Tag Archives: Jump

The ruble is failing — and now more Russians are cutting back on buying basic goods like food and toothpaste as prices jump – Yahoo News

  1. The ruble is failing — and now more Russians are cutting back on buying basic goods like food and toothpaste as prices jump Yahoo News
  2. Russia earns less from oil and spends more on war. So far, sanctions are working like a slow poison The Associated Press
  3. Putin struggles with falling ruble, rising prices as sanctions bite The Washington Post
  4. Russia still has options to sustain its creaking war economy Financial Times
  5. Former Kremlin official blames the ruble’s crash on Russia’s stockpile of rupees that’s stranded in India Yahoo Finance
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Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani Box Office Estimate Day 2: Has a BIG 45% jump on Saturday; collects Rs. 16 crores – Bollywood Hungama

  1. Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani Box Office Estimate Day 2: Has a BIG 45% jump on Saturday; collects Rs. 16 crores Bollywood Hungama
  2. Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani box office collection Day 1: Karan Johar’s film earns less than Oppenheimer on opening day, makes Rs 11.5 crore The Indian Express
  3. Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani review: Just hand Ranveer an Oscar, someone! mid-day.com
  4. ‘Rocky Aur Rani Kii Prem Kahaani’ Review: Alia Bhatt & Ranveer Singh Led Karan Johar Film Is Pretty Good! | DMT DMT
  5. Does Rocky Aur Rani Bring Out Karan Johar 2.0? Rediff.com
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Nanobiotix ADRs Jump Over 50% After Agreement With J&J’s Janssen Pharmaceutical – Investopedia

  1. Nanobiotix ADRs Jump Over 50% After Agreement With J&J’s Janssen Pharmaceutical Investopedia
  2. J&J capitalizes on Nanobiotix cash crunch to capture late-phase cancer candidate for $30M upfront FierceBiotech
  3. NANOBIOTIX Announces License Agreement for Worldwide Co-development and Commercialization of Potential First-In-Class Radioenhancer NBTXR3 Yahoo Finance
  4. NBTX Soars On Teaming Up with Janssen for NBTXR3 TipRanks
  5. Nanobiotix’s stock soars after entering licensing, development deal with J&J’s Janssen Pharmaceutica MarketWatch
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Chiefs Offseason 2023: Patrick Mahomes helped 49ers’ quarterback Trey Lance make a ‘substantial jump’ – Arrowhead Pride

  1. Chiefs Offseason 2023: Patrick Mahomes helped 49ers’ quarterback Trey Lance make a ‘substantial jump’ Arrowhead Pride
  2. 49ers QB Trey Lance made ‘substantial jump’ after working with Patrick Mahomes in offseason NFL.com
  3. QB coach says 49ers’ Trey Lance needed drastic adjustment to throwing motion, now has Patrick Mahomes’ support CBS Sports
  4. Trey Lance retooled his throwing motion and has made a “substantial jump” this offseason NBC Sports
  5. 49ers’ Trey Lance has ‘substantial’ throwing-motion breakthrough thanks to Patrick Mahomes New York Post
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Coinbase Shares Jump 18% After Brian Armstrong Says Exchange Had ‘Turning Point’ First Quarter – The Daily Hodl

  1. Coinbase Shares Jump 18% After Brian Armstrong Says Exchange Had ‘Turning Point’ First Quarter The Daily Hodl
  2. Earnings Update: Coinbase Global, Inc. (NASDAQ:COIN) Just Reported Its First-Quarter Results And Analysts Are Updating Their Forecasts Yahoo Finance
  3. Coinbase is 100% Committed to the US Despite Regulatory Uncertainty: Brian Armstrong CryptoPotato
  4. Coinbase Shareholder Action Reminder – Coinbase Glb (NASDAQ:COIN) Benzinga
  5. Coinbase Jumps 17% Post-Earnings; Analysts Praise Results but Worry About Regulatory Uncertainty CoinDesk
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Jack Harlow and Sinqua Walls seen in official trailer for Hulu remake of White Men Can’t Jump – Daily Mail

  1. Jack Harlow and Sinqua Walls seen in official trailer for Hulu remake of White Men Can’t Jump Daily Mail
  2. White Men Can’t Jump Trailer Previews Jack Harlow’s Cringeworthy Acting Debut: Watch Yahoo Entertainment
  3. White Men Can’t Jump | Official Trailer | 20th Century Studios 20th Century Studios
  4. Jack Harlow and Sinqua Walls Work Together to Compete for $500000 in White Men Can’t Jump Trailer PEOPLE
  5. Jack Harlow’s ‘White Men Can’t Jump’ debut irks fans: ‘No one wanted this’ New York Post
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“Air”: Matt Damon and Ben Affleck’s filmmaking jump shot – CBS News

  1. “Air”: Matt Damon and Ben Affleck’s filmmaking jump shot CBS News
  2. Ben Affleck and Matt Damon on working together in their 50s: ‘You can see the end of the tunnel!’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Ben Affleck and Matt Damon on “Air” CBS Sunday Morning
  4. Ben Affleck & Matt Damon Open Up About Upcoming Jennifer Lopez Movie Project, Working Together Again, Life Lessons With Age & More in ‘CBS Sunday Morning’ Interview Just Jared
  5. ‘Air’ Review: Ben Affleck’s Underdog Story Soars Thanks to a Dynamite Cast Yahoo Entertainment
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David Borges: UConn men’s basketball makes big jump on our AP Top 25 ballot this week – CT Insider

  1. David Borges: UConn men’s basketball makes big jump on our AP Top 25 ballot this week CT Insider
  2. No. 4 Huskies to Host Xavier on Senior Night – University of Connecticut Athletics UConn Huskies
  3. With return of much-needed depth, UConn men have everything working for late push; notes from Saturday’s win at St. John’s Hartford Courant
  4. UConn’s Adama Sanogo claps back at ‘G League’ chants from St. John’s fans: ‘That’s cool, they lost’ NJ.com
  5. No. 18 Huskies Roll Over St. John’s At MSG – University of Connecticut Athletics UConn Huskies
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Trump and Biden teams both jump on Pence disclosure as a classified documents defense



CNN
 — 

Advisers to former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden jumped on news of classified documents being found in former Vice President Mike Pence’s Indiana home, with both viewing it as a helpful defense in their own documents investigations.

Biden’s team continues to draw a distinction between him and Trump when it comes to their handling of classified documents, and the parallels between the Pence and Biden cases have served to sharpen that argument in the initial fallout.

But sources familiar with both cases acknowledged Tuesday new revelations about sensitive materials found at Pence’s home help their cause.

On one hand, Trump’s legal team views the news of classified documents found at Pence’s home as a positive development for the former president, believing the discovery, coupled with Biden’s own ongoing special counsel investigation related to his handling of classified documents, changes the dynamics of the Justice Department’s investigation into the former president, according to a source familiar with the matter.

While the circumstances are different in each case, members of Trump’s legal team believe these developments will make it harder for prosecutors to justify bringing criminal charges against any of them, the source said.

Meanwhile, Biden officials were relieved by the news, according to sources who told CNN that the Pence news “turns down the temperature on this being a Biden-only story.”

Another source familiar with the investigation likened the steps Pence took upon the discovery of classified documents to those taken by Biden. Pence turned over about a dozen documents marked classified to the FBI shortly after discovering them.

When Biden’s team found classified documents at his Washington, DC, think tank office in November, they immediately notified the National Archives, which in turn notified the Justice Department, though the discovery was not publicly disclosed for weeks.

“It appears Pence has followed a very similar initial process to Biden in terms of a voluntary review of materials and prompt disclosure to the proper authorities when they were found, all of which were made public by a media report,” the source said.

The FBI searched Biden’s home only recently, months after the first classified material was found. Biden’s team discovered documents in multiple locations between November and January.

But Trump allies also embraced the Pence news and believe it further blurs the lines between the three cases.

“They are all now linked in a way,” the source familiar with the thinking of Trump’s legal team said, referring to Pence, Biden and Trump.

Trump’s team also believes the Biden and Pence revelations support their argument that this should not treated as a criminal matter but rather as an administrative review of the White House’s process for handling classified material overseen by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the source said.

The special counsel investigation into Trump’s handling of classified documents also is looking at possible obstruction of justice. Meanwhile, the Justice Department has launched a review of the Pence documents and how they ended up in his house in Indiana.

Trump reacted to the Pence documents discovery on Tuesday, writing on Truth Social: “Mike Pence is an innocent man. He never did anything knowingly dishonest in his life. Leave him alone!!”

– Source:
CNN
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Former Trump official says Pence classified documents make Biden’s case for him

For Biden administration officials and allies, who have been under siege the past few weeks through multiple disclosures of classified documents found at Biden’s private office in Washington, DC, and subsequently, his house in Wilmington, Delaware, the Pence headline was welcome news – and even quietly celebrated.

As one senior administration official put it: “It turns down the temperature on this being a Biden-only story.”

One hope, this official said, was that the discovery of classified documents at Pence’s home would help to underscore that Biden aides were clearly not alone in making the mistake of packing up classified documents that should have been turned over to the National Archives.

Another hope: The development could be used by the White House to try to emphasize that what’s most important is how the situation was handled once the classified documents were discovered – and continue to draw the distinction between the Biden legal team’s handling of the matter compared to the actions of Trump and his allies.

The White House largely deflected questions on the Pence news Tuesday. The decision not to engage publicly on the discovery was in part tied to the White House’s long-standing effort not to engage in ongoing reviews and investigations, one official said, pointing to the need to maintain consistency on that posture.

But there was also a view that there was more value in letting the Pence development stand on its own – a much different tactic than the deliberate contrast with Trump’s case.

But it’s one that underscores the careful navigation of what one official acknowledged was a “helpful example” of another former vice president, dealing with issues that appeared to stem from the transition out of office, who publicly stated no awareness that classified documents were in his possession. Left unsaid was the clear value in the fact that the former vice president served in a Republican administration.

Beyond that, the official added, “We’ll let you guys draw the conclusions about what this all means.”

That didn’t mean officials weren’t paying close attention to the developments throughout the day – an effort that included keeping a close eye on Republican responses to the Pence news on Capitol Hill, with a particular interest in Republicans who have led or pledged inquiries into Biden.

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Big Jump in Cardiovascular-Related Deaths Reported by American Heart Association

The number of deaths from cardiovascular disease in the US increased during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, from 874,613 in 2019 to 928,741 in 2020. This represents the largest single-year increase since 2015 and is higher than the previous record of 910,000 in 2003, according to the Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics — 2023 Update of the American Heart Association.

American Heart Association 2023 Statistical Update reports the largest increase in the number of CVD deaths in the U.S. in years, highest among Asian, Black, and Hispanic populations.

  • More people died from cardiovascular-related causes in 2020, the first year of the

    “While the total number of CVD-related deaths increased from 2019 to 2020, what may be even more telling is that our age-adjusted mortality rate increased for the first time in many years and by a fairly substantial 4.6%,” said the volunteer chair of the Statistical Update writing group Connie W. Tsao, M.D., M.P.H., FAHA, an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and attending staff cardiologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. “The age-adjusted mortality rate takes into consideration that the total population may have more older adults from one year to another, in which case you might expect higher rates of death among older people. So even though our total number of deaths have been slowly increasing over the past decade, we have seen a decline each year in our age-adjusted rates – until 2020. I think that is very indicative of what has been going on within our country – and the world – in light of people of all ages being impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, especially before vaccines were available to slow the spread.”

    The biggest increases in the overall number of CVD-related deaths were seen among Asian, Black, and Hispanic people, populations most impacted in the early days of the pandemic, and brought to focus increasing structural and societal disparities.

    “We know that COVID-19 took a tremendous toll, and preliminary data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have shown that there was a substantial increase in the loss of lives from all causes since the start of the pandemic. That this likely translated to an increase in overall cardiovascular deaths, while disheartening, is not surprising. In fact, the Association predicted this trend, which is now official,” said the American Heart Association’s volunteer president, Michelle A. Albert, M.D., M.P.H., FAHA, the Walter A. Haas-Lucie Stern Endowed Chair in Cardiology, a professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) and Admissions Dean for UCSF Medical School. “COVID-19 has both direct and indirect impacts on cardiovascular health. As we learned, the virus is associated with new clotting and inflammation. We also know that many people who had new or existing heart disease and stroke symptoms were reluctant to seek medical care, particularly in the early days of the pandemic. This resulted in people presenting with more advanced stages of cardiovascular conditions and needing more acute or urgent treatment for what may have been manageable chronic conditions. And, sadly, appears to have cost many their lives.”

    According to Albert, who also is the director of the CeNter for the StUdy of AdveRsiTy and CardiovascUlaR DiseasE (NURTURE Center) at UCSF and a renowned leader in health equity and adversity research, the larger increases in the number of coronary heart disease deaths among adults of Asian, Black, and Hispanic populations appear to correlate with the people most often infected with COVID-19.

    “People from communities of color were among those more highly impacted, especially early on, often due to a disproportionate burden of cardiovascular risk factors such as hypertension and obesity. Additionally, there are socioeconomic considerations, as well as the ongoing impact of structural racism on multiple factors including limiting the ability to access quality health care,” Albert said. “The American Heart Association responded quickly at the beginning of the pandemic to address the impact of COVID-19 and focus on equitable health for all. The Association launched the first-ever rapid response research grants calling on the research community to quickly turn around transformative science; established a COVID-19 CVD hospital registry through the Get With The Guidelines® quality initiative; and also made an unprecedented pledge to aggressively address social determinants while working to support and improve the equitable health of all communities. We are empowering real change that will save lives.”

    Cardiovascular disease, overall, includes coronary heart disease, stroke, heart failure, and hypertension/high blood pressure. Coronary heart disease includes clogged arteries or atherosclerosis of the heart, which can cause a heart attack. Known generally as ‘heart disease’, coronary heart disease remains the #1 cause of death in the U.S. Stroke continues to rank fifth among all causes of death behind heart disease, cancer, COVID-19 and unintentional injuries/accidents. COVID-19 appeared in the list of leading causes of death for the first time in 2020, the most recent year for which final statistics are available from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

    Appropriately, this year’s statistical update includes many references to COVID-19 and its impact on cardiovascular disease. Data points and scientific research findings are inserted throughout most chapters of the document, including those related to the risk factors for heart disease and stroke such as obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure, all of which also put people at increased risk for COVID. Many of the studies noted identify specific gender, race and ethnicity disparities.

    However, disparities don’t only occur among age, sex and racial/ethnic groups, according to a special commentary authored by members of the Statistical Update writing committee. While the Statistical Update has been including various social determinants of health data in its report, the commentary noted that data from other underrepresented populations, such as LGBTQ people and people living in rural vs. urban areas of the U.S. are still lacking. The commentary authors call out the lack of scientific research and cumulative data on the impacts of social identity and social determinants.

    “We know that to address discrimination and disparities that impact health, we must better recognize and understand the unique experiences of individuals and populations. This year’s writing group made a concerted effort to gather information on specific social factors related to health risk and outcomes, including sexual orientation, gender identity, urbanization, and socioeconomic position,” Tsao said. “However, the data are lacking because these communities are grossly underrepresented in clinical and epidemiological research. We are hopeful that this gap in literature will be filled in coming years as it will be critical to the American Heart Association’s goal to achieve cardiovascular health equity for all in the U.S. and globally.”

    Global data

    Cardiovascular disease continues to be the #1 killer globally, taking the lives of more than 19 million people around the world each year, including people of all ages, genders and nationalities. Yet, the risk factors that lead to heart disease and stroke continue to disproportionately impact certain populations in the U.S. as well as around the world.

    Supplemental tables in this year’s statistical update look at the trend of overall CVD-related deaths globally and regionally, and also provide the number and proportion of deaths caused by various cardiovascular diagnoses. Additionally, the supplemental tables compared all-cause deaths and CVD-related deaths attributable to various risk factors, as well as age-standardized disability-adjusted life years, or DALYs, in various countries and regions. Of special note:

    • Globally, ischemic heart disease and stroke represent the top two causes of CVD-related deaths and account for 16.2% and 11.6% of all causes of deaths, respectively. These rates have increased across the world over the past decade in all but two regions – North America and Europe/Central Asia. Note that ischemic heart disease is the term used in global data sources and is also known as coronary heart disease.
    • In 1990, ischemic heart disease represented 28.2% of all deaths in North America, dropping to 18.7% of all deaths in 2019. Stroke dropped from 7.3% of all deaths in North America in 1990 to 6.4% of all deaths in 2019.
    • In the region of Europe and Central Asia, ischemic heart disease dropped from 27.2% of all causes of death in 1990 to 24.4% in 2019, while stroke represented 15.1% of all causes of death in 1990 and dropped to 12.5% in 2019.
    • The region of East Asia and Pacific is the only region where stroke represents the highest proportion of CVD-related deaths, with the proportion of deaths increasing from 14.8% in 1990 to 18.3% in 2019. During this same time period, the proportion of deaths caused by ischemic heart disease nearly doubled from 8.1% to 15.6%.
    • The region of Sub-Saharan Africa noted the lowest proportion of CVD-related deaths as a percentage of all causes of death. Stroke was the leading cause of CVD-related deaths in the region of Sub-Saharan Africa in 1990, representing 3.6% of all causes, followed by ischemic heart disease (3.1%). In 2019, ischemic heart disease and stroke were both at 5.4% of total deaths.

    “As the U.S. prepares to celebrate the 60th annual Heart Month in February 2023, it’s critical that we recognize and redouble the life-saving progress we’ve made in nearly a century of researching, advocating, and educating, while identifying and removing those barriers that still put certain people at disproportionately increased risk for cardiovascular disease,” Albert said. “Tracking such trends is one of the reasons the American Heart Association publishes this definitive statistical update annually, providing a comprehensive resource of the most current data, relevant scientific findings, and assessment of the impact of cardiovascular disease nationally and globally.”

    Reference: “Heart disease and stroke statistics—2023 update: A report from the American Heart Association” 25 January 2023, Circulation.
    DOI: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000001123

    The annual update represents a compilation of the newest, most relevant statistics on heart disease, stroke, and risk factors impacting cardiovascular health. It tracks trends related to ideal cardiovascular health, social determinants of health, global cardiovascular health, cardiovascular health genetics, and health care costs. Tsao emphasized the importance of this surveillance as a critical resource for the lay public, policymakers, media professionals, clinicians, healthcare administrators, researchers, health advocates, and others seeking the best available data on these factors and conditions.

    This statistical update was prepared by a volunteer writing group on behalf of the American Heart Association Council on Epidemiology and Prevention Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee.



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