TABLE OF CONTENTS: NOVEMBER 16, 1998

 The complete contents of Traffic World.

 Up FRONT
WHO BENEFITS FROM BOLERO?
Latest venture promising 'paperless' international trade may offer more to bankers than shippers.

WASHINGTON REPORT

 

WHO'S ON FIRST?

Most imcumbents remain incommittee leadership positions, with some curcial changes expected.

  • For whom the tax tolls
  • Briefs

SPECIAL REPORT
NITL UPDATE
Most incumbents remain in committee leadership positions, with some curcial changes expected.
  • Feds seed driver recruitment program
  • Roberts Express value
  • AAR's reach for shippers
  • AAR revives NARS tie
COLUMNS

 

  • Logistics and theLaw: Cost Plus
  • Import-Export Logistics: Shippers' Declaration update
  • Commentary: Origin of Wolf's truck bashing
  • Q&A: Is 'C/O' consignee responsible?
DEPARTMENTS

 

  • EDITORIAL
  • LETTERS
  • THE WEEK
  • UPDATE
  • MARKET REPORT
  • PEOPLE WATCH
  • CLASSIFIED ADS
  • CALENDAR
  • THE BACK PAGE
  • COMPANY INDEX
MOTOR
Cracked roadways cost nation $5.9 billion, over half of urban roads subpar.
  • Briefs
  • 'Amazing' year
  • 20 and counting
LOGISTICS
Kathleen Strange takes the helm at Council of Logistics Management.
  • Paying her dues
  • Menlo makes music
  • Briefs
TECHNOLOGY
Aeris Communications' MicroBurst technology uses cell phone channels to track vehicles.
  • Know where you're going?
  • PeopleSoft does e-move
  • Embeddable software
  • Destinations
  • Briefs
WATER
Miami has a new security setup meant to keep legal cargo safe, illegal stuff out.
  • Brazil cracks down
  • Canal update
RAIL
STB environmental analysis of CN-IC merger shows it's no Conrail.
  • Working the new Congress
  • Phillips post split
  • Getting ducks in row

AIR
FedEx shifts focus from pilot talks to contingency plans in case of peak-season strike.

  • A miserable third
  • Rough quarter in Canada
  • Air freight stocks up
INTERNATIONAL
Patching up Canada's medicare system takes priority over roads.
  • Safety first