Word: loganized
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...next time you pass through Logan, hand over your deodorant. But, remember, you’re more likely to be killed by your appendix than Al-Qaeda...
...Whereas insurers used to pass off environmental liability onto government, they now believe that climate change is so serious a threat to their business that they can't wait for government to take the initiative. "The industry is crucial to the functioning of the global economy," says Andrew Logan, energy and finance program director at the ethical-investment organization CERES. As the storm season winds down, activists pray the industry doesn't lose focus. "If there isn't a big hurricane season this year, it could slow things down. That is the larger risk," says Logan...
...industry used to pass off environmental liability onto government, insurers now believe that climate change is so serious a threat to business that they can't wait for the public sector to take the initiative. "The industry is crucial to the functioning of the global economy," says Andrew Logan, energy and finance program director at the ethical investment organization CERES. If the developed world is truly committed to reducing carbon emissions before the earth reaches what Stern describes as a catastrophic warming tipping point, then the insurance industry will need to play a bigger corporate and civic leadership role than...
...answer, say security experts, highlights the need for a security system based on sophisticated profiling: It may be more important for the security system to be geared towards detecting passengers with intent to do harm rather than relying on detecting the specific means they've chosen. Boston's Logan Airport is currently testing a version of profiling called the SPOT program, but it avoids the ethnic profiling that many security experts say, despite its objectionable political connotations, would have to be the focus of an effective system...
Just 25 minutes before he was scheduled to address the Harvard Business School MBA Class of 2006 at its Class Day ceremony yesterday, Henry M. Paulson, President George W. Bush’s nominee for the next secretary of the Treasury, touched down at Logan Airport. The Business School, which had hatched several back-up plans in case the erratic Boston weather did not cooperate, printed out 1,000 revised Class Day programs and found a substitute speaker...