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Hartmann s Inc building its future with DCOA help

Hartmann’s Inc. in Abilene, rapidly grew from its origins in 1955 as a small auto repair facility to making its own automotive parts. These days, the company, which recently relocated to a new facility thanks, in part, to help from the Development Corporation of Abilene, is involved in industries as diverse as medical, commercial, energy and aerospace, said Alan Hartmann, whose grandfather started the manufacturer. The family-owned company moved from Maple Street to a 100,000-square foot facility at Five Points Business Park after buying the property from the DCOA. In the effort to retain and expand Hartmann s, the DCOA worked with the Small Business Development Center, First Financial Bank, Abilene City Council and Abilene Industrial Foundation, and also secured a federal grant from the Economic Development Administration.

Top 20 M&A bankers who closed 2020 s largest deals in North America

Citigroup; JPMorgan; Morgan Stanley; Qatalyst Partners; Skye Gould/Insider This story is available exclusively to Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. While M&A had a down year during the pandemic, bankers still orchestrated a number of megadeals. Insider partnered with the financial-data platform MergerLinks to identify 2020 s top 20 bankers. The ranking is based lead investment bankers who arranged the largest M&A deals in North America. For Wall Street s rainmakers, the start of 2020 was a nightmare. Mergers and acquisitions temporarily went over a cliff in the springtime as the world was met with a series of lockdowns and strict restrictions to confront the spread of the coronavirus. In the dealmaking drought in the first half of the year, global volumes collapsed to $1.2 trillion, a 41% decline from 2019, with megadeals taking the brunt of it, falling 69%, according to data from Ref

Sharp Drop in Heart Surgeries During the Pandemic

Sharp Drop in Heart Surgeries During the Pandemic By Ernie Mundell and Robert Preidt                 HealthDay Reporters TUESDAY, Feb. 2, 2021 (HealthDay News) There has been a sharp decline in heart surgeries and an increase in heart surgery patient deaths in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers say. An analysis of national data revealed a 53% decrease in all adult heart surgeries, including a 40% decline in non-elective heart surgeries and a 65% drop in elective heart surgeries during the pandemic, compared to 2019. The study was led by Dr. Tom Nguyen, who directs adult cardiothoracic surgery at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). He and his colleagues presented the findings Saturday at the annual meeting of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Such research is considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Heart surgeries down by half in U S as patients avoid hospitals during pandemic

Heart surgeries down by half in U.S. as patients avoid hospitals during pandemic By (0) As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and concerns about catching the coronavirus, researchers say heart patients have avoided hospitals as much as possible. Photo by skeeze/Pixabay There has been a sharp decline in heart surgeries and an increase in heart surgery patient deaths in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers say. An analysis of national data revealed a 53% decrease in all adult heart surgeries, including a 40% decline in non-elective heart surgeries and a 65% drop in elective heart surgeries during the pandemic, compared to 2019.

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