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Increased settler violence drives Palestinian displacement in the occupied West Bank | DW News – DW News

  1. Increased settler violence drives Palestinian displacement in the occupied West Bank | DW News DW News
  2. West Bank forgotten? Settler violence against Palestinians grows as war continues – Middle East matters FRANCE 24 English
  3. While Gaza Burns, the West Bank Is at Boiling Point Bloomberg
  4. West Bank’s settler violence problem is a second sign that Israel’s policy of ignoring Palestinians’ drive for a homeland isn’t a long-term solution The Conversation
  5. West Bank forgotten? Settler violence against Palestinians grows as war continues • FRANCE 24 FRANCE 24 English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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WATCH: Florida police officer drives off after he’s stopped for speeding – WFLA

  1. WATCH: Florida police officer drives off after he’s stopped for speeding WFLA
  2. Heated body cam video shows Orlando police officer drive off after being stopped for speeding Yahoo! Voices
  3. Police officer pulled over for speeding flees traffic stop #Shorts USA TODAY
  4. Orlando police officer accused of reckless driving, takes off during confrontation with deputy WSVN 7News | Miami News, Weather, Sports | Fort Lauderdale
  5. ‘No’: BWC video shows Fla. officer refused to hand over license, fled traffic stop after exchange with deputy Police News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jennifer Aniston, 54, reveals the ageist ‘compliment’ she cannot stand: ‘Drives me bananas’ – Page Six

  1. Jennifer Aniston, 54, reveals the ageist ‘compliment’ she cannot stand: ‘Drives me bananas’ Page Six
  2. Jennifer Aniston Recalled Having To “Retrain” Her Brain To Shift Her Unhealthy Attitude Towards Working Out After Admitting That She Totally “Burnt Out” And “Broke” Her Body Yahoo Life
  3. Jennifer Aniston admits she used to feel ‘broken or in pain’ from overdoing workouts Fox News
  4. Jennifer Aniston Shares Backhanded Compliment She “Can’t Stand” Bustle
  5. Jennifer Aniston expresses her annoyance over one ageist comment Geo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sandisk and WD_Black flash drives and storage devices are on sale

Save all your data with these amazing deals on Sandisk and WD_Black flash drives and hard drives.

Storage woes? You’re in luck. Right now, Amazon is having a huge sale on Sandisk and WD_Black items. One of the best discounts of the bunch? This SanDisk 128GB Flash Drive 5-Pack. With fast read and write speeds, it’s great for laptops, tablets and game consoles that need more storage capacity (hello, HD videos and high-res photos). And nearly 90,000 shoppers gave it a perfect five-star rating.

One happy customer shared, “My new laptop has plenty of data storage — unless you want to store several years of experience digital photos! Now I can transfer files from the hard drive over to this USB drive!”

Another raved about how ideal it is for its size, “I like the size and the price. You really can’t beat that. Plus it’s Sandisk. I wouldn’t buy a no-name storage solution.”

A five-star reviewer wrote, “I am a photographer, but a low-tech guy in general. The hard drive in my tower is loaded to the max with images. I don’t like or trust the cloud, personally. So this external drive is great for my needs. I can fill it up with raw and jpeg files, and not worry about my desktop PC crashing. […] So now they will be safely backed up with this San Disk drive.”

More than 26,000 reviewers agree, this WD_Black external hard drive is the safest place for their data and holds up to wear and tear, too. One explained, “I’ve only had mine for a couple of months, but so far I have no complaints. It does everything I need with no perceivable penalty in performance. The extra storage space (5TB!) is a life saver since I had maxed out my PS4’s internal drive, and it had already been upgraded to a 2TB drive.”

If you have Amazon Prime, you’ll get free shipping, of course. Not yet a member? No problem. You can sign up for your free 30-day trial here. (And by the way, those without Prime still get free shipping on orders of $25 or more.)

The reviews quoted above reflect the most recent versions at the time of publication.

Looking for more great Amazon tech deals? Check these out:

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Tablets and tech

  • Lenovo 2022 Newest Ideapad 3 Laptop

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Oxytocin Drives Development of Neural Connections in Adult-Born Neurons

Summary: In the olfactory bulb, levels of oxytocin rise and peak when new neurons incorporate themselves into neural networks. The findings shed new light on adult neurogenesis and brain plasticity.

Source: Baylor College of Medicine

Learning a new task, mastering a musical instrument or being able to adapt to the constantly changing environment are all possible thanks to the brain’s plasticity, or its ability to modify itself by rearranging existing neural networks and forming new ones to acquire new functional properties. This also helps neural circuits to remain healthy, robust and stable.

To better understand brain plasticity, a team of researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’ Hospital used mouse models to investigate how brain cells build connections with new neurons born in adult brains.

Their findings, published in the journal Genes & Development, not only expand our understanding of brain plasticity but also open new possibilities for treating certain neurodevelopmental disorders and repairing injured circuits in the future.

“In this study, we wanted to identify new molecules that help new neurons build connections in the brain,” said corresponding author Dr. Benjamin R. Arenkiel, professor of molecular and human genetics and neuroscience at Baylor and the Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s.

“We worked with the olfactory bulb, the part of the brain that is involved in the sense of smell. In mice, the olfactory bulb is a highly plastic sensory area and has a remarkable capacity to maintain plasticity into adulthood via continuous integration of adult-born neurons. We discovered that oxytocin, a peptide, or short protein, produced in the brain, drives events that contribute to neural circuit plasticity.”

The researchers discovered that the levels of oxytocin increase in the olfactory bulb, peaking at the time the new neurons incorporate themselves into neural networks.

Using viral labeling, confocal microscopy and cell-type specific RNA sequencing, the team discovered that oxytocin triggers a signaling pathway—a series of molecular events inside cells—that promotes the maturation of synapses, that is, the connections of newly integrated adult-born neurons. When the researchers eliminated the oxytocin receptor, the cells had underdeveloped synapses and impaired function.

To better understand brain plasticity, a team of researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’ Hospital used mouse models to investigate how brain cells build connections with new neurons born in adult brains. Image is in the public domain

“Importantly, we found that synapse maturation occurs by regulating the morphological development of cells and the expression of a number of structural proteins,” said Arenkiel, a MacNair Scholar at Baylor.

“The most exciting aspect of this study is that our findings suggest that oxytocin drives development and synaptic integration of new neurons within the adult brain, directly contributing to adaptability and circuit plasticity,” said first author Brandon T. Pekarek, a graduate student—research assistant in the Arenkiel lab.

The findings, which are relevant to all mammals, including humans, open new possibilities to improve neurological conditions.

“Oxytocin is normally present in our brain, so if we understand how to turn it on or off or mobilize it, we can help keep our circuit connections healthy by promoting the growth of underdeveloped connections or strengthening new ones,” Arenkiel said.

“Our findings also suggest that oxytocin could promote the growth of new neurons to repair damaged tissue. Further studies are needed to explore these possibilities.”

About this neuroplasticity and neurogenesis research news

Author: Press Office
Source: Baylor College of Medicine
Contact: Press Office – Baylor College of Medicine
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
“Oxytocin signaling is necessary for synaptic maturation of adult-born neurons” by Brandon T. Pekarek et al. Genes & Development

See also


Abstract

Oxytocin signaling is necessary for synaptic maturation of adult-born neurons

Neural circuit plasticity and sensory response dynamics depend on forming new synaptic connections. Despite recent advances toward understanding the consequences of circuit plasticity, the mechanisms driving circuit plasticity are unknown.

Adult-born neurons within the olfactory bulb have proven to be a powerful model for studying circuit plasticity, providing a broad and accessible avenue into neuron development, migration, and circuit integration.

We and others have shown that efficient adult-born neuron circuit integration hinges on presynaptic activity in the form of diverse signaling peptides.

Here, we demonstrate a novel oxytocin-dependent mechanism of adult-born neuron synaptic maturation and circuit integration.

We reveal spatial and temporal enrichment of oxytocin receptor expression within adult-born neurons in the murine olfactory bulb, with oxytocin receptor expression peaking during activity-dependent integration.

Using viral labeling, confocal microscopy, and cell type-specific RNA-seq, we demonstrate that oxytocin receptor signaling promotes synaptic maturation of newly integrating adult-born neurons by regulating their morphological development and expression of mature synaptic AMPARs and other structural proteins.

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Enzyme Drives Cognitive Decline in Mice, Provides New Target for Alzheimer’s

Summary: A subtle increase of the PKCα protein produces biochemical, cellular, and cognitive impairments akin to those seen in Alzheimer’s disease. The finding provides a potential new target for the treatment of the neurodegenerative disorder.

Source: UCSD

In a recent search for gene variants associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), several affected families showed a mutation in an enzyme called protein kinase C-alpha (PKCα). Family members with this mutation had AD; those without the mutation did not.

The M489V mutation has since been shown to increase the activity of PKCα by a modest 30 percent, so whether and how it contributes to the neuropathology of AD has remained unclear.

In a new study, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine found that the subtle increase in PKCα was sufficient to produce biochemical, cellular and cognitive impairments in mice, similar to those observed in human AD.

The findings, published online on November 23, 2022 in Nature Communications, position PKCα as a promising therapeutic target for the disease.

PKCα regulates the function of many other proteins, particularly in the brain.

The enzyme facilitates chemical reactions that add phosphate groups to other proteins, shaping their activity and ability to bind to other molecules. By tuning the phosphorylation state of proteins in the synaptic environment, PKCα may play an important role in synaptic function and neuronal signaling.

To assess its role in AD, several research teams collaborated to first generate a mouse model with the PKCα M489V mutation and then assess its biochemistry and behavior over the next year and a half (corresponding to approximately 55 years in human aging).

After three months, the brains of the mutated mice had significantly altered levels of protein phosphorylation compared to the brains of wild type control mice, indicating that neuronal proteins were being misregulated.

By 4.5 months, the mice’s hippocampal neurons showed several cellular changes, including synaptic depression and reduced density of dendritic spines.

By 12 months, the mice showed impaired performance in behavioral tests of spatial learning and memory, clear evidence of cognitive decline.

“We were surprised to find that just a slight increase in PKCα activity was enough to recreate the Alzheimer’s phenotype in a mouse,” said senior author Alexandra C. Newton, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Pharmacology at UC San Diego School of Medicine.

“This is an amazing example of the importance of homeostasis in biology—even minor tweaks in kinase activity can result in pathology if the effects are allowed to accumulate over a lifetime.”

To confirm whether similar enzymatic changes could be observed in human patients, the researchers also measured protein levels in the frontal cortex of human brains from deceased patients with AD and control individuals.

Compared to wild type control mice, hippocampal neurons in PKCa M489V mice showed fewer dendritic spines. Credit: UC San Diego Health Sciences

Brains from AD patients showed a 20 percent increase in PKCα. Furthermore, phosphorylation of a known PKCα substrate was increased by approximately four-fold in these brains, further suggesting that PKCα activity was enhanced in the human AD brain.

“The PKCα M489V mutation has been a great way to test the role of this enzyme in AD, but there are many other ways to have aberrant PKCα,” said Newton.

“We’re finding that many mutations associated with AD are in genes that regulate PKCα, so a variety of gene variants may actually be converging onto this same important pathway.”

The authors note that several pharmacological inhibitors of PKCα have already been developed for use in cancer and could be repurposed to treat AD. Future drug development might focus on ways to selectively inhibit PKCα at the synapse.

“It’s increasingly clear that the amyloid plaques we see in AD are secondary to some other earlier process happening in the brain,” said Newton.

“Our findings add to a growing body of evidence that PKCα may be an important part of that process, and is a promising target for treating or preventing Alzheimer’s disease.”

Co-authors include: Gema Lorden, Jacob M. Wozniak, Kim Dore, Laura E. Dozier, Gentry N. Patrick and David J. Gonzalez, all at UC San Diego; Amanda J. Roberts and Chelsea Cates-Gatto at The Scripps Research Institute; and Rudolph E. Tanzi at Harvard Medical School.

See also

About this Alzheimer’s disease research news

Author: Scott LaFee
Source: UCSD
Contact: Scott LaFee – UCSD
Image: The image is credited to UCSD

Original Research: Open access.
“Enhanced activity of Alzheimer disease-associated variant of protein kinase Cα drives cognitive decline in a mouse model” by Gema Lordén et al. Nature Communications


Abstract

Enhanced activity of Alzheimer disease-associated variant of protein kinase Cα drives cognitive decline in a mouse model

Exquisitely tuned activity of protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes is essential to maintaining cellular homeostasis. Whereas loss-of-function mutations are generally associated with cancer, gain-of-function variants in one isozyme, PKCα, are associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD).

Here we show that the enhanced activity of one variant, PKCα M489V, is sufficient to rewire the brain phosphoproteome, drive synaptic degeneration, and impair cognition in a mouse model.

This variant causes a modest 30% increase in catalytic activity without altering on/off activation dynamics or stability, underscoring that enhanced catalytic activity is sufficient to drive the biochemical, cellular, and ultimately cognitive effects observed.

Analysis of hippocampal neurons from PKCα M489V mice reveals enhanced amyloid-β-induced synaptic depression and reduced spine density compared to wild-type mice.

Behavioral studies reveal that this mutation alone is sufficient to impair cognition, and, when coupled to a mouse model of AD, further accelerates cognitive decline.

The druggability of protein kinases positions PKCα as a promising therapeutic target in AD.

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Protests and strikes erupt across Europe as soaring inflation, cost of living drives ‘winter of discontent’

Workers in Greece and Belgium walked off the job this week as protests have unfolded all across Europe pushing back against soaring cost of living prices driven by inflation in what some have labeled a “winter of discontent.”

Workers in Greece held a 24-hour general strike this week when thousands of protesters marched through Athens and the northern city of Thessaloniki, prompting brief clashes with small groups of protesters breaking off from the main group, and throwing Molotov cocktails and rocks at police who responded with tear gas and stun grenades.

The strike disrupted services around the country, with ferries tied up in port, severing connections to Greece’s islands, state-run schools shutting, public hospitals running with reduced staff and most public transport grinding to a standstill.

INFLATION IN GERMANY HITS NEAR 50-YEAR HIGH AMID ENERGY CRISIS

A Molotov cocktail explodes near riot police outside the Greek Parliament during clashes in Athens, Greece, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2022. 
(AP Photo/Petros Giannakouris)

A similar scene unfolded in Belgium, as traffic backups were reported across the country after workers set up picket lines at supermarkets and shopping centers to protest runaway inflation and energy bill spikes due in part to Russia’s war in Ukraine. 

More than 100,000 government workers could be walking off the job this winter in the United Kingdom to protest cost of living hikes, according to The Sun, and Reuters reported that drivers working for 12 British train operators announced they will strike on Nov. 26.

INFLATION HOLDS GRIP ON US ECONOMY IN OCTOBER AS PRICES REMAIN STUBBORNLY HIGH

Protesters hold banners and chant as they demand decent pay on the eve of winter in front of the Parliament building in Sofia, Bulgaria, Friday, Nov. 11, 2022.
(AP Photo/Valentina Petrova)

Striking subway workers shut down half of the Paris Metro lines Thursday, a nationwide day of walkouts and protests by French train drivers, teachers and other public-sector workers demanding the government and employers increase salaries to keep up with inflation.

Tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets in France last month in a strike that called for pay hikes to keep up with inflation that had hit 6.2%.

BIDEN SAYS THERE’S NO ‘GUARANTEE’ COUNTRY WILL ‘GET RID OF INFLATION’

Scotland’s main teaching union said on Thursday that it had won an “overwhelming mandate” to strike along with a major rail union and postal worker union, who are also threatening to strike this winter, Financial Times reported.

Workers in Spain are also pushing back against cost of living increases as truck drivers have called for an indefinite strike next Monday, News24 reported.

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People stand in front of a closed subway station Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022 in Paris. Striking workers, demanding higher wages shut down half of subway lines in the French capital on Thursday
(AP Photo/Michel Euler)

Thousands of Bulgarians took to the streets on Friday in a rally organized by the country’s two largest labor unions to protest inflation and demand higher salaries this winter to compensate for the rising cost of living.

Inflation hit a new record in October in the 19 countries that use the euro currency. Economic growth also slowed ahead of what economists fear is a looming recession, largely as a result of those higher prices sapping Europeans’ ability to spend.

Associated Press contributed to this report.

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What Drives Galaxies? The Milky Way’s Black Hole May Be the Key

On May 12, at nine simultaneous press conferences around the world, astrophysicists revealed the first image of the black hole at the heart of the Milky Way. At first, awesome though it was, the painstakingly produced image of the ring of light around our galaxy’s central pit of darkness seemed to merely prove what experts already expected: The Milky Way’s supermassive black hole exists, it is spinning, and it obeys Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

And yet, on closer inspection, things don’t quite stack up.

From the brightness of the bagel of light, researchers have estimated how quickly matter is falling onto Sagittarius A*—the name given to the Milky Way’s central black hole. The answer is: not quickly at all. “It’s clogged up to a little trickle,” said Priya Natarajan, a cosmologist at Yale University, comparing the galaxy to a broken showerhead. Somehow only a thousandth of the matter that’s flowing into the Milky Way from the surrounding intergalactic medium makes it all the way down and into the hole. “That’s revealing a huge problem,” Natarajan said. “Where is this gas going? What is happening to the flow? It’s very clear that our understanding of black hole growth is suspect.”

Over the past quarter century, astrophysicists have come to recognize what a tight-knit, dynamic relationship exists between many galaxies and the black holes at their centers. “There’s been a really huge transition in the field,” says Ramesh Narayan, a theoretical astrophysicist at Harvard University. “The surprise was that black holes are important as shapers and controllers of how galaxies evolve.”

These giant holes—concentrations of matter so dense that gravity prevents even light from escaping—are like the engines of galaxies, but researchers are only beginning to understand how they operate. Gravity draws dust and gas inward to the galactic center, where it forms a swirling accretion disk around the supermassive black hole, heating up and turning into white-hot plasma. Then, when the black hole engulfs this matter (either in dribs and drabs or in sudden bursts), energy is spat back out into the galaxy in a feedback process. “When you grow a black hole, you are producing energy and dumping it into the surroundings more efficiently than through any other process we know of in nature,” said Eliot Quataert, a theoretical astrophysicist at Princeton University. This feedback affects star formation rates and gas flow patterns throughout the galaxy.

But researchers have only vague ideas about supermassive black holes’ “active” episodes, which turn them into so-called active galactic nuclei (AGNs). “What is the triggering mechanism? What is the off switch? These are the fundamental questions that we’re still trying to get at,” said Kirsten Hall of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Stellar feedback, which occurs when a star explodes as a supernova, is known to have similar effects as AGN feedback on a smaller scale. These stellar engines are easily big enough to regulate small “dwarf” galaxies, whereas only the giant engines of supermassive black holes can dominate the evolution of the largest “elliptical” galaxies.

Size-wise, the Milky Way, a typical spiral galaxy, sits in the middle. With few obvious signs of activity at its center, our galaxy was long thought to be dominated by stellar feedback. But several recent observations suggest that AGN feedback shapes it as well. By studying the details of the interplay between these feedback mechanisms in our home galaxy—and grappling with puzzles like the current dimness of Sagittarius A*—astrophysicists hope to figure out how galaxies and black holes coevolve in general. The Milky Way “is becoming the most powerful astrophysical laboratory,” said Natarajan. By serving as a microcosm, it “may hold the key.”

Galactic Engines

By the late 1990s, astronomers generally accepted the presence of black holes in galaxies’ centers. By then they could see close enough to these invisible objects to deduce their mass from the movements of stars around them. A strange correlation emerged: The more massive a galaxy is, the heavier its central black hole. “This was particularly tight, and it was totally revolutionary. Somehow the black hole is talking to the galaxy,” said Tiziana Di Matteo, an astrophysicist at Carnegie Mellon University.

The correlation is surprising when you consider that the black hole—big as it is—is a scant fraction of the galaxy’s size. (Sagittarius A* weighs roughly 4 million suns, for instance, while the Milky Way measures some 1.5 trillion solar masses.) Because of this, the black hole’s gravity only pulls with any strength on the innermost region of the galaxy.

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Wall St falls as hot inflation data drives fears of big rate hike

  • Indexes tumble to around fresh two-year lows
  • Headline and core Sept CPI rise more than expected
  • Megacap growth stocks tumble on rapid rate-hike fears
  • Indexes down: Dow 0.63%, S&P 1.08%, Nasdaq 1.79%

Oct 13 (Reuters) – U.S. stock indexes fell on Thursday, with the Dow and the S&P 500 near two-year lows, after a bigger-than-expected rise in consumer prices last month sparked fears of another big rate hike from the Federal Reserve when it meets in November.

The headline consumer price index gained at an annual pace of 8.2% in September, compared with an estimated 8.1% rise. The reading was lower than an 8.3% increase in August. read more

Core CPI, which eliminates volatile food and fuel prices, gained 6.6% last month, compared with the estimates of a 6.5% increase. The reading was much higher than a 6.3% rise in August.

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“Both the headline and core CPI came in much higher than expectations, and that’s disappointing,” said Mace M. McCain, chief investment officer at Frost Investment Advisors.

“We would have hoped to see some moderation in inflation and we’re not seeing that at this point. There’s just nothing to dissuade the Fed from their path.”

The inflation report follows data on Wednesday that showed U.S. producer prices increased more than expected in September, prompting Traders of U.S. interest-rate futures to price in a near 91% odds of a fourth straight 75-basis-point (bps) hike by the Fed at its meeting next month, with some also pricing in a 9% chance of a 100 bps rise. FEDWATCH

Minutes from last month’s central bank meeting showed policymakers agreed they needed to maintain a more restrictive policy stance, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell vowed that they would “keep at it until we’re confident the job is done.” read more

The Fed is showing no signs of a let up in its fight against inflation, leading to immense market volatility in recent months and triggering a selloff in rate-sensitive technology shares.

Megacap growth stocks such as Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), Apple Inc (AAPL.O), Meta Platforms Inc (META.O), Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O), Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O), Tesla Inc (TSLA.O), and Amazon.com (AMZN.O) slipped between 1.7% and 4.7% as the 10-year benchmark Treasury yield touched fresh 2008 highs at 4%.

At 10:07 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) was down 183.99 points, or 0.63%, at 29,026.86, the S&P 500 (.SPX) was down 38.67 points, or 1.08%, at 3,538.36, and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) was down 186.08 points, or 1.79%, at 10,231.02.

Markets briefly rose earlier in the day after a report that the British government was discussing making changes to its fiscal plan that had spooked global financial markets when it was announced last month. read more

Third-quarter earnings reports will also help determine the impact of higher prices on company results, with analysts now expecting profit for S&P 500 companies to have risen just 4.1% from a year ago, much lower than an 11.1% increase expected at the start of July, according to Refinitiv IBES data.

Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc (WBA.O) rose 3.24% following better-than-estimated fourth-quarter results. read more

Delta Air Lines Inc (DAL.N) gained 1.92% after the carrier forecast a 9% rise in fourth-quarter from the same period in 2019, helped by robust domestic and international demand. read more

Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 4.89-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and for a 3.39-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.

The S&P index recorded no new 52-week high and 170 new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 10 new highs and 514 new lows.

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Reporting by Bansari Mayur Kamdar, Ankika Biswas and Shreyashi Sanyal in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty and Anil D’Silva

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Aaron Rodgers’ treatment of receivers ‘drives me crazy’

Sean Payton expects better from Aaron Rodgers.

Payton, the former longtime Saints head coach now serving as a Fox NFL analyst, voiced his displeasure with Rodgers’ body language and comments during and after the Packers’ Week 1 loss to the Vikings.

“It drives me crazy,” Payton said on the “NFL Rhodes Show”. “It drives me crazy.”

Rodgers has notably been critical of the team’s young receiving group, which lost Davante Adams when the Packers traded him to the Raiders in a blockbuster this offseason. During the preseason, Rodgers said “the young guys, especially young receivers, we’ve got to be way more consistent. A lot of drops, a lot of bad route decisions, running the wrong route. We’ve got to get better in that area.”

That sentiment has now carried into the regular season, which saw rookie receiver Christian Watson drop an easy, wide-open would-be 75-yard touchdown in the beginning of the loss.

“There’s going to be growing pains,” Rodgers said after the game. “This is real football, it counts. It’s different, there’s nerves. … We’ve got to make those plays.”

Sean Payton, Aaron Rodgers
USA TODAY Sports (2)

Those comments rubbed Payton the wrong way, who would have preferred Rodgers take accountability instead of shift blame onto rookies and young players.

“After the game we go to the interview in the locker room and the very first question posed to Aaron was about bouncing back and he referenced the first play of the game, the dropped pass from a rookie,” Payton said. “And I thought, ‘Come on.’ I like Aaron Rodgers, but I didn’t like what I saw.”



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