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All Eyes on the Future
Retirement Planning a Key Component for Medical Practice Owners and Administrators
The Coming Baby Deficit
The Covid-19 crisis may leave a lasting imprint on U.S. fertility trends, taking a toll on growth
The Strange Tale of Nelson Mandela's golden Hands
How a piece of lavish memorabilia became an art world albatross
Japan's Next Top Comic Book Artist
The country’s premier manga creator is ending Attack on Titan, a blockbuster series about maneating behemoths. The pressure is on his publisher to find a new gargantuan thing
The Pitch The Product
Luckin became a $4 billion business by promising that Chinese would drink more coffee if they could buy it more easily and cheaply than at Starbucks. Then it faked hundreds of millions in sales
The Struggle Over Statues
Trump seized on the monument protests to send federal agents into U.S. cities
Lightning Round
The Finn Cycle promises 18 holes in two hours or less. But is the game ready for it?
Green Acres for China's EVs
Automakers are targeting drivers outside big cities for cheaper electric models
Even Better Than a Convertible on a Sunny Day
Munich startup Sono has developed a diminutive car that can be charged by solar panels embedded in its roof, doors, and hood
Bollywood Gets a Covid Makeover
As it reopens, health rules mean that big dance numbers are out, social distancing is in
China Has Eyes On Taiwan
After cracking down on Hong Kong, Beijing turns its attention to the island across the strait
QUARANTINE LIFE
What we've been up to a while sheltering at home
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT
FOR 84 LUMBER, THE NATION'S LARGEST PRIVATELY HELD BUILDING MATERIALS SUPPLIER, THERE 'S NOTHING BUT SUCCESS AHEAD.
STRIVING FOR THE BEST IN EVERYTHING
GLOBAL ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION POWERHOUSE CLOUGH SETS UP SHOPS STATESIDE
OUT OF THE CLEAR BLUE SKY
Shutdowns have lowered emissions,but they're not a long term solution
HOSPITAL HEROES
What life is like on the front lines of the pandemic
CHAIN REACTION
Disruption everywhere leads to gaps in supply chain and resourceful thinking
Together apart
How to keep dispersed teams conneCTED
WORK-AROUND
CONSTRUCTION BUSINESSES CUT COSTS FOR AN UNCERTAIN SUMMER SEASON
SOFT OPENING
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE A KEY FACTOR IN RECOVERY
WATCHING OUT
CONTACT TRACING TECH REQUIRES A LOT OF TRUST IN A TIME LACKING IN IT
LEADING FROM THE HEART TO MAKE A REAL DIFFERENCE
As COVID-19 vexes the world, SAP is helping its employees and customers lean into change
PRIDE IN PEOPLE POWER IN PERFORMANCE
FOR ADVANCED MANUFACTURING AND MACHINING GIANT PETERSEN INC. , PUTTING IDEAS INTO ACTION IS THE WAY TO SUCESS.
TOTAL ECLIPSE
RENEWABLE ENERGY IS KICKING COAL TO THE CURBEC
MADE IN AMERICA
Bringing manufacturing back from overseas sounds great, but it's not easy
HOW FAST IS WARP SPEED?
WHERE WE STAND ON AN EFFECTIVE COVID -19 VACCINE
GOING WITH the flow
Syntron Material Handling is on the move
With ridership down 90 percent, US ferries endure pandemic pause
Most U.S. ferry operators saw ridership declines of more than 90 percent during certain weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Passenger Vessel Association. Going into the summer months, ferry systems from coast to coast are retaining as many crewmembers as they can while waiting for passengers to return.
Vinik answers call, clears hurdles with seasoned offshore fleet
Daunting is a good word to describe the process of getting some older tugboats into compliance with Subchapter M, said Capt. Mike Vinik, a 2003 SUNY Maritime graduate and owner of Vinik Marine, a New Jersey-based towing company founded in 2005. He then brought up the case of his largest current tugboat, Vinik No. 6, which is 50 years old.
Towing: Pandemic leads to remote inspections, extensions for Subchapter M
There were numerous obstacles during the decade-long period in which Subchapter M, the new regulatory framework for the towing industry, was created. Now, in the second year of the rollout, there is another challenge: COVID-19.