Business News in Pictures
Date: 29 January 2011
Photos reflecting news and features from last week in the business world.
29 januari 2011 was een zaterdag onder het sterrenbeeld ♒. Het was de 28e dag van het jaar. President van de Verenigde Staten was Barack Obama.
Als je op deze dag bent geboren, ben je 15 jaar oud. Je laatste verjaardag was op donderdag 29 januari 2026, 128 dagen geleden. Je volgende verjaardag is op vrijdag 29 januari 2027, in 236 dagen. Je hebt 5.607 dagen geleefd, of ongeveer 134.586 uur, of ongeveer 8.075.193 minuten, of ongeveer 484.511.580 seconden.
Date: 29 January 2011
Photos reflecting news and features from last week in the business world.
Date: 29 January 2011
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
A federal jury ruled that Johnson & Johnson’s Cordis unit had infringed on a patent for a device used to treat damaged heart tissue.
Date: 29 January 2011
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
A judge in Boston upheld a jury decision that Pfizer illegally promoted Neurontin for unapproved uses. Pfizer said it would appeal.
Date: 29 January 2011
By Bloomberg News
Bloomberg News
The Chevron Corporation reported fourth-quarter sales and refining profits that failed to meet analysts’ estimates on Friday.
Date: 29 January 2011
By Robert F. Worth
Robert Worth
The channel has provided exhaustive coverage of Egypt’s protests despite repeated efforts to block its broadcasts.
Date: 30 January 2011
By Arthur S. Brisbane
Arthur Brisbane
Can The Times get it first and get it right?
Date: 29 January 2011
By Jeremy W. Peters
Jeremy Peters
Sites like Politico, Talking Points Memo and RealClearPolitics are planning to smother the 2012 campaign trail in a way they could never have imagined four years ago.
Date: 29 January 2011
By Michael D. Shear
Michael
Jay Carney, the administration’s new press secretary, once mused that he “wouldn’t be any good at it.”
Date: 29 January 2011
By Mike Males
Mike Males
The media invent yet another teenage pregnancy “crisis.”
Date: 30 January 2011
By James Warren
James Warren
A debate among Chicago mayoral candidates lacked a particular passion; it did not capture the novelty of a great city’s impending change of power.