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2018年3月5日 星期一

United's bonus faux pas | Boeing's flying taxis | Trump ousted from Panama hotel

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Chicago Tribune

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March 5, 2018

chicagotribune.com

BizWrap

United walks back new bonus lottery system that angered employees

Monday, Mar 5

United has dropped a bonus "lottery" system that would have rewarded only some employees with cash and prizes after drawing anger from employees. "We misjudged how these changes would be received by many of you," the airline's president said.

American Airlines' late opposition unlikely to halt O'Hare expansion plan

A dispute over five gates might seem small compared with the $8.5 billion O'Hare expansion package, but airline experts say even a few gates are valuable.

He lost his brother to gangs. Now the Pilsen native leads one of Chicago's busiest trauma centers.

BACK STORY: Dr. Jaime Moreno, the new medical director at Mount Sinai Hospital, lost his brother to gangs. The loss informs his work in the emergency room at one of the city's busiest trauma centers.

Judge orders 'Pharma Bro' to forfeit $7.3M in fraud case

A judge has ordered "Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli to forfeit more than $7.3 million in assets — including his $2 million, one-of-a-kind Wu-Tang Clan album — in his securities fraud case.

Judge, police help oust Trump Hotels from Panama property

Escorted by police officers and a Panamanian judicial official, the owners of the Trump Panama City hotel have taken control of the property, and workers began taking the Trump name off the building.

Boeing is getting ready to sell flying taxis in the next decade

The dream of flying cars has been around longer than Boeing Co. has been making airplanes. Now a vision from the pages of Jules Verne is near enough to occupy the present-day plans of Boeing's leadership.

Debt-conscious millennials ditch credit cards, threaten industry

Millennials have been accused of disrupting many industries, from newspapers to brick-and-mortar stores. Credit cards appear to be next in line.

Businesses spurn the NRA, but gun group doesn't much care

Despite unprecedented pressure from corporate America, the NRA is unlikely either to lose a significant number of members or to see its influence diminished.

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