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Business

Fb Extends Trump Ban ‘at Least’ By Finish of Time period: Stay Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Facebook will block President Trump on its platforms, including Instagram, at least until the end of his term, chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on Thursday.

“The shocking events of the last 24 hours clearly demonstrate that President Donald Trump intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power to his elected successor, Joe Biden,” Mr. Zuckerberg wrote.

“We believe the risks of allowing the president to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great. Therefore, we are extending the block we have placed on his Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely and for at least the next two weeks until the peaceful transition of power is complete.”

United States › United StatesOn Jan. 6 14-day change
New cases 255,728 +8%
New deaths 3,964 Flat
World › WorldOn Jan. 6 14-day change
New cases 785,681 +1%
New deaths 14,266 –5%

Where cases per capita are
highest

By: Ella Koeze·Source: Refinitiv

Stocks rose again on Thursday, after having maintained gains on Wednesday even as chaos erupted in Washington as a pro-Trump mob overran the Capitol building, as investors kept their focus on the prospects for increased federal spending by the incoming government.

The S&P 500 rose more than 1 percent in early trading, after a 0.6 percent gain on Wednesday. Shares in Europe and Asia were also mostly higher, oil prices and government bond yields edged higher.

The gains on Thursday reflect Wall Street’s eagerness to look past violence in Washington and to the impact of a government unified under Democratic leadership, analysts said. The rally began on Tuesday after it became apparent that Democrats would effectively control the Senate, after winning a pair of runoff votes in Georgia, and be able to more forcefully push forward with President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s plans to bolster the economy with government spending.

“As disturbing as these events were, markets were largely unfazed, which, we hope, points to this being an aberration,” equity analysts at J.P. Morgan wrote to clients on Thursday. “The longer-term cue for markets and policy comes from the result of the two Georgia senate runoffs, which both went to Democrats and thus enlivened the ‘blue wave.’”

After the order in the Capitol was restored, the Senate and House of Representatives voted early Thursday to certify Mr. Biden as winner of the 2020 presidential election.

Investors are also banking on the rollout of coronavirus vaccines to eventually energize business activity that has been dormant during the pandemic, and, as they have for months, also looked past fresh evidence of the economic catastrophe unfolding. On Thursday, the Labor Department reported that 922,000 workers filed new state claims for unemployment benefits last week, while another 161,000 new claims were filed under a federal program.

Treasury bond yields continued to rise, lifted by expectations that additional fiscal spending in Washington will generate more bond issues, reaching as high as 1.06 percent on 10-year notes. The yield climbed above 1 percent this week for the first time since March.

Economists at Goldman Sachs said they expected Democrats to pass $750 billion in fiscal stimulus in the first quarter of the year. The U.S. investment bank also raised its forecast for economic growth this year to 6.4 percent from 5.9 percent.

Oil was holding on to an 11-month high, after Saudi Arabia announced on Tuesday it would cut oil production. The U.S. crude benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, hit $51.28 a barrel before slipping a bit, while Brent crude reached $54.90.

The Royal Divinity Food Bank in Birmingham, Ala., says it has been feeding hundreds more families each month since the pandemic began. The job market has improved, but millions remain unemployed.Credit…Audra Melton for The New York Times

New claims for unemployment benefits remained high last week, the government reported on Thursday, the latest evidence that the pandemic-racked economy still has a lot of lost ground to make up heading into a new year.

A total of 922,000 workers filed initial claims for state benefits during the final week of 2020, the Labor Department said, while another 161,000 new claims were filed under a federal pandemic jobless program. Neither figure is seasonally adjusted. On a seasonally adjusted basis, new state claims totaled 787,000.

The labor market has improved since the coronavirus pandemic broke out and closed down the economy. But of the more than 22 million jobs that disappeared in the spring, 10 million remain lost.

With a recently enacted $900 billion relief package that includes an extension of federal unemployment benefits, most of the unemployed can at least look forward to more financial help.

Still, “this winter is going to be very difficult,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial economist at Oxford Economics. “We’re seeing overall economic momentum is slowing, and that feeds through to the labor market.”

“Employers are very cautious about rehiring at the same time they have had to increase layoffs,” Ms. Bostjancic said, “but the resurgence of the virus is really the main culprit here.”

A fuller picture of December employment will come Friday when the Labor Department releases its monthly jobs report, and most analysts are expecting minor payroll gains — or even the first net loss since April.

As for Thursday’s report, there was a sharp increase in claims for extended state benefits — payments to the long-term unemployed whose regular benefits have run out. But new claims under the federal Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program fell, most likely reflecting the exhaustion of benefits before Congress acted.

Some fuzziness surrounding the count could be related to the difficulty of seasonally adjusting the numbers over the holidays, said Ernie Tedeschi, the head of fiscal analysis at Evercore ISI. The unadjusted number for new state claims was up by 77,000 from the previous week, while the seasonally adjusted number scarcely budged.

But longer-term trends, Mr. Tedeschi noted, are more meaningful than any week-to-week changes.

Even with the arrival of vaccines, “employers are still cautious related to their work force strategy,” said Amy Glaser of the staffing firm Adecco USA.Credit…Bryan Anselm for The New York Times

While the availability of vaccines will speed the economy’s return to normal, employers remain wary about hiring, job recruiters say.

Job postings and hiring typically fall off at the end of December, and the trend after the latest holiday season has been more pronounced than usual. “Right now, employers are still cautious related to their work force strategy,” said Amy Glaser, senior vice president at the staffing firm Adecco USA.

The rebound has been bumpy, and employers have responded in kind, retaining flexibility to increase or reduce their staffing through the use of temporary workers, Ms. Glaser said. That could mean more people are cycling through jobs.

Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the online job site ZipRecruiter, has seen the same caution.

“Employers are being apprehensive, and job seekers are not yet flocking back to the market in droves, either,” Ms. Pollak said. “The virus is still spreading, hospitalizations have hit a new record, and there is a pullback in demand for certain services. A lot of stay-at-home orders and restrictions are causing a further decline.”

Some industries have managed to thrive. A key measure of manufacturing, for instance, rose this week to its highest level since 2018. Construction spending and employment have grown along with a surge in home buying. Staffing agencies say they have seen hiring in the automotive business and financial services. The demand for warehouse and delivery workers also remains strong.

One of the biggest trends has been the increase in customer service workers and call center representatives operating from home, Ms. Glaser of Adecco said. Those jobs require greater digital literacy than in the past, she said, because individuals must be able to set up their computers and solve problems themselves.

“There is no tech person sitting down the hallway,” she said.

Farley's East in Oakland, Calif., was able to stay open with help from the Paycheck Protection Program. Small businesses are waiting for details about the next round of lending aid.Credit…Nathan Frandino/Reuters

The federal government released updated rules for lenders just before midnight on Wednesday for the next round of Paycheck Protection Program lending, but it did not set a date for when it expects to begin taking applications.

Lenders anticipate the program could restart as soon as next week. Last month’s stimulus package included $284 billion for new loans through the small-business relief program, which ended in August after distributing $523 billion to more than five million businesses. In this next round, the hardest-hit business — those whose sales have dropped at least 25 percent from before the pandemic — can qualify for a second loan. First-time borrowers will also be eligible for loans.

The Small Business Administration, which runs the program, plans to give small lenders a head start. In its first two days, the program will accept loan applications only from community lenders like Community Development Financial Institutions, which specialize in working with low-income borrowers and in areas underserved by larger lenders.

For second loans of more than $150,000, applicants will need to provide their lender with records proving their sales have declined. Lenders will need to do a “good faith review” of those documents, but will be allowed to rely on borrowers’ certifications that their claims are accurate — a win for lenders, which are concerned about being held liable for fraudulent claims.

For smaller loans, borrowers will not need to provide their sales records as part of their application, but the S.B.A. can request them later.

The S.B.A. is scrambling to release a variety of relief measures included in last month’s stimulus bill, including a $15 billion grant program for music clubs, theaters and other live-events venues. The agency has not yet released any details on that program, and it will not start until after President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. takes office.

When Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, issued a statement condemning the violence in Washington on Wednesday, he urged “our elected leaders” to call for an end to it. He did not directly mention President Trump.

Nor did the Charles Scharf, the chief executive of Wells Fargo (“The behavior in Washington, D.C., today is unacceptable”) or the chief executives of Goldman Sachs, Bank of America or Citigroup. Business leaders and organizations often instead referred to “leaders” or called for “the peaceful transition of power” to President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Business leaders have rarely criticized Mr. Trump directly. When he announced, shortly before he was inaugurated, that Stephen K. Bannon would be his chief strategist in the White House, Democrats on the congressional committees that oversee the finance industry asked industry leaders to publicly oppose the appointment. The lawmakers called Mr. Bannon a “bigot beloved by white supremacists” and said the business leaders had “a moral obligation to speak out.”

None did.

After Mr. Trump took office, chief executives found themselves in the uncomfortable position of deciding whether to take part in so-called business advisory councils, common forums for business leaders to influence the policy of a new president, even as he was rolling out policies many saw as hateful. Several such councils disbanded after Mr. Trump declined in 2017 to condemn violence by white supremacists in Charlottesville, Va., and said there were “very fine people” and “blame” on “both sides.”

With the president’s increasing efforts to subvert the election, organizations have grown bolder. On Monday, for example, 170 business leaders signed their names to a statement, organized by the business advocacy organization Partnership for New York City, urging Congress to certify the result of the presidential election, though some prominent members were missing.

On Wednesday, as a mob stormed the Capitol, organizations not known for vocal statements seemed to no longer worry about the political ramifications of speaking up against Mr. Trump.

The research group High Frequency Economics suspended regular publication of its research notes for the first time since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and sent a note to its clients: “We at High Frequency Economics are disgusted by the role of the president of the United States in inciting this riot, and we are saddened that he cannot find the character to stand up in front of the mob he has created, quell the violence and send everyone home.”

And the Business Roundtable, a group of chief executives, including Mr. Dimon, from some of the nation’s largest companies, was direct as to the cause of the violence.

“The chaos unfolding in the nation’s capital is the result of unlawful efforts to overturn the legitimate results of a democratic election,” the group said. “The country deserves better. Business Roundtable calls on the president and all relevant officials to put an end to the chaos and to facilitate the peaceful transition of power.”

Commercial space for rent in New York City. Stay-at-home orders and other restrictions have left millions without work as businesses close.Credit…Mohamed Sadek for The New York Times

Several states say they are moving quickly to restore federal unemployment benefits that lapsed last month when President Trump delayed signing a second round of federal pandemic relief.

A handful, including New York, Texas, Maryland and California, say they have started sending out the weekly $300 supplement that was part of the legislation, while others like Ohio say they are awaiting more guidance from the U.S. Labor Department.

Michele Evermore, a senior policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, said that “at least half of the states should have something up by next week.”

Congress approved 11 weeks of additional benefits, and the entire amount will ultimately be delivered to eligible workers even if payments are initially delayed.

“Any claims for the first week will be backdated,” said James Bernsen, deputy director of communications at the Texas Workforce Commission.

In addition to a $300-a-week supplement for those receiving unemployment benefits, the $900 billion emergency relief package renews two other jobless programs created last March as part of the CARES Act.

One, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, covers freelancers, part-time hires, seasonal workers and others who do not normally qualify for state unemployment benefits. A second, Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, extends benefits for workers who have exhausted their state allotment.

This latest round also offers additional assistance for people who cobble together their income by combining a salaried job with freelance gigs. The new program, called Mixed Earner Unemployment Compensation, provides a $100 weekly payment to such workers in addition to their Pandemic Unemployment Assistance benefits.

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. on Wednesday.Credit…Doug Mills/The New York Times

  • President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. set aside plans to deliver a speech on the economy on Wednesday afternoon, instead calling for an end to violent protests in Washington and calling on President Trump to stop what he called an “insurrection.” Mr. Biden’s speech was expected to emphasize several of his economic priorities, including reiterating calls for another round of financial aid to help people, businesses and state and local governments weather ongoing economic pain from the virus. The president-elect is still expected to deliver economic remarks in the coming days, a transition spokesman said.

  • Federal Reserve officials were warily eyeing a surge in coronavirus cases at their Dec. 15-16 meeting, but they hoped that vaccine breakthroughs might set the stage for a strong economic rebound in 2021. “With the pandemic worsening across the country, the expansion was expected to slow even further in coming months,” according to minutes from the gathering of the Federal Open Market Committee, released Wednesday. “Nevertheless, the positive vaccine news” was “viewed as favorable for the medium-term economic outlook.”

  • The Labor Department on Wednesday released the final version of a rule that could classify millions of workers in industries like construction, cleaning and the gig economy as contractors rather than employees, another step under the Trump administration toward endorsing the business practices of companies like Uber and Lyft.

Categories
Entertainment

The Royal Academy of Dance: From Music Corridor to Ballet Royalty

“It is utter nonsense to say that the English temperament is unsuitable for dancing,” said Edouard Espinosa, a London dance instructor, in 1916. It was just a lack of qualified instruction that prevented the creation of “perfect dancers”. ”Espinosa spoke to a reporter from Lady’s Pictorial about an uproar he had caused in the dance world with this idea: dance teachers should adhere to standards and be screened for their work.

Four years later, in 1920, Espinosa and several others, including Danish-born Adeline Genée and Russian ballerina Tamara Karsavina, founded a teaching organization that would become the Royal Academy of Dance (RAD). Today the academy is one of the largest ballet education programs in the world. Students in 92 countries follow the curriculum and take their exams, which are regulated by the organization. And as the exhibition “On Point: Royal Academy of Dance at 100” at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London shows, its history is synonymous with the history of ballet in Great Britain.

“Much of the legacy of British dance began with the RAD,” said Darcey Bussell, a former Royal Ballet ballerina who has served as the academy’s president since 2012. “It is important that dance training and instruction are closely linked to the professional world. The RAD has done this from the start.”

When the Royal Academy was founded, there was no national ballet company in Britain. But there was a lot of ballet, said Jane Pritchard, the curator of dance, theater, and performance at the Victoria and Albert Museum. She curated the exhibition with Eleanor Fitzpatrick, the archive and archive manager of the Royal Academy of Dance. “The Ballets Russes were there, Pavlova performed in London and excellent emigrant teachers came,” said Ms. Pritchard. “So the RAD was born at just the right moment, using the best of the Italian, French and Russian schools to create a British style that it then sent back to the world.”

The exhibition, which runs until September 2021, opened in May due to Covid-19 restrictions. It opened on December 2nd but closed again when the UK re-introduced restrictions in mid-December. While we wait for the museum to reopen, here’s a tour of some of the exhibition’s photographs, designs, and objects that touch on some of the most important figures in 20th century ballet history.

Adeline Genée (1878-1970), who spent much of her career in England, reigned as prima ballerina at the Empire Theater for a decade, appearing on various programs. She was both revered as a classical dancer and very popular with the public. Florence Ziegfeld called her “The World’s Greatest Dancer” when she performed in the USA in 1907. Genée became the first female president of the Royal Academy of Dance, and her royal connections and popularity with the public made her a formidable figurehead.

The photo from 1915 shows Genée in her own short ballet “A Dream of Butterflies and Roses” in a costume by Wilhelm, the resident designer at the Empire Theater and an important figure in the theater scene. “It’s a really good example of the type of costume and type of ballets that were being shown at the time,” said Ms. Fitzpatrick. “Ballet was still part of the music hall entertainment.”

This 1922 weekly vaudeville poster in the Coliseum of London shows how ballet was seen at the time the Royal Academy of Dance was founded. “It was part of a bigger picture, and it shows it visually,” said Ms. Pritchard. “Sybil Thorndike was a great British actress and would have given a brief performance of a play or monologue. Grock was a very famous clown. Most of the Colosseum’s bills had some sort of dance element, but it wasn’t always ballet. “

Jumping Joan was one of three characters that Tamara Karsavina danced in “Nursery Rhymes”, which she choreographed to music by Schubert for an evening at the Coliseum Theater in London in 1921. Unusually for ballet at the time in London, it was a standalone show rather than part of a variety program. Karsavina and her company did it twice a day for two weeks.

“People associate Karsavina with the Ballets Russes, but they also had their own group of dancers who performed regularly at the Colosseum,” Ms. Pritchard said. “She was really an independent artist in a way that we think is very modern, who works with a large company, but also has an independent existence.”

She also tried to promote British artists; The costume design is by Claud Lovat Fraser, a brilliant theater designer who died in his early 30s. “I think Lovat Fraser is the British equivalent of Bakst,” said Ms. Pritchard. “His drawings are so animated and precise, and he uses color wonderfully to create a sense of character.”

In 1954 the Whip and Carrot Club, an association of high jumpers, approached the Royal Academy of Dance with an unusual request. Members had read that athletes in both Russia and America had benefited from ballet lessons, and they asked the academy to formulate lessons that would improve their height.

The result was a multi-year course with courses for high jumpers and hurdlers and later for “obstacle hunters, discus and javelin throwers”, as can be seen from a Pathé film clip that is shown in the exhibition. In 1955, a leaflet containing 13 exercises for jumping was produced, drawn by cartoonist Cyril Kenneth Bird, professionally known as Fougasse, best known for government propaganda posters (“Careless Talk Costs Lives”) made during World War II .

“I love the photo of Margot Fonteyn watching in her fur coat!” Said Mrs. Pritchard.

Karsavina, until 1955 Vice President of the Royal Academy of Dance, developed a curriculum for teacher training and other sections of the advanced exams. As a dancer, she created the title role in Mikhail Fokine’s “The Firebird” with music by Stravinsky when the Ballets Russes performed the ballet at the Paris Opera in 1910. Here she is shown coaching Margot Fonteyn when the Royal Ballet first staged the ballet in 1954, the year Fonteyn took over from Genée as President of the Royal Academy of Dance.

“Karsavina knew firsthand what the choreographer and composer wanted and is passing it on,” said Ms. Fitzpatrick. (“I was never someone who counted,” says Karsavina in a film about learning “The Firebird”. “Stravinsky was very nice.”) “It gives a wonderful feeling of passing things on from one generation to the next.”

This relaxed moment of a rehearsal from 1963 shows the ease and the relationship between Fonteyn and the young Rudolf Nureyev, who had left Russia two years earlier. They were rehearsing for the Royal Academy of Dance’s annual gala, which Fonteyn had launched to raise funds for the organization. Her fame allowed her to bring together international guests, British dancers and even contemporary dance choreographers like Paul Taylor.

“The gala was also an opportunity for Fonteyn and Nureyev to try things that they might not have danced with the Royal Ballet,” said Ms. Pritchard. “Here they were rehearsing for ‘La Sylphide’ because Nureyev was passionate about the Bournonville choreography. They really look like two dancers who are happy together. “

Stanislas Idzikowski, known to his students as Idzi, was a Polish dancer who moved to London as a teenager and danced with Anna Pavlova’s company before joining the Ballets Russes, where he inherited many roles from Vaslav Nijinsky. A close friend of Karsavina, he later became a popular teacher and worked closely with the Royal Academy of Dance. Always formally dressed in a three-piece suit with a stiff collared shirt and sleek shoes, he was “tiny, elegant and precise,” according to Fonteyn in her autobiography.

In this 1952 photo, he is teaching fifth-year girls who may have been hoping for a career. Idzikowski was also a member of the Royal Academy of Dance’s Production Club, which was founded in 1932 to allow students over the age of 14 to work with choreographers. Frederick Ashton and Robert Helpmann were among the early volunteers, and later a young John Cranko created his first job there.

This 1972 photo of young girls about to begin a sequence called “Party Polka” was taken by Fonteyn’s brother Felix, who was also filming a group of elementary school students demonstrating for Fonteyn and other teachers. The footage, which was kept in canisters labeled “Children’s Curriculum” in the archives of the Royal Academy of Dance, was recently discovered by Ms. Fitzpatrick.

The film offers a rare glimpse into Fonteyn in her offstage role at the Royal Academy of Dance, Ms. Fitzgerald said, and reflects an important change the ballerina made during her presidency. “People really think about Fonteyn as a dancer, but she has been very involved in teaching and curriculum development,” said Ms. Fitzpatrick. Previous curricula, she explained, included pantomime, drama, and history, but when a body including Fonteyn revised the program in 1968, much of it was scrapped.

“They wanted to streamline everything and make it more comfortable for the kids and just focus on movement,” said Ms. Fitzpatrick. “The party polka is a great example of having a great feel for the kids to swirl around the room and really dance.”

Categories
Business

Starbucks CFO Pat Grismer to retire, reiterates outlook

Patrick “Pat” Grismer, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Starbucks, is pictured at the Annual General Meeting on March 20, 2019 in Seattle, Washington.

Jason Redmond | AFP | Getty Images

Starbucks said Thursday that Rachel Ruggeri, senior vice president of finance for the Americas division, will take the place of CFO Pat Grismer when he retires on February 1.

The coffee chain also reiterated its outlook for the first fiscal quarter of 2021 and the forecast for the full year.

For the first quarter of the fiscal year, the company is forecasting adjusted earnings of 50 cents to 55 cents per share. For the full fiscal year, Starbucks expects sales of $ 28 to 29 billion, after adjustments, between $ 2.70 and $ 2.90 per share.

Grismer will serve as an advisor to CEO Kevin Johnson through May 2 to assist in the transition. He took on the role of Chief Financial Officer in 2018 after holding the same title at Hyatt.

Ruggeri started working for Starbucks 16 years ago as a member of the accounting team and helped launch the first Starbucks card. She has 28 years of experience.

Starbucks’ shares, valued at $ 122 billion, were unchanged in premarket trading. The stock is up 18% over the past year.

Categories
Health

Set Your Train Objectives Excessive, however Not Too Excessive

They began recruiting 20 overweight, adult men and women who were initially inactive but healthy enough to run. They equipped the volunteers with activity trackers and asked them to continue their normal lives for two weeks while the researchers set their base step counts, which turned out to be an average of around 5,000 steps per day.

Then the researchers had the volunteers download a phone app that sent them individual step count goals each day. Goals randomly ranged from the same number of steps someone took at the start of their studies to 2.6 times as many. Participants may aim for their normal 5,000 steps one day and 13,000 the next day.

The experiment lasted 80 days. Then the researchers compared people’s daily goals, achievements, and the resulting overall activity levels. And they found that on days when they were asked to walk more, people walked significantly more; If the goals exceeded the number of basic steps people took, they were more active, even if the goals were quite ambitious.

But few people reached the goals with the highest step count, often lagging far behind, and generally walking little more than – or even less – than on days when the goals were more moderate. In essence, goals that people nearly got seemed most effective at getting and keeping them moving.

Of course, this was a small, short-term study that didn’t ask directly about people’s motivations or whether they felt demoralized for not completing these 13,000 steps. It also included walking, which is not everyone’s favorite exercise, and steps that some people may not have the desire or technology to count. (Almost all cell phones have accelerometers that count steps for you, or you can buy inexpensive pedometers.)

However, the results contain useful advice for anyone looking to get more active this year. “Set precise, dynamic goals that are not too simple, but realistic,” says Dr. Chevance. Perhaps check the Activity app on your phone for the past month to see how much you’ve run and add “10 percent,” a goal for this week, a plan that will put you at about your current value Take 500 steps a day Life is similar to that of a volunteer.

Update this goal “at least every week” by increasing steps – or time, or distance – whenever you are slightly above your goal, and dropping the bar a little if you stay low. “When you are close,” he says with a goal that is still a little further away, “you are on the right track.”

Categories
Politics

Mick Mulvaney resigns from Trump administration, expects others to comply with

WASHINGTON – Former President Donald Trump’s Chief of Staff and current Special Envoy for Northern Ireland said Thursday that he is stepping down from his diplomatic post.

“I called [Secretary of State] Mike Pompeo last night to let him know I’ve resigned from it. I can’t do it, I can’t stay, “Mick Mulvaney told CNBC in an exclusive interview.

“Those who choose to stay, and I’ve spoken to some of them, choose to stay because they fear the president might make someone worse,” said Mulvaney. But he said other officials couldn’t stay.

Trump encouraged thousands of supporters to march to the Capitol during a rally outside the White House Wednesday to protest the historically ceremonial practices. Trump returned to the White House after his speech and later said in a tweet video to supporters, “You have to go home now,” but he did not condemn the violence.

On Wednesday, members of Trump’s cabinet in the US Capitol issued tough reprimands of chaos, forcing Congress to halt the process of declaring Joe Biden’s victory in the presidential election. However, officials stopped criticizing the president, who urged his supporters to take action.

This story evolves. Please try again.

Categories
Business

Carmakers Put Their Greatest Faces Ahead

Every generation of automotive design has its Mona Lisa – and its Dogs Playing Poker.

We had tail fins (time for a comeback?) And the replica convertible tops of Landau vinyl roofs (I judge my parents cruelly – but rightly – after this difficult decision of the 1980s). Do you remember the sharp-edged rear ends of the Cadillac Seville, Lincoln Continental, and Chrysler Imperial? No? Lucky you.

We can look back on 2020 when automakers reached their peak. Of course there is this pandemic and political chaos. But more than ever there are bars inside. Grids are big. Grids are bold. Grilles are a little unnecessary on some cars, but there they are. Some might qualify for their own zip code if they weren’t on wheels.

To understand why, it is helpful to understand the difficulties automakers face in creating great designs. Cars and trucks are global products that must meet what appears to be a myriad of global government safety and fuel efficiency standards. Imagine if a new law student has to pass the American, German, Japanese, Korean, and Swedish bar exams to be able to work. I rest my case, Your Honor.

Automakers are spending billions of dollars to face the regulatory blizzard and sculpting silhouettes to cheat the wind. We only see the styling that surrounds the technology. Design is the hiss, the emotion, at least a tiebreaker when choosing a vehicle.

When Akio Toyoda took over the presidency of the company with his family name on the building in 2009, he famously declared: “No more boring cars.” Now look at the list. My God, what a big face you have, Camry.

“Years ago Lexus had no identity,” said Kevin Hunter, president of Toyota’s Calty Design Research Studio. “The attempt was made to be a brand for everyone, which neutralized our position and identity.”

This is how the spindle lattice was born. The exaggerated hourglass shape is now the distinctive face of Lexus, Toyota’s luxury brand. Originally compared to Predator or Darth Vader’s mask, it quickly shared different camps. And that’s fine with Mr. Hunter.

“We call the identity our own, very different from our competitors,” he said. “It’s very big and polarizing, that’s true, but we like the fact that we’re polarizing now. It means we’re pushing the envelope and taking more risks. Consumers are realizing it – the radiator grille connects our cars as a coherent unit. “

Since aerodynamics dictate car design, the front is the best place to add character to vehicles. People don’t buy the cars they forget. You may not like Picasso’s Cubism era, but you will know when you see it.

It might come as a surprise, but automakers aren’t necessarily trying to appeal to the broadest possible audience. Ask Domagoj Dukec, Head of BMW Design, what the brand stands for and he says: “Be stunning and make a difference.” Mission accomplished with the BMW 4 Series Coupé 2021. The current “it” car for maximum face, it takes the classic double kidney grille of the brand and turns the optics to 11. Maybe 12.

The design has drawn attention that money can’t buy – exactly what Mr. Dukec and his team were aiming for.

“Design is the emotional approach to every product experience,” he said. “It is of course very subjective. Not everyone will like it, but it has to have a personal and individual meaning to the customer. This can vary from product to product. A businessman would not want this bold face of the 4 Series in his 5 Series. “

Economy & Economy

Updated

Jan. 6, 2021, 1:10 p.m. ET

BMW is no stranger to the styling controversy. In a 10-year run that began in 1999, Chris Bangle highlighted designs that were so polarizing that there were backends commonly known as “Bangle Butts”. Now many see Mr. Bangles’ designs as groundbreaking.

Mr. Dukec understands that not everyone will like the 4’s large nostrils. But they convey the message.

“It’s very characteristic in our portfolio and clearly BMW,” he said. “Polarize, yes, but that’s very welcome because people want to show off.”

Another grill of the year contender can be found throughout the Genesis lineup. The so-called Crest Grille is an elongated version of the emblem between the wings of the brand badge. And it’s as big as Seoul.

Bold? Certainly. However, the scarcity of the brand’s new GV80 SUV suggests that the designers did something right.

“You could absolutely hate the grille,” said Jarred Pellat of Hyundai’s luxury brand, “and that’s what I love about the Genesis design. The designers aren’t afraid to make strong statements while building a brand from scratch. We don’t have the history of some of our German competitors – we can be innovative with design. The Crest Grille tells people this is a Genesis, like a second logo. “

Jeeps Wrangler’s round headlights and seven-slit grille are a real trademark of the brand (though the lights were square for a spell from the late ’80s). Jeep is defending it like a Rubicon scratching rough terrain suing General Motors’ Hummer division and most recently Indian automaker Mahindra.

Fun Fact: All Jeeps have a seven-slot grille, but “not all of them actually work,” said Mark Allen, Jeep Design Director. “It’s completely blocked on the compass, but it’s far from useless: they say this is a jeep.”

This robust American image helped the mark grow from 350,000 at the beginning of Mr. Allen’s tenure in 2009 to 1.5 million in sales. Jeep is the most successful American brand in what is known to be the closed Japanese market. It can’t hurt that the Wrangler is the most iconic vehicle in the world. Oh, and its grille is bloody big.

Andrew Smith, Executive Director of Cadillac Design, said, “Ultimately, design is about making the customer feel special so that they stand out from the crowd.” While the brand’s front signature is large vertical LED Chases are, few models, like the Escalade, have an acre face area.

“We don’t do a Russian doll design that has a small, medium, and large version of an SUV,” said Smith. “They’re all Cadillacs, but they’re different, and the grille wants to be proportional to the face of the vehicle.”

He added, “In the case of Escalade, the Giant Maw is functional. People haul it, it hauls a lot of people and cargo, so there needs to be an airflow to cool the engine. “The same goes for pickups.

Cadillac has announced it will accelerate the transition to electrification, starting with the Lyriq SUV in late 2021. Electric vehicles will challenge designers. Without a motor to cool down, the fronts still play a big role.

“Lyriq’s face will have complex lighting to make it look like a really luxurious vehicle,” said Smith. “We also have Super Cruise and new autonomous technologies with sensors that have to be in the front of the vehicle. We design surfaces that are flush and clean to place these sensors in such a way that they are invisible to the customer.

“The front will continue to give identity, like a kind of belt buckle,” he added.

BMW Mr. Dukec agrees. “Our upcoming iX electric vehicle has almost no openings in front of it,” he said. “The characteristic twin kidneys that announce that it is a BMW are closed because it is an electric vehicle. However, there are cameras and sensors in the kidneys that cannot see through color.”

And these kidneys? You guessed it, they are huge.

Categories
World News

After Fast Vaccine Success, Israel Faces New Virus Woes

JERUSALEM – Just last week, Israel was seen as a model coronavirus country, well ahead of the rest of the world in vaccinating its citizens.

But the virus had other ideas.

This week, Israel faces a tightened lockdown as infections surge to more than 8,000 new cases a day. Officials fear that the more transmissible variant of the virus, first identified in the UK, is spreading rapidly and Israel’s vaccine supplies are running low.

The prospect that Israel would have the virus under control by spring, which was once promising, now seems uncertain. Health officials say the vaccine campaign can’t compete with rising infection rates, at least in the short term.

And the Palestinian Authority, which operates its own health system in the occupied West Bank, has asked Israel for vaccines, which has sparked a debate about Israel’s responsibility to the Palestinians at a time when Israel’s vaccine supplies are dwindling.

“We are at the height of a global pandemic that is spreading at record speed with the UK mutation,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video statement late Tuesday, explaining the government’s decision to impose a full national lockdown that will Closing most schools and schools will all non-essential jobs for at least two weeks.

“With every hour that we delay, the virus is spreading faster and it will cost a very high price,” he added.

The lock decision was made after Prof. Eran Segal of the Weizmann Science Institute in Rehovot, Israel, presented the government with the dire prognosis that without such measures, Israel’s infection rate could rise to 46,000 new cases per day by February, an astonishing number Country with about 9 million inhabitants.

Government officials cited the variant discovered in the UK as one of the main reasons for imposing tighter restrictions. Mr Netanyahu said the line had “jumped forward”, although not at the same pace as the UK.

At least 30 cases of the variant have been identified in Israel through special samples spread across 14 different cities. However, officials and experts said these tests were aimed at identifying the presence of the variant, not quantifying it, and the actual number of cases was likely much higher.

Many scientists believe that the variant is more transmissible, which means that it can more easily spread from one person to another.

Professor Segal said the variant could be a factor in the rising rate of infection in Israel’s ultra-Orthodox Jewish community. In the past four weeks, infections among the ultra-Orthodox have increased sixteen-fold.

He estimated that the variant now accounts for around 20 percent of morbidity in ultra-Orthodox cities and neighborhoods.

During the coronavirus crisis, there was constant tension between the ultra-Orthodox, who make up around 12.5 percent of the population, and the incumbent Israelis, especially because some ultra-Orthodox rabbis insisted on keeping their educational institutions open during the crisis, violating previous lockdowns and regulations generally disregarding the restrictions on large gatherings and social distancing.

Israel’s vaccine supplies cast another shadow over the tempting prospect of an early emergence from the crisis. Vaccine supplies were running low and officials said they may have to slow their widely touted vaccination program until mid-January if they can’t convince drug companies to ship more vaccines sooner than promised.

A few days ago, the Israelis celebrated the successful start of their vaccination campaign, which has surpassed the rest of the world. Approximately 1.5 million Israeli citizens, or more than 16 percent of the population, have received an initial dose of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine since the vaccination program began on December 20.

Updated

Jan. 7, 2021, 6:03 ET

The shortcoming, according to the authorities, could be due to the success of the program: the first phase of the program went faster than most thought possible.

Israel has not disclosed the number of vaccine doses received as the agreements with the pharmaceutical companies are confidential. The government has promised to reserve enough vaccines so that anyone who received a first dose can get their second dose as planned after about 21 days. This should include the majority of Israel’s high-risk population of health workers and citizens 60 and older.

Quiet negotiations are being held with the drug companies to improve their supplies, but the shortage could lead to delays in implementation. Mr Netanyahu, whose political future may depend on the success of the program, said he “continues to work around the clock to bring millions of vaccines to Israel”.

Mr. Netanyahu said Wednesday that a small initial shipment of Moderna vaccines should arrive on Thursday and that more would follow. Pharmaceutical companies now see Israel as an interesting test case for vaccination effectiveness and possibly the first country to be fully vaccinated. Officials and experts stated this, which gives him an advantage in securing additional shipments.

Israel has been criticized by human rights groups for failing to expand its vaccination program to most Israeli-controlled Palestinians, despite the fact that Israelis living in settlements in the West Bank have been vaccinated.

Palestinian officials have recorded hundreds of Covid-19 cases daily in the occupied West Bank and Hamas-led Gaza Strip, the overcrowded Palestinian coastal enclave whose borders are tightly controlled by Israel and Egypt, and health officials believe the real numbers are much higher . Palestinians in these areas have not yet received vaccines.

On Wednesday, two Palestinian officials said the Palestinian Authority had asked Israel for up to 10,000 doses of the vaccine to immunize Palestinian frontline workers.

Hussein al-Sheikh, the top Palestinian official in charge of coordination with the Israelis, said Israel refused.

An Israeli official, who spoke on condition of anonymity for not having the authority to speak to the news media, said Israel secretly delivered “dozen” vaccines to the Palestinians this week but has not yet responded to the larger request. Several Palestinian officials denied having received vaccines from Israel.

The Oslo Accords, the provisional peace accords signed between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1990s, commit both sides to work together to fight epidemics and provide each other with support in emergencies.

The Geneva Conventions also oblige an occupying power to ensure medical care for the local population and preventive measures to combat contagious diseases and epidemics.

Alan Baker, a former Israeli ambassador and international law expert who helped draft the Oslo Accords, said he believes this would “represent a commitment for Israel to provide vaccines to fight Covid 19 help “but that was it” a one-way street. “

Hamas, he said, holds Israeli hostages in Gaza and is obliged to release them by the same humanitarian standards.

Israel Health Minister Yuli Edelstein said last week it was in Israel’s best interest to contain the virus on the Palestinian side, but Israel’s first obligation was to its own citizens. (Palestinian citizens of Israel and residents of East Jerusalem receive vaccinations through the Israeli program.)

Dr. Ali Abed Rabbo, a senior official in the agency’s health department, said the Palestinians hope to receive two million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine in February. They also expect the Covax global vaccine-sharing system to deliver 60,000 doses in the first quarter of 2021 and nearly two million more later this year.

United Nations officials have asked Israel to provide the Palestinians with some vaccines to protect their medical workers, said Gerald Rockenschaub, head of the World Health Organization’s mission to the Palestinians.

But Israel advised United Nations officials that it cannot send vaccines to the Palestinians just yet because of a lack of shots for its own citizens, Rockenschaub said.

Categories
Health

American Airways strikes flight crews to DC airport lodges

An airline employee walks past empty American Airlines check-in terminals at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia on May 12, 2020.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | Getty Images

Airlines are moving flight crews to hotels outside of central Washington, DC to avoid protests in the U.S. Capitol, airlines and a major union said.

American Airlines began booking Washington overnight crews at airport hotels on Tuesday and plans to do so at least on Wednesday, said Curtis Blessing, an American Airlines spokesman.

United Airlines flight attendants will also stay at airport hotels this week, while Alaska Airlines flight attendants have been urged to avoid downtown Washington DC, said Taylor Garland, spokeswoman for the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, cabin crews at those airlines and more represents than a dozen others. The decisions were made before pro-Trump rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday afternoon.

United crews staying in Atlanta will also be staying at airport hotels this week.

The airlines had relocated crews from central Washington, DC, on election day in November because of concerns about demonstrations and possible logistical problems.

Categories
Business

‘Dangerous’ to delay second Covid vaccine photographs within the UK: ex-FDA director

Postponing the second dose of Covid-19 vaccines is “very risky” because the efficacy data was based on a specific dosage schedule, a former FDA director told CNBC on Thursday.

His comments came after the UK’s decision to give a second shot of the coronavirus vaccine 12 weeks after the first dose, contrary to vaccine manufacturers’ recommendations. Germany is reportedly considering a similar move, while Denmark approves a six-week gap between doses.

The vaccines approved for use in the UK both require two doses.

American pharmaceutical company Pfizer and German biotechnology company BioNTech recommended giving the second dose of their vaccine 21 days after the first. British-Swedish pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca said the vaccine, jointly developed with Oxford, requires two doses to be given one month apart. The UK initially said it would follow this timetable.

It’s a very risky endeavor because if it fails, you will be worse off.

Norman Baylor

Former FDA director

Any decision to change dosing schedules should be based on data, said Norman Baylor, a former director in the US Food and Drug Administration’s bureau of vaccine research and testing.

“It is very risky to try to extend [the gap between two doses] or give a dose if there is no data, “he told CNBC’s Street Signs Asia on Thursday.

“I can see some reasons for this, but again, it’s not really data-driven,” said Baylor, who is also president and chief executive officer of Biologics Consulting. “It’s a very risky endeavor because if it fails, you will be worse.”

The UK’s controversial decision came as the country continued to grapple with a new strain of the coronavirus that is spreading faster, despite no evidence that it is more severe or deadly. 62,322 cases were reported on Wednesday, and more than 2.8 million people have tested positive for the virus to date, according to government figures.

A nurse prepares the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine at Pontcae medical practice in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales on January 4, 2021.

Matthew Horwood | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Delaying the second dose of the vaccine means more people can get their first dose. However, Baylor said it was ideal to follow the dosing regimen from the vaccine’s effectiveness studies.

“If you don’t have the data, you are taking a risk there,” he said. “That is the point, the risk you are taking.”

Weigh vaccine manufacturers

Categories
Politics

Lady Shot in Capitol Has Died

A woman who was fatally shot in the Capitol after being overrun by a pro-Trump mob was shot down by a Capitol police officer, a police officer said Wednesday night.

Metropolitan Police Department chief Robert J. Contee told reporters that the woman was shot dead by a police officer on Wednesday afternoon when plainclothes police were confronted with the mob. She later died in a hospital, he said, and the shooting is being investigated.

At least 14 Capitol police officers were injured during Wednesday’s demonstrations, Chief Contee said, including two who were hospitalized.

A video posted on Twitter Wednesday showed a shooting in the Capitol.

The woman in the video appeared to be climbing onto a small ledge next to a door in the building just before a single loud bang was heard. The woman, wrapped in a flag, fell to the floor at the top of a stairwell. A man with a helmet and a military style rifle stood next to her after she fell, and they called “police” when a man in a suit approached the woman and crouched next to her.

“Where did she meet?” People screamed as blood flowed around their mouths.

Chief Contee said three more deaths were reported from the Capitol area on Wednesday – one woman and two men. He said, without elaborating, that the three people appear to have “suffered from separate medical emergencies that resulted in their deaths.”