Advertising Big Shots Open NASDAQ For Advertising Week

Ken Kaess, President and Chief Executive Officer, DDB Worldwide Communications, Chairman, Advertising Week in New York City; and O.

Burtch Drake, President and CEO of the American Association of Advertising Agencies and President of Advertising Week in New York City will preside over The NASDAQ Market Open as part of the kick off ceremonies to Advertising Week New York 2004.

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Steve Hall

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Psychologists explain that people who were never yelled at but always met with silence when they disappointed someone often develop a fear of calm that follows them into every adult relationship. They don’t flinch at anger. They flinch at quiet.

Psychologists explain that people who were never yelled at but always met with silence when they disappointed someone often develop a fear of calm that follows them into every adult relationship. They don’t flinch at anger. They flinch at quiet.

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I’m 73 and I just realized I have no close friends — not because I’m unlikeable, but because I spent forty years being pleasant to everyone and deep with no one, and now I don’t even know how to start

I’m 73 and I just realized I have no close friends — not because I’m unlikeable, but because I spent forty years being pleasant to everyone and deep with no one, and now I don’t even know how to start

Global English Editing

The difference between people who age into bitterness and people who age into warmth often comes down to one thing — Whether they treated happiness as something they deserved or something that grew naturally from how they chose to live each day

The difference between people who age into bitterness and people who age into warmth often comes down to one thing — Whether they treated happiness as something they deserved or something that grew naturally from how they chose to live each day

Global English Editing

The people who seem most at peace in their 60s and 70s didn’t find happiness by searching for it — they built lives where meaning, routine, and genuine connection left room for happiness to show up on its own terms

The people who seem most at peace in their 60s and 70s didn’t find happiness by searching for it — they built lives where meaning, routine, and genuine connection left room for happiness to show up on its own terms

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The generation that grew up in the 1950s and 60s wasn’t given a childhood — they were given a rehearsal for adulthood, handed responsibilities before they had finished being children, and then spent the rest of their lives wondering why they felt robbed of something they couldn’t quite name

The generation that grew up in the 1950s and 60s wasn’t given a childhood — they were given a rehearsal for adulthood, handed responsibilities before they had finished being children, and then spent the rest of their lives wondering why they felt robbed of something they couldn’t quite name

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The real reason boomer women who raised children, worked full-time, and cared for aging parents without complaining now struggle to accept help isn’t pride — it’s that their entire sense of worth was built around being the person who could handle everything, and slowing down feels like becoming irrelevant

The real reason boomer women who raised children, worked full-time, and cared for aging parents without complaining now struggle to accept help isn’t pride — it’s that their entire sense of worth was built around being the person who could handle everything, and slowing down feels like becoming irrelevant

Global English Editing