Delaware News
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Updated 56 minutes ago
Much like turning to Star Trek and Iron Man sequels for a safe way to ensure box-office sales, recalling popular former leaders has become a reliable corporate script in times of crisis.
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Updated 1 hour, 8 minutes ago
The rails where a Metro-North Railroad train derailed May 17 in Connecticut had been repaired a month before the accident that snarled commuters and injured at least 75 people.
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U.S. nuclear-power generation rose to an 11-week high after reactors in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Maryland returned to service.
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Ally Financial Inc., the auto lender majority-owned by the U.S. government, agreed to pay $2.1 billion to avoid lawsuits related to its bankrupt mortgage unit, Residential Capital LLC.
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U.S. investigators looking into the May 17 Connecticut commuter-rail crash haven’t yet found a clear cause.
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Sony Corp. and three other companies that helped invent Blu-Ray movie discs sued Imation Corp., claiming the data-storage company broke patent laws by selling blank, recordable versions of the discs.
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AsiaInfo-Linkage Inc., which provides telecommunications software services in China, was sued by a shareholder who contends the stock is undervalued in a proposed $890 million buyout led by Citic Capital Partners.
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TPO Hess Holdings Inc., a printer of commercial and educational materials, filed for bankruptcy protection from creditors, citing a slump in the industry and the global economic downturn.
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Former IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman’s self-portrait of an executive intentionally distanced from political controversy will be tested today by House Republicans eager to uncover details about the tax agency’s scrutiny of small-government groups.
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KidsPeace Corp., the owner of a nonprofit psychiatric hospital for teenagers in Pennsylvania, filed for bankruptcy blaming government spending cuts.
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