The 2015 AP Stylebook. Now available.

2015 AP Stylebook
2015 AP Stylebook

The Associated Press released the 2015 edition of The Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law this past week, which includes about 300 new or revised entries. For the first time, an 85-page index was added to the back of the Stylebook so that users can more quickly find words and definitions.

Among the changes to the 2015 Stylebook are:
• Sports updates range over baseball playoffs, basketball’s NCAA Tournament, horse racing, injuries, Olympic Games, race distances, soccer tactics and titles.
• Global warming can be used interchangeably with climate change.
• Other new or revised entries include Affordable Care Act; animal welfare activist; autism spectrum disorder; Ebola, execution-style; justify; obscenities, profanities and vulgarities; One World Trade Center; and privacy.

The only place to get the spiral-bound AP Stylebook with the new comprehensive index is on apstylebook.com. When you buy your 2015 Stylebook on apstylebook.com, you also get 30 days of AP Stylebook Online to try.

By Stephen Brockelman

As a Sr. Writer at T. Rowe Price, I work with a group of the best copywriters around. We belong to the broader creative team within Enterprise Creative, a part of Corporate Marketing Services. _____________________________________________ A long and winding road: My path to T. Rowe Price was more twisted than Fidelity’s green line. With scholarship in hand, I left Kansas at 18 to study theatre in New York. When my soap opera paychecks stopped coming from CBS and started coming from the show’s sponsor, Proctor & Gamble, I discovered the power of advertising and switched careers. Over the years I’ve owned an ad agency in San Francisco; worked for Norman Lear on All in the Family, Good Times, Sanford and Son, and the rest of his hit shows; and as a member of Directors Guild of America, I directed Desi Arnaz in his last television appearance— we remained friends until his death. In 1988 I began freelancing full time didn’t look back. In January 2012 my rep at Boss Group called and said, “I know you don’t want to commute and writing for the financial industry isn’t high on your wish list, but I have a gig with T. Rowe Price in Owings Mills…” I was a contractor for eight months, drank the corporate Kool-Aid, became a TRP associate that August, and today I find myself smiling more often than not.

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