The vice chairman of South Korea’s Lotte Group has been found dead hours before he was to be questioned in a corruption probe.
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A Cheaper Airbag, And Takata’s Road To A Deadly Crisis
Linda Rink holding a Takata airbag inflater. At least 14 people have been killed by the faulty devices.
Tesla Clears Antitrust Hurdle In $2.6 Billion Deal For SolarCity
Tesla Motors has won antitrust approval to purchase SolarCity, which has been hit by competition and a changing regulatory landscape.
Despite Fears, Mexico’s Manufacturing Boom Helps Some U.S. Workers
Workers assemble the Forte sedan on the floor of a Kia plant in Nuevo Leon, Mexico, which began production in May. The country already
When The Family Business Is Keeping Cool, It Pays To Be Warm With People
Frank Mutz’s family has been keeping people cool for more than half a century. It began with his grandfather, who started installing and repairing
Bloom And Doom: Pokémon Go-Like Art Project Explores Climate Change
Using the Layar app on a smartphone, visitors to SAM’s Olympic Sculpture Park can see artist Tamiko Thiel’s “augmented reality installation” called “Gardens of
Prince’s Paisley Park Open For Tours This Fall: A Look At The Musician’s Legacy
At 81, Disney’s First African-American Animator Is Still In The Studio
Floyd Norman was Disney’s first African-American animator. He’s shown above in 1956, working as an “apprentice inbetweener” on Sleeping Beauty.
The Beats’ Countercultural Ferment Still Bubbles, In Paris
Part of Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road,” on display — all 120 feet of it — in the “Beat Generation” exhibition at the Pompidou
The School That Art Saved
A second-grader at Roosevelt School in Bridgeport, Conn., molds putty to create the life stages of a ladybug, which is part of an effort