know, USA TODAY has a highly influential readership, offering an unri- valled route to the American market.” Bruce Dewar, USA TODAY F For almost twenty years, United World has been making a difference in global communications. Through an exclusive media agreement with America’s number 1 newspaper, USA Today, we produce socio-economic reports, published under the title “Our World”, that constitute an additional section to the newspaper. Our reports are an unprecedented communication tool for nations and regions to voice their opinions on a global scale. Through the representation of the interna- tional survey, countries are empowered to create their own international image, sending out the messages that will attract others to their part of the world. With our extensive experience, from Dubai to Turkey, from Nigeria to Thai- land, United World offers you a rare opportunity: the ideal environment to present the best political, economic and cultural aspects of your nation and your vision of current and future potential to an affluent, influential American audience. There is no more effective way to showcase your nation and receive the maximum return on your time and investment. Our impact W We at United World are committed to delivering an insightful analysis of your country. From concept to publication, our agency offers a complete service. Our reports provide: Maximum impact Space for developed content Professionalism of product In-depth information ADDITIONAL SERVICES. We provide opportunities for electronic dissemina- tion of our report on our website, www.unitedworld-usa.com, through animated banners and links to official websites. We will provide each client with an agreed number of these special reports for inter- nal marketing purposes or external distribution. We formulate a tailored mailing list of over 600 entries. We believe that while our report receives excellent coverage through its distribution with USA Today it also deserves specific attention from the world’s leading decision-makers. We therefore offer you the opportunity to transmit your message to the following entities: Presidential Offices in Selected Countries, Major Embassies in Washington, D.C., Representatives of Leading International Organizations , Influential, Washington, D.C.-based Think Tanks, U.S. Banks and Financial Institutions, Chambers of Commerce in Washington, D.C., U.S. Stock Exchanges, This list is constantly updated by our analysts in Washington, D.C and will be presented to you by our representatives. On publication, our reports are sent to a selection agreed by the client and United World. A follow-up procedure is carried out and feedback is registered and passed on to the client. Welcome to Our World About Summit Communications Summit Communications is an independent communications agency dedicated to raising the profile of the world’s most dynamic, emerging markets through the production of country, regional and sector-based reports. Through an exclusive agreement with The New York Times Company, Summit Communications reaches the most influential decision- makers in the political, financial and economic communities of North America. Since 1999, over one hundred independent reports have been published and distributed with this prestigious media company and their flagship product, The New York Times. As an independent agency that works in collaboration with The New York Times, the represen- tatives of Summit Communications are solely responsible for the content of each report; there- fore, the editors of The New York Times do not participate in the preparation of our reports. The Company Address: 53 Davies Street, London W1K 5JH, United Kingdom Tel.: +44 (0) 20 7698 4453 • Mob. UK: +44 (0) 75 5147 4568 • Mob. Italy: +39 33 5648 1300 E: info@worldwideportfolio.co.uk • W: www.worldwideportfolio.co.uk Worldwide Portfolio is a leading property consultancy based in London. We have been operating for a number of years and have established a wide-ranging network of contacts covering all sectors of the property industry, including private sellers, estate agencies and developers. At Worldwide Portfolio we have a thorough knowledge of the markets in which we operate. This helps our local staff provide clients with a detailed analysis of the specific dynamics of each market. Our competence in these areas, together with the experience gained in our dealings with the foreign property market, has been acknowledged by investors the world over, who recognise Worldwide Portfolio’s standing as a professional body to guide them through all stages of the investment process, from purchase to management. At Worldwide Portfolio we use the latest systems for researching properties and are constantly interacting with real estate professionals and companies to ensure that our clients have privileged access to all opportunities, be they “on market” or “off market”. Our Company In order to communicate with the correct audience for our clients, Summit Communications publishes in the three distinct mediums of The New York Times: The New York Times Broadsheet, The New York Times Magazine and The New York Times Digital, all of which reach an affluent audience with global interests. Targeted editions will be selected for indi- vidual report distribution. New York Times Broadsheet. Nationwide: • Average net weekday circulation of 1,023,852. (ABC Publisher’s Statement, September 2007). • 47% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels. (MRI Fall 2007). New York Times Broadsheet. In The New York Market: • The Weekday New York Times is no. 1 in quality of readership of all competitive city and suburban newspapers. (Scarborough New York Release 2,2007). New York Times Magazine: • Average net Sunday paid circulation of 1,500,394. (ABC Publisher’s Statement, September 2007). • Largest Sunday newspaper in the U.S. • 47% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels. (MRI Fall 2007). New York Times Digital: • 17,177,000 Adult unique users (based on 12 month average) make NYTimes.com the nº 1 most visited newspaper website in the U.S. • 48% of readership is comprised of Professional/Managerial levels. • Mean household income of readership is $90,038. (SOURCE: Nielsen Online NetView December 2007; @Plan Winter 2007/2008). VOL. CLVI . No. 53,985 Copyright © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 2007 New York: Today, partly sunny, a shower, high 82. Tonight, cloudy, low 69. Tomorrow, few clouds, much warmer, high 89. Yesterday, high 74, low 56. Weather map is on Page 20. $5 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $3.50 Late Edition By JASON DePARLE MINDELO, Cape Verde — Virtually ev- ery aspect of global migration can be seen in this tiny West African nation, where the num- ber of people who have left approaches the number who remain and almost everyone has a close relative in Europe or America. Migrant money buoys the economy. Mi- grant votes sway politics. Migrant departures split parents from children, and the most fa- mous song by the most famous Cape Verdean venerates the national emotion, “Sodade,” or longing. Lofty talk of opportunity abroad mixes at cafe tables here with accounts of false documents and sham marriages. The intensity of the national experience makes this barren archipelago the Galapagos of migration, a microcosm of the forces straining American politics and remaking so- cieties across the globe. An estimated 200 million people live out- side the country of their birth, and they help support a swath of the developing world as big if not bigger. Migrants sent home about $300 billion last year — nearly three times the world’s foreign aid budgets combined. Those sums are building houses, educating children and seeding small businesses, and they have made migration central to discussions about how to help the global poor. A leading aca- demic text calls this the “Age of Migration.” But it is also the age of migration alarm, as European ships patrol African coasts to in- tercept human smugglers and new fences are planned along the Rio Grande. Countries that want migrant muscle and brains also want more border control. Many of them see illegal migrants as a security threat, especially in a terrorist age, and worry that large-scale mi- gration, even when legal, can undercut wages, require costly services and subject national identities to bonfires of religious and cultural conflict. The stakes can be seen here in Mindelo, a semicircle of barren hillsides that gaze out at the only sign of natural life, a beckoning sea. In a country with little rain and a history of famine, migration began as a necessity and became part of the civic DNA. You can dine at Café Portugal, drink at the Argentina bar and stroll Avenida da Holanda. Yet Holland — the Netherlands — now requires would-be migrants to pass a test on Dutch language and culture. Other countries InaWorldontheMove,aTinyLandStrainstoCope James Hill for The New York Times Stenio da Luz dos Reis, 17, lives in Cape Verde but longs to join his mother in the Netherlands. She left six years ago for a job there. BORDER CROSSINGS The View From Cape Verde Continued on Page 14 WESTERN SAHARA MALI ALGERIA MAURITANIA CAPE VERDE SENEGAL GAMBIA CANARY ISLANDS Mindelo Praia MOROCCO Miles 300 The New York Times TexasTown,NowDivided,Forged Bush’sFirmStandonImmigration By JIM RUTENBERG MIDLAND, Tex. — Late last spring, Republicans in this West Tex- as oil town called for a boycott of Doña Anita’s Mexican restaurant, a retaliatory step against its owner, Luz Reyes, for closing shop and showing up at a rally against pro- posed new penalties for illegal immi- grants. But President Bush’s three best friends here defied the boycott and went to the restaurant, Mr. Bush’s favorite when he lived here, regard- less. One of them, the president’s close confidant and former com- merce secretary, Donald L. Evans, told Ms. Reyes: “Luz, you didn’t do anything wrong. We love you.” The hometown divide helps to shed light on a broader rift, as Mr. Bush and like-minded Republicans engage in an unusually contentious fight with the rest of their party in the na- tional debate over immigration. Mr. Bush has pursued a goal of providing citizenship for the millions of illegal immigrants with rare at- tacks on his conservative supporters, who have derided his approach as tantamount to amnesty. There are various political motivations for Mr. Bush to push for his plan, including the rapid growth in the nation’s His- panic population, a voting group that he has long considered to be po- tentially Republican. But the roots of Mr. Bush’s passion lie here in Midland, now heavily His- panic, the city where Mr. Bush spent much of his childhood and to which he returned as a young adult after spending his high school and college years in the more genteel settings of Andover and Yale. As a boy, and later as a young, hard-drinking oilman, his friends say, Mr. Bush developed a particular empathy for the new Mexican immi- grants who worked hard on farms, in oil fields and in people’s homes and went on to raise children who built businesses and raised families of George Bush Presidential Library via Associated Press George W. Bush visiting the oil fields in Midland, Tex., during his campaign for Congress in 1978. 0 3 5 4 7 1 3 8 2 5 7 0 7 FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES By NEIL MacFARQUHAR Iran is in the throes of one of its most ferocious crackdowns on dis- sent in years, with the government focusing on labor leaders, universi- ties, the press, women’s rights advo- cates, a former nuclear negotiator and Iranian-Americans, three of whom have been in prison for more than six weeks. The shift is occurring against the backdrop of an economy so stressed that although Iran is the world’s sec- ond-largest oil exporter, it is on the verge of rationing gasoline. At the same time, the nuclear standoff with the West threatens to bring new sanctions. The hard-line administration of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, analysts say, faces rising pressure for failing to deliver on promises of greater prosperity from soaring oil revenue. It has been using American support for a change in government as well as a possible military attack as a pretext to hound his opposition and its sympathizers. Some analysts describe it as a “cultural revolution,” an attempt to roll back the clock to the time of the 1979 revolution, when the newly formed Islamic Republic combined religious zeal and anti-imperialist rhetoric to try to assert itself as a re- gional leader. Equally noteworthy is how little has been permitted to be discussed in the Iranian news media. Instead, at- tention has been strategically fo- cused on Mr. Ahmadinejad’s politi- cal enemies, like the former presi- dent, Mohammad Khatami, and the controversy over whether he violat- ed Islamic morals by deliberately shaking hands with an unfamiliar woman after he gave a speech in Rome. Mr. Khatami, the lost hope of Iran’s reform movement, felt com- pelled to rebut the accusation be- cause such a handshake is religious- ly suspect, but contended that the crowd seeking to congratulate him for his speech was so tumultuous that he could not distinguish between the hands of men and women. Natu- rally a video clip emerged, showing the cleric in his typical gregarious style bounding over to the first wom- an who addressed him on the orderly sidewalk, shaking her hand and chat- ting amicably. The dispute over the handshake occurred during a particularly fierce round of the factional fighting that has hamstrung the country since the 1979 revolution. Far more harsh ex- amples abound. Young men wearing T-shirts deemed too tight or haircuts seen as too Western have been paraded bleeding through Tehran’s streets by uniformed police officers who force them to suck on plastic jerrycans, a toilet item Iranians use to wash their bottoms. In case anyone misses the point, it is the official news agency Fars distributing the pictures of what it calls “riffraff.” Far bloodier photographs are circulating on blogs and on the Internet. The country’s police chief boasted Iran Cracks Down on Dissent, Parading Examples in Streets Continued on Page 8 By SARA RIMER The Dominican boys in the back of the freshman English class at the high school in Washington Heights were making fun of the timid Afri- can-American girl, Queen Bond. One of the boys got down on one knee in front of her as if he were Romeo — they had been studying “Romeo and Juliet” — and delivered the final crushing insult. “He was saying something about that I smelled,” recalled Queen, now 17. “I just put my head down. I start- ed crying.” Then something remarkable hap- pened, she said: “Cristal stood up.” Cool, streetwise, 4-foot-11-inch Cris- tal Pimentel. “This short, like, two-foot-tall per- son is standing up to these guys who are up to the ceiling,” Queen said. “She’s screaming, getting angry, waving her arms. She stood up, she defended me. No one ever stood up for me in that way. “I’m, like, ‘Wow, this girl is the most beautiful person.’ ” For four years now, Queen and Cristal have been a team: two teen- age girls who are striving to make something of themselves in the face of tremendous adversity. They graduated together yester- day from the High School of Interna- tional Business and Finance, a duo who beat the odds in a school system where despite improvements, only 50 percent of high school students grad- uated on time last June, according to state statistics. Cristal, who is 18, is the first per- son in her family to earn a high school diploma. Queen is the first of seven children — she has two older brothers — to graduate. How they did it is a story of two outsiders who found each other in one of the small schools the city has turned to in an attempt to break up large high schools that, with gradua- tion rates of 25 to 40 percent, became known as factories of failure. Queen and Cristal’s school, with roughly 700 students, is one of four The High School Kinship of Cristal and Queen Ruby Washington/The New York Times Cristal Pimentel and Queen Bond worked as a team to graduate from the High School of International Business and Finance in Manhattan. Continued on Page 18 By BILL PENNINGTON When she moved into her retire- ment condominium on a golf course, Eleanor Weiner admired the lush, pristine views of the fairways and greens, a landscape she never had to mow or maintain. Not long after, as she prepared dinner, a golf ball shat- tered the kitchen window, whistled past her head and crashed through the glass on her oven door. Ms. Wei- ner retrieved the ball from her oven and stalked outside to confront the golfer who had launched the missile. “He told me that’s what I get for living on a golf course,” said Ms. Wei- ner, who has lived for a dozen years alongside Rancho Las Palmas Coun- try Club near Palm Springs, Calif. “That was the first time I heard that, but it surely hasn’t been the last.” The intersection of errant golf shots and private property is not a new phenomenon. But with new gear that enables average golfers to hit a ball 250 yards, and with golf commu- nities sprouting nationwide — 70 per- cent of new courses include housing — it is becoming an increasingly prominent problem. Most homes built near this country’s 16,000 golf courses may not be in the cross hairs of slicing duffers, but thousands are. “It’s not only an ongoing problem, it’s been made worse by technologi- cally advanced golf equipment that makes golf balls go farther — and farther sideways,” said David Mulvi- hill, a managing director at the Ur- ban Land Institute, who has studied golf course development. “So homes that have been on a golf A Fairway View, But the Window Is Often Broken Continued on Page 17 INSIDE By any measure, the “surge” in Iraq is failing, according to Frank Rich. What will the Bush administra- tion do now? OPINION PAGES A New Propaganda Offensive New Yorkers may have become accustomed to the eccentricities of Michael R. Bloomberg, the billion- aire information mogul who took an unorthodox path to the mayor’s of- fice. But as he has thrust himself ever more fully into national politics, even Mr Bloomberg has questioned whether the rest of the country is ready for him. PAGE 19 How an independent candidate could anoint a president in a close general election. WEEK IN REVIEW Odd Man In? Bloomberg As Mayor and ’08 Kingmaker Critics of the official investigation of the August 2003 massacre of 17 aid workers in the town of Mutur, Sri Lanka, point to delays in introducing findings and to inconsistencies in bal- listics evidence that they say could implicate government soldiers in the killings. PAGE 4 Sri Lanka Faulted on Killings The will of Brooke Astor, at the center of a legal battle over her care and her for- tune, reflects the devotion of Mrs. Astor, now 105, both to her family and to the many civic interests that have helped make her an enduring New York fig- ure for decades. PAGE 25 A Look at Mrs. Astor’s Will Continued on Page 22 By DAVID E. SANGER and THOM SHANKER WASHINGTON, June 23 — Last month, Congress set a deadline for the American commander in Iraq, declaring that by Sept. 15 he would have to assess progress there before billions more dollars are approved to finance the military effort to stabil- ize the country. The commander, Gen. David H. Petraeus, said in re- cent days that his report would be only a snapshot of trends, strongly suggesting he will be asking for more time. But even before he composes the first sentences of the report, to be written with the new American am- bassador in Baghdad, Ryan C. Crock- er, the administration is commis- sioning other assessments that could dilute its findings about the impact of the current troop increase. The in- tent appears to be to give President Bush, who publicly puts great em- phasis on listening to his field com- manders, a wide range of options. The assessments are likely to con- clude that the Iraqi government has failed to use the troop increase for the purpose the president intended, to strike the political accommoda- tions that he said would stabilize the country. That and other views ex- pected in the various reports could also provide some rationale for be- ginning a reduction of troops in Iraq under conditions far short of the “vic- tory” Mr. Bush, for the past four years, has said was his ultimate goal. He has used that word with far less frequency recently. American intelligence agencies, according to senior administration and intelligence officials, are already preparing to submit their own as- sessment of Iraq’s progress. That is expected to include a judgment about whether Prime Minister Nuri General’s Report On Iraq Progress Has Competition Continued on Page 10 News Summary 2 International ........................................... 3-14 Metro ....................................................... 25-29 National .................................................. 16-22 Editorial, Op-Ed ... Week in Review, 13-15 Obituaries ................. 23 Weather ................... 20 TV Update ................ 29 Job Market Listings............. Sunday Business, page 21-29 In New York City and the metropolitan region. Updated news: nytimes.com The predictions are increasingly ominous, but just how bad could a cyberwar really be? WEEK IN REVIEW Internet Armageddon Jeffrey Smith After talks with ABC and NBC fell through, Paris Hilton has decided to give her first post-jail interview, without payment, to CNN’s Larry King on Wednesday night, a spokes- woman for the show said. PAGE 22 CNN Gets Hilton Interview Since reacquiring their shoe com- pany, the Florsheim family has giv- en it new life. SUNDAY BUSINESS Back in Their Own Shoes VOL. CLVI . No. 53,866 Copyright © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2007 New York: Today, a chance of snow arriving late, high 38. Tonight, snow, mixed with sleet, low 29. Tomorrow, snow ends early, high 36. Yesterday, high 42, low 20. Details, Page 18. $3.50 Late Edition Petty Officer Third Class Dustin E. Kirby, right and above, and Marine Lance Cpl. Colin Smith were thrown together on a battlefield in Iraq’s Anbar Province. Lance Corporal Smith was shot through the helmet and skull by a sniper in late October and Petty Officer Kirby, a Navy corpsman, worked feverishly to save him. On Christ- mas, Petty Officer Kirby was also shot through the head by a sniper. Petty Officer Kirby, 23, is back home in Georgia with his wife, Lauren, and is progressing steadily toward recovery. Lance Corpo- ral Smith, 19, below with his mother, Melissa, is undergoing inten- sive therapy in Minneapolis. By C. J. CHIVERS, PAGE 16 Lives Touched by War Photographs by Todd Heisler/The New York Times, top and bottom; Joao Silva for The New York Times 0 3 5 4 7 1 3 8 0 8 7 0 7 FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES By DAMIEN CAVE BAGHDAD, Feb. 24 — Moktada al- Sadr, the radical Shiite cleric and founder of the Mahdi Army militia, discovered recently that two of his commanders had created DVDs of their men killing Sunnis in Baghdad. Documents suggested that they had received money from Iran. So he suspended them and stripped them of power, said two Mahdi lead- ers in Sadr City, the heart of Mr. Sadr’s support here in the capital. But did he do so as part of his co- operation with the new security plan for Baghdad, which aims to quell the sectarian violence tormenting the city? Because his men had been dis- loyal, taking orders from Iran, whose support he values but whose control he fights? Or was it just for show — the act of an image-conscious leader who grasped the risk of graphic vid- eos and wanted to stave off direct American action against him? Mr. Sadr has been the great desta- bilizer in Iraq since 2003, wielding power on the streets and in the ruling Shiite bloc, thwarting the Americans and playing out at least a temporary alliance with Iran. With the new security plan for Iraq under way, every question about Mr. Sadr’s motives touches on a different facet of Iraq’s complicated struggle. He now finds himself under pres- sure from several sources. One is his popular Shiite base, which demands protection from devastating Sunni attacks. Another is Iran, with which he has had long but difficult ties. Then there are renegade factions of his own militia that resent his move into the political mainstream. Finally, the Americans, who have accused Iran of supplying Shiite mili- tias, including Mr. Sadr’s, with an es- IRAQREBELCLERIC REINS IN MILITIA; MOTIVES AT ISSUE PRESSED ON MANY FRONTS Shiite Leader Seems to Be Cooperating With U.S., at Least for Present Continued on Page 4 By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK WASHINGTON, Feb. 24 — A group of influential Christian conservatives and their allies emerged from a pri- vate meeting at a Florida resort this month dissatisfied with the Repub- lican presidential field and uncertain where to turn. The event was a meeting of the Council for National Policy, a se- cretive club whose few hundred members include Dr. James C. Dob- son of Focus on the Family, the Rev. Jerry Falwell of Liberty University and Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform. Although little known outside the conservative movement, the council has become a pivotal stop for Republican presi- dential primary hopefuls, including George W. Bush on the eve of his 1999 primary campaign. But in a stark shift from the group’s influence under President Bush, the group risks relegation to the margins. Many of the conserva- tives who attended the event, held at the beginning of the month at the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island, Fla., said they were dismayed at the ab- sence of a champion to carry their banner in the next election. Many conservatives have already declared their hostility to Senator John McCain of Arizona, despite his efforts to make amends for having once denounced Christian conserva- tive leaders as “agents of intoler- ance,” and to former Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani of New York, because of his liberal views on abortion and gay rights and his three marriages. Many were also suspicious of for- mer Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachu- setts; members have used the coun- cil as a conduit to distribute a dossier prepared by a Massachusetts con- servative group about liberal ele- ments of his record on abortion, stem cell research and gay rights. (Mr. Romney has worked to convince con- servatives that his views have changed.) And some members of the council have raised doubts about lesser known candidates — Gov. Mike Huckabee of Arkansas and Repre- sentative Duncan Hunter of Califor- nia, who were invited to Amelia Is- land to address an elite audience of about 60 of its members, and Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, who spoke to the full council at its previ- ous meeting, in October in Grand Rapids, Mich. Although each of the three had supporters, many conservatives ex- pressed concerns about whether any of the candidates could unify their CHRISTIAN RIGHT LABORS TO FIND AN ’08 CANDIDATE CONSERVATIVE DISCONTENT Doubts Are Raised on Top Republican Hopefuls — Recruits Sought Continued on Page 21 INSIDE Venezuelan arms spending has ex- ceeded $4 billion in the past two years, putting the nation ahead of major buyers like Pakistan and Iran. Venezuela says the fighter jets, at- tack helicopters and Kalashnikovs are to counter potential aggression from the United States. PAGE 3 Venezuela a Top Arms Buyer The New York Times Style Maga- zine details the trends for spring, from a new fascination with the future to graphic prints and ethnic influences. Also: Cathy Horyn goes behind the scenes at Yves Saint Laurent. T: Women’s Fashion By JOSEPH KAHN BEIJING — Li Jinsong and Li Jianqiang are Chinese trial lawyers who take on difficult political cases, tangle with the police and seek sol- ace in the same religion, Christian- ity. But like many who devote them- selves to expanding freedoms and the rule of law in China, the two spend as much time clashing over tactics and principles as they do challenging the ruling Communist Party. The two Mr. Lis are part of a mo- mentous struggle over the rule of law in China. Young, well educated and idealistic, they and other members of the so-called weiquan, or rights de- fense, movement, aim to use the laws and courts that the Communist Par- ty has put in place as part of its mod- ernization drive to constrain the par- ty’s power. The informal network of rights de- fenders may be the only visible force for political openness and change in China at a time when the surging economy and the country’s rapidly expanding global influence have oth- erwise strengthened party leaders. The authorities have refrained from suppressing it entirely, at least part- ly because it operates carefully with- in the law and uses China’s judicial system, as well as the news media, to advance its aims. Yet nearly 18 years after the June 4, 1989, crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijing, China quickly crushes any organized opposition. Rights defenders face the delicate task of coordinating their actions and expanding their collective influence when they remain autonomous, rud- derless and, very often, rivalrous. The two Mr. Lis have feuded about how to handle big court cases. When they met the Bush administration’s China specialists in the White House last November, they argued about whether top leaders like President Hu Jintao were basically benevolent. A joint interview on Radio Free Asia devolved into a shouting match over whether rights defenders could work with party leaders or should actively oppose them. As their confrontation grew, Li Jianqiang, the more combative of the two, wrote a manifesto that called China a “super jail” and described its leaders as “ruthless dictators.” He Rivals on Legal Tightrope Seek To Expand Freedoms in China RULE BY LAW A Shared Vision of Justice Continued on Page 12 By BARNABY J. FEDER After more than a decade-long de- cline, is heart bypass surgery poised for a comeback? Some doctors say it may be time to give bypass operations a second look. They include even some cardiolo- gists who specialize in the far more popular alternative — using stents to keep coronary arteries open. No one is predicting a sudden surge back to bypass, which is still a far more invasive and initially riski- er way to treat plaque-clogged heart arteries, a condition that afflicts mil- lions of Americans. But in light of new safety concerns over the long-term risks of stents, as well as accumulating data indicating that the sickest heart patients may live longer if they receive bypass surgery instead, some well-known stent specialists say the pendulum may have swung too far away from bypass surgery. “We as cardiologists have prob- ably pressed forward on stent tech- nology a little faster than we should have,” said Dr. Kirk Garratt, the di- rector of research into stents and re- lated heart therapies at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, one of the na- tion’s leading stenting centers. It is a remarkable acknowledg- ment, considering the medical and fi- nancial stakes in play. In the last Continued on Page 20 In the Stent Era, Heart Bypasses GetaNewLook Nicholas D. Kristof, from Ethiopia, on what happens when the U.S. cuts aid to women in the developing world. WEEK IN REVIEW, PAGE 15 Opinion: Death by Pregnancy A truck bomb detonated beside a Sunni mosque and market near Fal- luja, killing 36 people. Page 6. Truck Bomb in Iraq Kills 36 NEWS SUMMARY 2 International ........................................... 3-12 Metro ....................................................... 23-27 National .................................................. 14-21 Editorial, Op-Ed ... Week in Review, 13-15 Obituaries ................. 28 Weather ................... 18 TV Update ................ 26 Job Market Listings............. Sunday Business, page 17-25 In New York City and the metropolitan region. Updated news: nytimes.com By FELICITY BARRINGER and ANDREW ROSS SORKIN Under a proposed $45 billion buyout by a team of private equity firms, the TXU Corporation, a Texas utility that has long been the bane of environ- mental groups, will abandon plans to build 8 of 11 coal plants and commit to a broad menu of environmental measures, according to people in- volved in the negotiations. The roster of commitments came through an unusual process in which the equity firms asked two prominent environmental groups what meas- ures could be taken to win their sup- port. The result is an about-face from the company’s earlier approach to climate-change issues, and includes a goal of returning the carbon-dioxide emissions by TXU to 1990 levels by 2020. Environmental groups said yester- day that they had never known of a fi- nancial deal with such an ambitious built-in environmental component. Two private equity firms, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Company and the Texas Pacific Group, have proposed to buy TXU in what would become the largest leveraged buyout ever. The transaction will be put to the TXU board for a vote on Sunday. People involved in the negotiations said that Goldman Sachs, an adviser and lender to the buyers, helped bro- ker peace with environmental groups and sought their support for the transaction. Goldman Sachs has been one of the most aggressive firms on Wall Street about taking action on cli- mate change; the company sends its bankers home at night in hybrid lim- ousines. For the investor groups, the effort Continued on Page 20 Utility to Limit NewCoalPlants In Big Buyout Twenty-three women were asked to leave Delta Zeta sorority at DePauw University, including every member who was overweight or non- white. Others left in protest. PAGE 17 A Sorority Showdown Andrew Hancock for The New York Times The Carpetbagger looks back on his humbling Oscar season on the edge of celebrity. ARTS & LEISURE All Access, No Insight Internal Justice Department per- formance reports for six of the eight U.S. attorneys dismissed in recent months rated them “well regarded” or “very competent.” The evalua- tions, which were not made public before, raise questions about why the prosecutors were let go. PAGE 19 Praise for U.S. Attorneys Dismissed by Justice Dept. In an unusual move, a federal ap- peals court is recommending that an appeals board review immigration cases involving a New York judge whose asylum hearings have been criticized. PAGE 25 Review of Judge’s Cases Citigroup is expected to name a top officer of American Express as its new chief financial officer in a move aimed at ending weeks of top management turmoil. PAGE 27 Finance Chief for Citigroup VOL. CLVII . No. 54,083 © 2007 The New York Times NEW YORK, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2007 By CLIFFORD KRAUSS NEVADA, Iowa, Sept. 24 — The ethanol boom of recent years — which spurred a frenzy of dis- tillery construction, record corn prices, rising food prices and hopes of a new future for rural America — may be fading. Only last year, farmers here spoke of a biofuel gold rush, and they rejoiced as prices for etha- nol and the corn used to produce it set records. But companies and farm co- operatives have built so many distilleries so quickly that the ethanol market is suddenly plagued by a glut, in part because the means to distribute it have not kept pace. The average na- tional ethanol price on the spot market has plunged 30 percent since May, with the decline esca- lating sharply in the last few weeks. “The end of the ethanol boom is possibly in sight and may al- ready be here,” said Neil E. Harl, an economics professor emeritus at Iowa State University who lec- tures on ethanol and is a consult- ant for producers. “This is a dan- gerous time for people who are making investments.” While generous government support is expected to keep the output of ethanol fuel growing, the poorly planned overexpan- sion of the industry raises ques- tions about its ability to fulfill the hopes of President Bush and oth- er policy makers to serve as a se- rious antidote to the nation’s heavy reliance on foreign oil. And if the bust becomes worse, candidates for president could be put on the spot to pledge even more federal support for the in- dustry, particularly here in Iowa, whose caucus in January is the first contest in the presidential nominating process. Many industry experts say the worst problems are temporary and have been intensified by transportation bottlenecks in get- ting ethanol from the heartland to the coasts, where it is needed most. And even if some farmers who invested in the plants lose money, most of them are reaping a separate bounty from higher ETHANOL’S BOOM STALLING AS GLUT DEPRESSESPRICES 30% PLUNGE SINCE MAY Production Expands but Distribution Lags — Blow to Farmers Continued on Page 26 By JO BECKER From a political standpoint, it should have been an easy deci- sion. The calls flooding Fred D. Thompson’s Senate office in the winter of 1999 showed that his Tennessee constituents over- whelmingly favored removing President Bill Clinton from of- fice. But as the historic impeach- ment trial neared, records show, Mr. Thompson agonized over what he saw as two “bad choices.” Years before, as Republican counsel to the Senate Watergate committee, Mr. Thompson had witnessed the proceedings that led to President Richard M. Nix- on’s resignation. Now, he pored over legal tomes on precedent. He ordered up lengthy staff memorandums on what the founding fathers intended when they said a president could be re- moved for “high crimes and mis- demeanors,” scribbling his thoughts on a yellow legal pad. Did the president’s cover-up of an affair with a White House in- tern justify deposing him “against the will of the people,” Mr. Thompson wondered, or should Mr. Clinton be protected by the very “baseness of his ac- tions?” “His office is too high + the crimes too low,” he mused. Yet would an acquittal not “haunt us in the future,” setting the bar so high that even a “seri- al perjurer” could not be re- moved from office so long as his conduct was “to cover up person- al wrongdoing?” “Worse of both worlds,” he scrawled on a scrap of paper. “Will be easier if you vote guilty.” Today Mr. Thompson is cam- paigning for president, selling himself as the most devoted con- servative in the Republican field, a leader whose vision was shaped by the Republican revo- lution of 1994. But his approach to the im- peachment case — and his ulti- mate decision to part with the Republican majority by voting to acquit Mr. Clinton on one of two impeachment counts — under- scores the concerns now being raised by many conservative G.O.P. Hopeful TookOwnPath In the Senate Thompson Agonized on Bill Clinton Trial Continued on Page 24 THE LONG RUN Thompson in Congress By C. J. CHIVERS GROZNY, Russia — In the evenings, unex- pected sights appear in this city, which less than two years ago seemed beyond saving and repair. Women stroll on sidewalks that did not ex- ist last year. Teenagers cluster under newly installed street lights, chatting on cellphones. At a street corner, young men gather to race cars on a freshly paved road — a scene, con- sidering that this is the capital of Chechnya, that feels out of place and from another time. Throughout the city, local officials, most of them former rebels who waged a nationalist Islamic insurgency against Russia, lounge in cafes, assault rifles idled beside them. Three years after a wave of guerrilla and terrorist attacks caused many analysts to say that Russia’s war against Chechen separat- ists could not be won, the republic has fallen almost fully under the control of the Kremlin and its indigenous proxies, led by Ramzan A. Kadyrov, the Chechen president. Mr. Kadyrov’s human rights record is chill- ing, and allegations of his government’s pat- terns of brutality and impunity are wide- spread. Yet even his most severe critics say he has developed significant popular support, in part because of the clear changes that have accompanied his firm and fearsome rule. Fighting has been sporadic and small in scale for a second year. A large rebel offen- sive did not materialize this summer, as the separatists had predicted. Buoyed by a sus- tained lull in fighting and flush with cash, Mr. Kadyrov’s government has rebuilt most of its capital and outlying areas. Like Stalingrad after World War II, Grozny, the Chechen capital, has reappeared from the rubble. It has done so more swiftly than Euro- pean cities revived by the Marshall Plan. As recently as early 2006, Grozny was less a city than rows of shattered buildings over- looking cesspools. It now has electricity al- Under an Iron Hand, ARebirthofaRepublic Russia’s Proxy Is a Fearsome Midwife In the Revival of the Chechen Capital Then and now: Grozny, Chechnya’s capi- tal, in 1995, right, and 2007, below. SHAKH AIVAZOV/ASSOCIATED PRESS, TOP; KAZBEK VAKHAYEV/EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY, ABOVE. Continued on Page 6 U(D5E71D)x+@!;!/!z!/ FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 1-800-NYTIMES By DAMIEN CAVE MAHMUDIYA, Iraq — On bas- es big and small south of Bagh- dad, the scrambled reality of war has become routine: an unending loop of anxious driving in ar- mored Humvees, gallons of Gatorade, laughter at the absurd and 4 a.m. raids into intimate Iraqi bedrooms. This is Iraq for the 3,300 sol- diers of the 10th Mountain Divi- sion’s Second Brigade, and many have come to the unfortunate re- alization that it now feels more like home than home. No brigade in the Army has spent more days deployed since Sept. 11, 2001, and with only a few weeks to go before ending their 15-month tour, the soldiers here are eager to go. But they are also nervous about what their minds will carry back, given the psychic toll of war day after day and the prospect of additional tours. Heartache can be heard in the quiet voice of Specialist Gerald Barranco-Oro, who at 22 is on his second tour of Iraq and will leave for home without two close friends who were killed May 19. There are other losses, too: for fathers like Staff Sgt. Kirk Ray, 25, whose 2-year-old daughter screams when he calls because “she doesn’t know who I am”; and for those who must detach to keep going, like Specialist Jesse Herb, 20, who casually mentioned recently that the ceiling above his bed was dented with the bone fragments of a lieutenant who Continued on Page 12 Weary Soldiers Ready for Rest, But Not at Ease NEWS SUMMARY 2 International ................................... 3-14 Metro .............................................. 33-37 National .......................................... 16-27 Editorial and Op-Ed appear in Week in Review, Pages 11-13. Obituaries ............ 30-31 Weather ......... 28 TV Update ................ 38 Job Market Listings..... Sunday Business, page 17-25 In New York City and the metropolitan region. Updated news: nytimes.com New York: Today, sunny, light winds, high 71. Tonight, cloudy, low 57. Tomorrow, mixture of sun and clouds, high 72. Yesterday, high 76, low 61. Details, Page 28. $5 beyond the greater New York metropolitan area. $4.00 Late Edition By DON VAN NATTA Jr. Freedom’s Watch, a deep-pock- eted conservative group led by two former senior White House officials, made an audacious de- but in late August when it began a $15 million advertising cam- paign designed to maintain Con- gressional support for President Bush’s troop increase in Iraq. Founded this summer by a doz- en wealthy conservatives, the nonprofit group is set apart from most advocacy groups by the im- mense wealth of its core group of benefactors, its intention to far outspend its rivals and its am- bition to pursue a wide-ranging agenda. Its next target: Iran pol- icy. Next month, Freedom’s Watch will sponsor a private forum of 20 experts on radical Islam that is expected to make the case that Iran poses a direct threat to the security of the United States, ac- cording to several benefactors of the group. Although the group declined to identify the experts, several were invited from the American En- terprise Institute, a Washington research group with close ties to the White House. Some institute scholars have advocated a more confrontational policy to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, including keeping mil- itary action as an option. Last week, a Freedom’s Watch newspaper advertisement called President Mahmoud Ahmadine- jad of Iran “a terrorist.” The group is considering a national advertising campaign focused on Iran, a senior benefactor said, though Matt S. David, a spokes- man for the group, declined to comment on those plans. “If Hitler’s warnings were heeded when he wrote ‘Mein Kampf,’ he could have been stopped,” said Bradley Blake- man, 49, the president of Free- dom’s Watch and a former depu- ty assistant to Mr. Bush. “Ahma- dinejad is giving all the same kind of warning signs to us, and the region — he wants the de- struction of the United States and the destruction of Israel.” With a forceful message and a roster of wealthy benefactors, Freedom’s Watch has quickly emerged from the crowded field of nonprofit advocacy groups as a conservative answer to the nine- year-old liberal MoveOn.org, Continued on Page 30 Big Coffers and a Rising Voice LiftaNewConservativeGroup INSIDE On the eve of parliamentary elections, Prime Minister Viktor F. Ya- nukovich, once reviled, is arguably Ukraine’s most popular politician, a transformation helped by an American political strategist. PAGE 8 Ukrainian Prime Minister Reinvents Himself The getting in, the going, the memories: a look at the college experience from every angle of the quad. MAGAZINE College From All Angles Frank Rich on the problem with Hillary Clinton’s perfect campaign. OPINION PAGES Beware the Bloviation Countrywide Financial faces scrutiny over its process to help distressed homeowners avoid foreclosure. SUNDAY BUSINESS Hard to Avoid Foreclosure On the eve of a North American and European tour, Bruce Spring- steen speaks with A. O. Scott about his reinfatuation with pop and why he timed his new album to the presidential election. ARTS & LEISURE Springsteen on Pop and Politics TODD HEISLER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Why the monks in Myanmar can grant, or deny, legitimacy to a government. WEEK IN REVIEW Making the Military Sweat Although its president denies that homosexuality exists in Iran, gays there insist that they are nu- merous, if quiet. PAGE 11 Iran’s Gays Keep Low Profile Why New Yorkers love side- walk cafes, despite some not-so delicious sights, sounds and smells. WEEK IN REVIEW The Great Outdoors In the 45 previous loopy sea- sons of the Mets, nothing had ever happened like the sheer mood swings yesterday. Strug- gling to stay alive after a ghastly two weeks, they had the double ex- hilaration of a near no-hitter by John Maine and a glut of runs in a 13-0 vic- tory against the Florida Marlins. The Mets could have used some of this surplus during the recent horrors — the worst days in the history of the franchise, if you think about it. They had squandered a seven-game lead with 17 to go, and sometimes could not hit and usually could not pitch. After the game, the Mets all said they were going out to din- ner with their families. Nobody would own up to a sideways peek at a laptop or a television set to track the Phillies-Nationals game later in the afternoon. Therefore, this may come as news to them as they report to work this morn- ing: For all their errors and home run pitches of the last two weeks, the Mets enter the last day of the season in a dead heat with the Phillies, who lost, 4-2. “It’s bizarre,” Manager Willie Randolph said after his own game was over. “The whole sec- ond half of the season is bizarre. You can’t figure it out.” Here’s what we know: If the Mets win today and the Phillies lose, the Mets will win the Na- tional League East. If both teams win or both teams lose, they will play a one-game playoff for the division title tomorrow in Phila- delphia. The Mets are also still in contention for the N.L. wild card after the San Diego Padres failed to clinch it yesterday. In the erratic feast-or-famine tradition of this team, the Mets had it all yesterday, mostly from Maine, a lanky 25-year-old right- hander who pitched the game of his life. Maine struck out 14 and allowed only a few solid outs until Paul Hoover, a substitute with eight career hits, dribbled a sin- gle 30 feet up the third-base line with two outs in the eighth in- ning. Oh, yes, there was also a bench-clearing rumble after the Continued on Page 18 GEORGE VECSEY SPORTS OF THE TIMES From the Deepest Depths, a Moment for the Mets JOHN DUNN FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Mets starter John Maine did not allow a hit for seven and two- thirds innings. The Mets finished the day in a tie for first place. In Mexico City, Viswanathan Anand of India took over the world championship from Vladi- mir Kramnik of Russia. PAGE 37 New Chess Champion Architecture Address: 53 Davies Street, London W1K 5JH, United Kingdom Tel.: +44 (0) 20 7698 4453 • Mob. UK: +44 (0) 75 5147 4568 • Mob. Italy: +39 33 5648 1300 E: info@worldwideportfolio.co.uk • W: www.worldwideportfolio.co.uk The Tudor architectural style is the final development of Medieval architecture in England, during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond. It followed the Perpendicular style and, although superseded by Elizabethan architecture in domestic building of any pretensions to fashion, the Tudor style long retained its hold on English taste. Tudor Architecture Your view from the top Special Report Representatives of VOICES OF LEADERS (VL) is the exclusive Special Report Representative for Newsweek magazine. We have been commissioned to prepare custom content reports about rapidly developing economies around the globe. We conduct in-depth personalised interviews that bring together the constructive commentaries and insights of the most prominent decision makers and business leaders that shape these economies. Interviews are an unique source of information that contribute to our custom content reports, which are published in the Global Edition of Newsweek, one of the world’s leading publications. Our objective is to engage the readers of Newsweek on prospective investment opportunities available in these promising financial markets while highlighting the countries’ needs and creating a direct channel of communication with readers around the world. Voices of Leaders is now crafting a series of engaging interactive e-books that allow our interviewees to be seen, read and heard in the print edition of Newsweek and online–at the same time. E about us books meet share&grow M 72% W m 28% 41 % % % %66% MM MM about us books meet share&grow Rea p o ess ona s o Rea es a e nves o s
  • 11. Marketing Kits ABOUT USPM Communications invites you to play a role on the world media stage For over 10 years,PM Communications has enjoyed an exclusive agreement with the United Kingdom’s lead- ing newspaper The Daily Telegraph through which we distribute sector-based and country reports,tailor made to fit our client’s needs and desires. Through a comprehensive focus on countries, sec- tors and entities, PM Communications aims to play an influential role in keeping British business leaders and decision makers informed of global investment op- portunities. Since 1997, PM Communications has maintained a strong and fruitful relationship with both The Daily Telegraph and its demanding readers,owing to the high quality of our reports and the consistency of our edi- torial. PM Communications’ long-established experi- ence in the communications industry is matched by the expertise and integrity of our team. Our aim is to provide comprehensive coverage on a range of pertinent issues from countries, specific sectors and regions which are not afforded an in-depth exposure within the United Kingdom. MORE THAN A DECADE INFORMING THE BRITISH READER PM COMMUNICATIONS REPORTING29th July 2007 Modernisatio n leads the way EgyptEgyptModernisatio n leads the way TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:38 Página 2 TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:38 Página 3 OUR PRODUCT PM Communications has developed a dynamic method of connecting nation to nation, vendor to consumer, producer to supplier,business opportunity to investor. For over 10 years, our product has successfully been used as a tool worldwide to generate awareness, influ- ence public opinion and provide information in a ded- icated context. The real value that our product carries benefits both parties on the communication chain: the reader and the client. PM Communications’ reports are attractive presenta- tions providing relevant information to the readers of The Daily Telegraph through targeted distribution. Through advertising opportunities and editorial con- tent,we are able to open an invaluable channel of com- munication for our clients with the newspaper’s affluent and intellectual audience. While greatly benefiting all clients,our reports provide a given entity with an excellent opportunity to access an international platform. Whereas standalone adver- tising campaigns only offer unitary exposure,PM Com- munications’ reports complement an advertisement by placing it within the scope of the project focus. Professional reports that open the doors to opportunity 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 TENYEARSDOINGBUSINESS TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:39 Página 4 THE APPROACHPertinent, first-hand information Today,exposure and communication are vital to modern business. Delivering your story to the audience is key. For this reason, PM Communications invests the neces- sary time and effort in acquiring first-hand knowledge from the personalities at the forefront of the nation,region or sector in focus. Interviews with influential politicians, public figures and industry leaders give the resulting re- ports a concise and invaluable view of the featured na- tion or sector, portraying its strengths and future aspirations, its economic reality and the best opportuni- ties for investment. TRIPTICO pmcomm 02.qxd 28/4/08 18:39 Página 5 About us Economy Survey Corp. Economy SurvEy corporation publishes special reports which are distributed within the pages of Smart Money-The Wall Street Journal. Our reports provide the reader with thought-provoking articles on topics from economic reform to cultural issues, and include the contributions of influential figures in politics and business. Economy Survey Corp gathers the information where it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of correspondents,scatteredacrosstheplanet.Economy Survey Corp serves as a link between governments and markets, companies and investors, and nations and individuals on a global scale. Our interviews and articles offer a different point of view on matters of in- terest to the US investor, businessman and politician. Economy Survey Corp gathers the information where it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of correspondents, scattered across the planet. Investment Opportunities Economy SurvEy corporation aims to play an influential role in keeping US leaders and decision makers informed of global investment opportunities through reports on those countries which are not fea- tured in the day-to-day press. Economy Survey Corp, leader in the industry, is ahead of the game, keeping up with the changing times, of- fering another vehicle for nations to show to the world their strengths, dreams, and future aspirations. Our representatives invest time and effort in acquiring first- hand knowledge about a nation. Interviews with influ- ential politicians, public figures and industry leaders give us unbeatable information about economic reali- ties and the best opportunities for investment. The result is a concise and invaluable view of the featured country or sector. Our reports are a tried- and-tested format, the ideal way to connect nation to nation, vendor to consumer, producer to supplier, business opportunity to investor. Our Reports our rEportS are a tool used successfully world- wide to influence public opinion, generate awareness and provide information in a dedicated context. Spe- cial reports have a guaranteed impact on the target audience. They have a real value in their own right. Attractive, graphic presentation with relevant infor- mation on every page, the special report has a guar- anteed impact on the target audience. They provide invaluable sources of data and are often kept for future reference by the reader. Unlike other reports, our editorial is independent, advertisements are clearly separate from editorial content, yet thanks to positive support from state and private organiza- tions, we are able to successfully blend objectivity with persuasive advertising. The dedicated context also provides a coherent framework for advertising, linking publicity to editorial analysis. Our reports Special reports in today’S timES, the crisis-driven orientation of American news outlets results in insufficient coverage of the extensive reforms and positive developments taking place in emerging markets. Our reports aim to redress this imbalance by providing an opportunity for key public and private sector leaders to address the positive evolution of their nations’ economic de- velopment and business environment. Through extensive research and interviews with top government officials and key business leaders, Econ- omy Survey Corp presents balanced and constructive portraits highlighting legislative reforms, good gover- nance, improvements in business, and opportunities for partnership and investment. As an independent agency with full editorial control, we have found that our clients enjoy the opportunity to provide greater input and review of our reports’ content in convey- ing their message to the influential readers of Smart money-the Wall Street Journal. To complement the already substantial distribution of our reports, we supplement circulation via our in- house mailing lists - local, international, and targeted. Copies of our reports are forwarded to local officials and businessmen within the country that has been profiled, key staff of The World Bank, The Interna- tional Monetary Fund, and the majority of the CEO’s of Fortune 500 companies. They are a tool used successfully worldwide to influ- ence public opinion, generate awareness and provide information in a dedicated context. A guaranteed impact on the target audience thEy havE a rEal valuE in their own right. Attractive, graphic presentation with relevant infor- mation on every page, the special report has a guar- anteed impact on the target audience. They provide invaluable sources of data and are often kept for fu- ture reference by the reader. Unlike other reports, our editorial is independent, advertisements are clearly separate from editorial content, yet thanks to positive support from state and private organizations, we are able to successfully blend objectivity with persuasive advertising. The dedicated context also provides a coherent framework for advertising, linking publicity to editorial analysis. Smart money-the Wall Street Journal promises to answer the tough questions of those seeking clarity in today’s confused times. In doing so, it has estab- lished a new standard in business finance publish- ing and virtual redefined upscale service journalism. With the refreshing clarity and provocative wit that characterize The Wall Street Journal, Smart Money presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for in- vesting. The editorial team, which has won three Na- tional Magazine Awards, includes three Pulitzer Prize winters. Smart Money-The Wall Street Journal has provided the nation’s political and economic leaders with the most comprehensive coverage as the world’s most trusted, authoritative source of business news and analysis. LIBYA 2007.indd 1 16/5/07 11:15:52 The Media Magazine review launchEd in 1992 by The Hearst Corporation and Dow Jones & Company to service the need for business finance information among the group of professional and managerial Americans who, while affluent and sophisticated, need a quick answer for their investment needs. Editorial excellence & Authority building advertiser credibility through Smart money-the Wall Street Journal promises to answer the tough questions of those seeking clarity in today’s confused times. In doing so, it has estab- lished a new standard in business finance publishing and virtual redefined upscale service journalism. Withtherefreshingclarityandprovocativewitthatchar- acterize the Wall Street Journal, Smart money presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for investing. The editorial team, which has won three National Magazine Awards, includes three Pulitzer Prize winters. Smart money-the Wall Street Jour- nal has provided the nation’s political and economic leaders with the most comprehensive coverage as the world’s most trusted, authoritative source of business news and analysis. Withadailyreadershipofover3.7million,Smartmoney- the Wall Street Journal reaches more C-Suite decision-makers than any other business publication. ToTal audience 3.7 million (MRI Fall 2004) audience reaching “C-Suite” executives/high-level executives 47% are Company Leaders (Erdos & Morgan 2004-2005) (Company Leaders = Chairman / President / C-Level or Owner / Partner). Smart monEy-thE Wall StrEEt Journal is at all times informative, authoritative, engaging, and es- sential to the decision-makers of our global economy which has earned it a dedicated and loyal readership. Economy SurvEy corp gathers the information where it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of correspondents, scattered across the planet. Wall Street Journal With thE rEfrEShing clarity and provocative wit that characterizes The Wall Street Journal, Smart- Money presents practical yet highly imaginative ideas for saving, investing, and spending, plus regular coverage of technology, automotive and lifestyle subjects including areas such as upscale travel, fashion, fine wine, music, food and more. In all cases, we stress consumer ser- vice with action-oriented information. Our editorial team, which has won three National Magazine Awards and was a finalist 14 times, includes three Pulitzer Prize winners. A powerful audience of influencers and decision makers 78,183 Smart money Subscribers function as their company’s Chief Planning Officer. Top Management 59.3% Serve on any Board of Directors 43.2% Responsible for Corporate Development/ Planning 19.0% Responsible for Corporate Real Estate 13.6% Involved in Acquisition of Real Estate, Plant Sites, Office Space 21.4% Source: 2003 WSJ U.S. Subscriber Study An award-winning editorial environment looking to incrEaSE your WEalth and plan for the future? SmartMoney, published monthly by the Wall Street Journal, is your key towards un- locking the full potential of your investments and fi- nancial planning. Expert analysis from top journalists and business professionals give you a leg-up on the tough compe- tition, better positioning you for the times ahead. We produce spe- cial sections for Smart Money- The Wall Street Journal that are designed to de- velop interest in nations world- wide - economies, people and culture - in which our journalists have lived and worked. Nations which Economy Survey Corp believes are worthy of the kind of coverage that our special sec- tions provide. We do all of our own reporting and news- gathering in-country, and prepare sections which are 100% independent from external interests. 50% 29% 28% 25% 24% 22% 19% 8% 6% SM WSJ Busin Week Times News Week Fortune US News Econ FTForbes 2004-2005 PurchaSe inFluence in aMerican BuSineSS 52.1 48.9 48.5 44.6 43.6 37.0 33.6 31.3 SM WSJ Econ News Week Busin Week US News Fortune FTForbes read 4/4 laST iSSueS oF MagaZineS and 5/5 laST iSSueS oF neWSPaPerS Born for Business WORLD REVIEW publishes special reports which are distributed within the pages of The New York Post newspaper. Our reports provide the reader with thought-provoking articles on topics from economic reform to cultural issues, and include the contributions of influential figures in politics and business. World Review gathers the information where it happens and disposes of a highly-qualified team of correspondents, scattered across the planet. World Review serves as a link between governments and markets, companies and investors, and nations and individuals on a global scale. Our interviews and articles offer a different point of view on matters of interest to the US investor, businessman and politician. Investment Opportunities WORLD REVIEW aims to play an influential role in keeping US leaders and decision makers informed of global investment opportunities through reports on those countries which are not featured in the day-to-day press. World Review, leader in the industry, is ahead of the game, keeping up with the changing times, offering another vehicle for nations to show to the world their strengths, dreams, and future aspirations. Our represen- tatives invest time and effort in acquiring first-hand knowledge about a nation. Interviews with influential politicians, public figures and industry leaders give us unbeatable information about economic realities and the best opportunities for investment. The result is a concise and invaluable view of the featured country or sector. Our reports are a tried-and-tested format, the ideal way to connect nation to nation, vendor to consumer, producer to supplier, business opportunity to investor. About us OuR REpORts are a tool used successfully worldwide to influence public opinion, generate awareness and provide information in a dedi- cated context. Special reports have a guaranteed impact on the target audience. They have a real value in their own right. Attractive, graphic presentation with relevant information on every page. They provide invaluable sources of data and are often kept for future ref- erence by the reader. Unlike other reports, our editorial is independent, advertisements are clearly separate from editorial content, yet thanks to positive support from state and private organizations, we are able to successfully blend objectivity with persuasive advertising. The dedicat- ed context also provides a coherent framework for advertising, linking publicity to editorial analysis. Through extensive research and interviews with top government offi- cials and key business leaders, World Review presents balanced and constructive portraits highlighting legislative reforms, good gover- nance, improvements in business, and opportunities for partnership and investment. As an independent agency with full editorial control, we have found that our clients enjoy the opportunity to provide great- er input and review of our reports’ content in conveying their mes- sage to the influential readers of the New York post newspaper. To complement the already substantial distribution of our reports, we supplement circulation via our in-house mailing lists - local, interna- tional, and targeted. Copies of our reports are forwarded to local officials and businessmen within the country that has been profiled, key staff of The World Bank, The International Monetary Fund, and the majority of the CEO’s of Fortune 500 companies. They are a tool used successfully worldwide to influence public opinion, generate awareness and provide information in a dedicated context. Our Reports As the preeminent daily newspaper in the competitive New York market, the mission of the New York post is to chronicle the triumphs and trag- edies of this great city through a bold, irreverent and edgy tabloid design that readers know and love. From breaking news and business national and international levels, the New York post is committed to being New Yorker’s source for essential information and entertainment. The power of the New York post brand extends beyond newspaper to online content and glossy magazine. These additional mediums bring the same flavor and style as the original newspaper, while keeping pace with technology and consumer demands. the New York post knows its readers, and readers love the Post. Partner with The New York Post to give your advertisements that extra advantage • Increased coverage in the New York market • A quality, targeted audience with discretionary income • Unique advertising positions in a compelling advertising environment • A newspaper that provides an alternative to magazine and outdoor advertising • Brilliant color with crisp resolution on our state of the art printers • Multimedia portfolio that fulfills your newspaper, online and magazine needs Content - relevant news at your fingertips daily • Breaking News!. Smart, bold coverage from our nationally recognized journalists. Find exclusive interviews and revealing news features in a clear, concise format. • It’s a Bull Market. The Post’s Business section is a staple for Wall Street. Coverage includes financial analysis, trend forecasting, and media industry exclusives from award-winning writer Keith Kelly. • Tell Me What You Really Think… The Post Opinion section includes insightful commentary on local, national and international issues. The Media Consistently Connect with New Yorkers Reach a quality, targeted audience daily • Median Age: 47.5 • Age 25-54: 57.7% • Male/Female ratio: 63.3% / 36.7% • College Educated (I+yrs): 58.7% • Married: 56.0% • Employed: 69.6% • Median HHI: $84,023 • Median Home Value: $458,415 Post NY DMA Readership — DAILY 2,109,435 Source: 2010 Scarborough (II); Base NYDMA Adults The New York Post has more exclusive readers in the NY DMA than The Times 575,000 550,000 525,000 500,000 475,000 450,000 425,000 400,000 Source: ABC Audit 12 month ending 9/30/1999 - 9/30/2009 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 532,484 435,976 NY Post 1,358,548 NY Times 1,305,990 Duplicated Readers 263,052 Worldwide News Where It Happens
  • 14. PLV
  • 15. PLV VOICES OF LEADERS is a global business network for top executives and companies to MEET, SHARE & GROW both locally and worldwide. www.voicesofleaders.com Follow us on: Sonorización de Eventos Discotecas móviles Karaokes Ceremonias Civiles Coros Rocieros La Fiesta Perfecta www.bailando.info
  • 18. C/ José Abascal, Nº 44 l 4ª planta 28003 l Madrid l SPAIN Tlf: +34 914 417 799 info@wimit-international.com www.wimit-international.com