Archive for July 2020
Five things you need to know today, and please, meet Fluffy
Good morning, friends. Here are the five things you need to know to get your workday started, plus podcast recommendations, Tupperware and beer trivia and a puppy video you gotta check out. Read More
Read MoreFor this Cape Cod fish market, it’s steady sailing despite coronavirus
A recent Friday night in July at the Lobster Trap fish market and restaurant in Bourne looked more like a Tuesday night in February to owner Dave Delancey. Read More
Read MoreAIM pushes Congress to forgive states’ massive unemployment debt
Massachusetts has borrowed more than $620M from the federal gov’t over the past several weeks, to pay for the record number of jobless claims. That’s a lot of debt that, barring federal intervention, will ultimately have to be borne by Mass. businesses. Read More
Read MoreRepublicans unveil stimulus plan. Here’s what’s in it for small businesses.
There are a number of small-business provisions, including an expanded PPP, in the newly unveiled Republican stimulus proposal. Read More
Read MoreCambridge biotech plans lab near Broadway T in South Boston
Cambridge biotech CRISPR Therapeutics has signed a new lease in South Boston. Read More
Read MoreDraftKings competitor Rush Street to go public via reverse merger
Three months after Boston-based DraftKings Inc. started trading, another U.S. online gaming company is going public by following the same strategy that brought DraftKings’ shares on the Nasdaq Global Select Market. Read More
Read MoreModerna launches $1B Covid-19 vaccine trial
Moderna Inc. officially launched the last stage of testing on its Covid-19 vaccine. Read More
Read MoreBillionaire WHDH owner Edmund Ansin dies
Ansin owned TV stations in Miami and Boston, and developed real estate. Read More
Read MoreArizona software firm acquires Boston-based Yantriks
The deal adds service capability to Blue Yonder’s key supply chain software product. Read More
Read MoreHere are the fall reopening plans for the 25 largest colleges in Mass.
Colleges and universities have been scrambling in recent months to design plans for the fall semester as the country continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic. There is no question that the upcoming semester will look starkly different than most. Read More
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