Pelosi lights up Christmas tree at The Capitol
US Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi attends the lighting of the Christmas tree at The Capitol. This year's tree is a 55-foot Engelmann Spruce from Colorado.
Fred Guttenberg shared a video of the now-congresswoman following and yelling questions at the Parkland survivor in 2018.
The "Global Insomnia Clinical Trial Pipeline Highlights - 2021" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
Manifold, a venture holding company, is shaking up the traditional consulting model and will now house an advisory firm, venture fund, and incubation studio all under one roof. The news comes as Manifold brings together its talent, resources, capital, and connections from Digital Intent and Founder Equity to ensure continued growth for its clients and partners.
The coronavirus pandemic is cited as one of the main reasons why the clock’s position has not changed this year.
(Bloomberg) -- Governor Andrew Cuomo lifted restrictions in most hot spot areas across New York state, saying the post-holiday surge in Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations is over.New York City restaurants must stay closed. The governor said he will be speaking with local officials and will announce a plan by the end of the week for potentially reopening them.“We’re looking at going back to the 25% would be the question, and how and when do you do that,” Cuomo said Wednesday, referring to a previous limit of 25% of indoor capacity.So-called yellow zone restrictions remain in two areas of the Bronx, one in Queens, one in Washington Heights and one in Newburgh, Cuomo said. In those spots, non-residential gatherings are restricted to a maximum of 25 people, residential gatherings are limited to 10 people, houses of worship can operate at 50% capacity and indoor and outdoor dining is restricted.Cuomo reported a fifth-straight decline in daily cases. Positivity and hospitalizations are on the decline across the state, he said Wednesday at a virus press briefing.The governor had said on Jan. 25 that the state was ready to begin loosening restrictions and increasing economic activity across the state. He allowed elective surgeries to resume in Erie County and said he would announce more adjustments today.For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2021 Bloomberg L.P.
Pearson also rose sharply amid a squeeze on short sellers
The "Global Autism Spectrum Disorders Clinical Trial Pipeline Highlights - 2021" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
New president hits the ground running with a sweeping set of executive actions, memorandums and policy proposals to shape the next four years
Our pick of the best women’s waterproof cycling jackets to suit any budget
It’s been a week since president Joe Biden took office, and he’s doubled down on promises made to the LGBT+ community during his campaign.
The governing body also addressed the presence of crowds at this summer’s tournament
"We cannot afford more job losses and more good-paying Canadian jobs moved offshore."
Shares of National Beverage (NASDAQ: FIZZ) are soaring 27% higher heading into midday trading Wednesday, seemingly making it the latest stock to catch short-sellers in a squeeze. Although National Beverage's 52% gain so far in 2021 is no match for the stratospheric rise in GameStop's (NYSE: GME) shares, which are up 685% year to date, the owner of La Croix sparkling water is also a heavily shorted stock with nearly two-thirds of its shares outstanding sold short. The short interest ratio in National Beverage, or the number of days it would take short-sellers to cover their position, is a hefty 27 days (anything over seven days is considered a lot), which suggests short-sellers are being squeezed.
Grenfell cladding firm president agrees to give evidence at inquiry. Claude Schmidt of French firm Arconic gives way after refusing to be a witness for seven months
The "Global Rett Syndrome Clinical Trial Pipeline Highlights - 2021" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.
The European Union is pushing AstraZeneca to supply the bloc with more doses of its Covid-19 vaccine from plants in Europe and Britain after the company announced delivery delays, adding to frustrations over the EU's inoculation programme. The EU is making more comprehensive checks on vaccines before approval, which means a slower rollout of shots compared with some other regions, especially former EU member Britain.The issue has been exacerbated by Anglo-Swedish AstraZeneca and Pfizer of the United States both announcing delivery holdups in recent weeks. AstraZeneca's delay was caused by production issues at a plant in Belgium."UK factories are part of our advanced purchase agreement and that is why they have to deliver," EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides told a news conference, noting that two of the four factories from which AstraZeneca has committed to providing vaccines to the EU are in Britain.British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it would have been a "great pity" if the United Kingdom had stayed in the European Union's vaccine programme rather than set up its own plan."I do think that we've been able to do things differently, and better, in some ways," he said in parliament.AstraZeneca, which partnered with Britain's Oxford University to develop its vaccine, said last week it would cut supplies to the EU in the first quarter, with an EU official saying that meant the EU would receive 31 million doses in the period, or 60% less than initially agreed, due to production issues at a Belgian factory.The EU has been pushing the company for a week to revise these cuts, but it is unclear how it can force AstraZeneca to deliver the agreed amounts.Pascal Soriot, the French chief executive of AstraZeneca, told newspapers on Tuesday the EU contract was based on a best-effort clause and did not commit the company to a specific timetable for deliveries.Soriot said that vaccines meant for the EU were produced in four plants in Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany and Italy.But EU Commission officials said on Wednesday that under the contract, the company had also committed to providing vaccines from two factories in Britain.They added the firm had not provided sufficient explanations on why doses could not be shipped from stocks at factories which experienced no production problem, like those in Britain.Reuters on Tuesday exclusively reported that EU's calls to reroute doses from Britain had not been answered by AstraZeneca .As an example of how the glitches are biting, delays in deliveries are forcing health authorities in Spain's wealthiest regions of Madrid and Catalonia to restrict inoculations even as a third wave of contagion rages, officials said.Adding to the confusion, a factory in Wales that produces AstraZeneca's vaccine was partially evacuated on Wednesday after it received a suspicious package and police said a bomb disposal unit was dealing with the incident.Meeting or no meeting?The EU has also threatened to monitor future exports of Covid-19 vaccines in retaliation for companies announcing delays, although the EU trade commissioner ruled out any export bans.Fraught relations showed up in confusion about the timing of a meeting between the EU and AstraZeneca.EU officials said the firm had pulled out of a virtual meeting scheduled for Wednesday, an Austrian minister then said it was set for Thursday, which was followed by an AstraZeneca statement saying it would go ahead on Wednesday as planned.The EU contract with AstraZeneca is an advance purchase agreement for the supply of at least 300 million doses provided the vaccine is approved as safe and effective, with doses delivered in stages. A decision on approval is scheduled for Friday.In a further sign of friction, EU officials also said details revealed by Soriot on production capacity and best-effort clause were confidential, and hinted at the possible breach of contract.Officials added that the best-effort clause was standard in contracts with manufacturers of products in development."Best effort is a completely standard clause when you are signing a contract with a company for a product that does not yet exist," one official said. "Obviously you cannot put a completely legal obligation" under these conditions.But the official said best effort meant the company had to show an "overall" effort to develop and deliver vaccines.AstraZeneca said on Wednesday: "Each supply chain was developed with input and investment from specific countries or international organisations based on the supply agreements, including our agreement with the European Commission.""As each supply chain has been set up to meet the needs of a specific agreement, the vaccine produced from any supply chain is dedicated to the relevant countries or regions and makes use of local manufacturing wherever possible," the firm added.Philanthropist Bill Gates told Reuters the rollout of vaccines was a "super hard allocation problem" that was putting pressure on global institutions, governments and drugmakers."If you're a pharma company that didn't make a vaccine, you're not under pressure. But the ones who did make the vaccine – they are the ones being attacked," he said. "It's all very zero-sum."(REUTERS)
Cast your minds back to 1994, well, if you’re old enough to remember it that is. It was certainly a thrilling and eventful year.
Fantasy sports operator DraftKings (NASDAQ: DKNG) has seen strong gains as the popularity of online sports betting rises quickly across America. Financial analysis firm Bernstein underscored that fact with its first-ever coverage of the company. Bernstein gave DraftKings a price target of $71 per share, more than 31% higher than its stock price at the start of trading today, along with an outperform rating.
The Tullow Oil share price is crashing through the floor today! Here I explain why full-year financials have sent investors scurrying for cover. The post This is why the Tullow Oil share price has sunk 11%! appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.