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Rochester's new frontier
Twenty years ago, he was an engineer in a state-owned film factory. Today, Yu Zhu Mao runs a Shanghai warehouse that keeps 400 stores stocked with Kodak film and cameras. He grosses $1 million a year, travels the globe, dines with top executives and diplomats -- and is ready to take on the world. Next year, Yu says without a trace of doubt, he'll sell more film in this city of 16 million people than is sold in all of New York City. No mean feat, given that only 15 percent of China's households own a camera. ''Well, why not?'' Yu says, flashing a million-dollar grin.
SPECIAL SECTION...
Reinventing Rochester's economy
Slow and steady: Everyone, from presidential candidates to novice stock watchers, is talking about it: The nine-year economic boom that has created the longest period of prosperity in the nation's history. While the country has reached new levels of economic success, statistics suggest that the Rochester area did not board this national gravy train. In almost every measure of job and income growth, the area lags the nation and many comparable regions.
FULL STORY...
Bright flight: Robert Wechsler left Rochester 12 years ago in search of a job in a thriving metropolis. He bounced from New York City to Miami, then settled in Nashville to work as chief operating officer of a dot-com. ''If you want to do a career in a high-profile corporation or industry, it's very difficult to do it (in Rochester),'' the 29-year-old said. ''And from a singles' perspective, it's not a good place.''
FULL STORY...
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