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Home arrow Newspaper Categories arrow AM New York arrow AM New York, January 9, 2008

AM New York, January 9, 2008

Newspaper - AM New York

AM New York, January 9, 2008, Asiaing.comAM New York: Manhattan's Largest Circulation Daily.

AM New York is a free daily New York City morning newspaper published in New York City by Tribune Company, which also publishes Newsday. According to the company, average daily distribution as of summer 2005 was 311,500.

When it launched in October of 2003, AM New York was the first newspaper of its kind in New York City. Its main competitor is now New York Metro, which followed AM New York into the market, using many of the same distribution and marketing strategies.

The paper is primarily distributed in two ways; The first being by workers ("hawkers," who sport a red AM New York vest) paid to station themselves near and around NYC transportation points, who offer the free paper to anyone who passes by; The second being distributed in enclosed newspaper holders ("honor boxes") located on the sidewalks and corners near areas of high pedestrian traffic.

(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)

Download AM New York, January 9, 2008

Pdf format, 9.5mb, 44pages.

Cover Story: COMEBACK GAL

Hillary win fuels prez bid; Rudy hightails it to Florida. By Ryan Chatelain

Sen. Hillary Clinton’s bid for the White House has new life after narrowly winning yesterday’s New Hampshire Democratic primary, while Rudy Giuliani packed his bags early and left for Florida. But political analysts say both New York presidential hopefuls are still very much alive.

After trailing Sen. Barack Obama, D-Illinois, by double digits in polls early yesterday, Clinton finished first. Sen. John Mc-Cain, R-Arizona, was the Republican winner.

“The pollsters in New Hampshire were cockeyed,” said Mickey Carroll, director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute.

Giuliani — who said he was focusing his efforts on other key states, namely Florida — took fourth place in the Republican primary with about three-quarters of precincts reporting.

After finishing third in the Iowa caucus and seeing her poll numbers plummet, Clinton produced the strong showing her campaign desperately needed. John Zogby, president of Zogby International Polling Center, credited Clinton’s teary-eyed response to a New Hampshire voter’s question Monday as a turning point.

“It certainly was a human moment,” Zogby said. “It lets people know that, just like women, she has to fight for everything that she’s achieved.”

Political pundits agree, however, that Super Tuesday (Feb. 5) will be the true measure of the Clinton and Giluiani campaigns’ pulses.

Clinton seemed to adjust her approach after stumbling in Iowa, and more refinements could be on tap. George Arzt, a political consultant, said Clinton can use her vulnerability to her advantage.

“Now she has to show that she has changed and then reporters will write what a heroic figure she is and show she has gone through this,”Arzt said.

Because Giuliani said he never considered Iowa and New Hampshire priorities, observers are left guessing whether the former New York City mayor and onetime Republican frontrunner can still make a charge.

“He has his sights set on Florida, and we’ll find out then whether that is a good strategy,” Carroll said.

Visit AM New York Official Website

"New York News, New York City News, New York, Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, Manhattan, World Trade Center, Ground Zero, 9/11, Hillary Clinton, Newsday, New York Newsday, Am New York."

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