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News Briefs - Oct. 7

Navistar, UAW Resume Talks • Airborne Doubles Weight Limits for International Express Service • Morgan Group Likely to File for Chapter 11 • Possible Terror Attack Boosts Oil Prices • And more...

October 7, 2002

Opinion: Web Self-Care - Internet Customer Service

The customer service (CS) departments of most transportation companies are focused on making call centers more efficient.

October 7, 2002

Technology Briefs - Oct. 1-Oct. 7

DOT Releases New Freight Analysis Tool • TMC Meeting Cards Lost in Mail Snafu • Cingular Stops e911 Equipment Shipments

October 7, 2002

iTECH: The Online Classroom - Open 24/7

Interactive online learning can be a valuable complement to traditional training and professional development programs.

October 7, 2002

iTECH: The Internet - Can It Transform Transportation Training

Online training is winning converts bit by bit. Wider adoption depends in part on the industry’s ability to invest in technology to implement it.

October 7, 2002

Diesel Prices Rise Another 2.2 Cents Per Gallon

The average U.S. retail price of diesel fuel rose Monday for the eighth consecutive week, by 2.2 cents to $1.46 a gallon, the Department of Energy reported.

October 7, 2002

U.S. Sept. Unemployment Rate, Payrolls Both Fall

The U.S. economy shed 43,000 jobs during September, but the unemployment rate fell to 5.6% from 5.7% on an upward revision in the August jobs data, the Department of Labor reported Friday. br clear = all>

October 4, 2002

News Briefs - Oct. 4

Allied Holdings Expects ‘Significant’ Earnings Improvement • Okla. Commission Approves Tag Reform Measure • Smithway Gets OK for Small Cap Listing • Federal Signal Buys Two Companies • And more...

October 4, 2002

Impact of Port Shutdown Widens

The impact of the closure of 29 ports on the West Coast continues to grow as negotiations made little progress Thursday.

October 4, 2002

West Coast Port Closings Idle Many Truckers

The closure of U.S. West Coast ports by a lockout of longshoremen by terminal operators idled thousands of port truckers, piled up shipborne cargoes that will take weeks to clear and began rapidly affecting businesses throughout the nation.

October 4, 2002