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Mother Jones May/Jun 2001 Barry Yeoman |
Subsidies at Sea A private shipbuilder received millions in 'location incentives' to save an abandoned naval yard in South Philadelphia. What did the city get in return?  |
Fast Company August 2001 Chuck Salter |
This Is One Fast Factory The igus manufacturing plant in Cologne, Germany can shrink or expand at a moment's notice. Its flexible design keeps it up to speed with an unpredictable, fast-changing market...  |
Science News May 12, 2001 Janet Raloff |
A dietary cost of our appetite for gold New research indicates that in some regions of the world, the mining of gold produces an unrecognized toxic fallout: fish dinners laced with methylmercury...  |
PC World May 8, 2001 Melissa J. Perenson |
CD-R Media Prices to Triple This Summer Temporary glut plus patent royalty demands prompt disc prices to climb...  |
Wired February 2001 Erik Davis |
Forging the Dragonslayer QuesTek's superstrong cyber-alloy promises to reinvent steel. The toughest broadsword in history is just the beginning...  |
Fast Company November 2000 Charles Fishman |
Creative Tension Corning Inc.'s Sullivan Park research facility is one of the most creative places in the world -- a place where brilliant (and unruly) scientists literally invent the future...  |
CIO October 15, 2000 Beth Stackpole |
Apps of Steel The founders of e-Steel needed to forge a strong IT foundation to make the promise of B2B work in the real world...  |
T.H.E. Journal October 2000 |
Public Radio Goes Online Bigchalk.com and National Public Radio have joined to provide high-quality learning materials for America's schools by creating and distributing original online content for the education community...  |
Salon.com September 27, 2000 Susan Emerling |
Not forever The death of South African diamond magnate Harry Oppenheimer last month might mark the end of global domination for one of the world's most infamous cartels.  |
Fast Company October 2000 Cathy Olofson |
Venture Catalyst One way for big companies to grow faster is to use the Web to turbocharge their business. Russ McMeekin and the e-Business for Honeywell team are showing the manufacturing giant how to do that.  |
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