Tag Archives: matters

Michael Penix Jr. went out on his own terms — and that’s what matters in frustrating CFP ending – The Athletic

  1. Michael Penix Jr. went out on his own terms — and that’s what matters in frustrating CFP ending The Athletic
  2. PENIX THROWS INTERCEPTION ON THE FIRST PLAY OF THE SECOND HALF 🤯 | ESPN College Football ESPN
  3. UW offense runs out of answers in national championship loss to Michigan The Seattle Times
  4. For Michael Penix Jr., Family is the Biggest Inspiration to Keep Grinding Despite All Setbacks; “They’ve Sacrificed so Much for Me” The Sportsrush
  5. Michael Penix Jr. says Washington’s all ‘wasn’t enough’ to beat Michigan | SC with SVP ESPN

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Michael Strahan to Miss “Good Morning America” for Another Week Due to ‘Personal Family Matters’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Michael Strahan to Miss “Good Morning America” for Another Week Due to ‘Personal Family Matters’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. Prayers Pouring In For Michael Strahan As He Deals With ‘Personal’ Situation The Spun
  3. Michael Strahan will miss another week on ‘GMA’ because of ‘personal family matters’ Page Six
  4. Michael Strahan’s ‘GMA’ absence will continue as he deals with ‘personal family matters’ Yahoo Sports
  5. Michael Strahan’s Absence From ‘Good Morning America’ Continues Amid ‘Personal Family Matters’ Entertainment Tonight
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Moore says Maryland must reckon with structural challenges facing state economy, budget – Maryland Matters

  1. Moore says Maryland must reckon with structural challenges facing state economy, budget Maryland Matters
  2. Gov. Wes Moore says Md. economy lags behind region, nation in growth The Washington Post
  3. Gov. Wes Moore urges ‘season of discipline’ for state, local spending; warns Maryland’s economy hasn’t kept pace with its ambition Baltimore Sun
  4. Governor Moore Delivers Keynote Address at the 2023 Maryland Association of Counties Summer Conference – Press Releases – News – Office of Governor Wes Moore Governor Larry Hogan – Official Website for the Governor of Maryland
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Jon Bon Jovi on Why He Doesn’t Think “Age Matters” When It Comes to Son Jake’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Jon Bon Jovi on Why He Doesn’t Think “Age Matters” When It Comes to Son Jake’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jon Bon Jovi on son Jake and Millie Bobby Brown getting engaged young: ‘I don’t know if age matters’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Jon Bon Jovi reacts to son’s engagement to Millie Bobby Brown at 20: ‘I don’t know if age matters’ Fox News
  4. Jon Bon Jovi Confirms Son Jake Bongiovi’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown PEOPLE
  5. Jon Bon Jovi reacts to son Jake’s engagement to Millie Bobby Brown at young age Page Six
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Jon Bon Jovi on Why He Doesn’t Think “Age Matters” When It Comes to Son Jake’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Jon Bon Jovi on Why He Doesn’t Think “Age Matters” When It Comes to Son Jake’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jon Bon Jovi reacts to son’s engagement to Millie Bobby Brown at 20: ‘I don’t know if age matters’ Fox News
  3. Jon Bon Jovi on son Jake and Millie Bobby Brown getting engaged young: ‘I don’t know if age matters’ Yahoo Entertainment
  4. Jon Bon Jovi Confirms Son Jake Bongiovi’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown PEOPLE
  5. Jon Bon Jovi REACTS to Son Jake’s Engagement to Millie Bobby Brown | E! News E! News
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Tom Sizemore’s Family ‘Deciding End of Life Matters’ After Brain Aneurysm, Doctors Say ‘There’s No Further Hope’ – Variety

  1. Tom Sizemore’s Family ‘Deciding End of Life Matters’ After Brain Aneurysm, Doctors Say ‘There’s No Further Hope’ Variety
  2. Tom Sizemore’s doctors ‘have recommended end-of-life decision’ after brain aneurysm: ‘No further hope’ Fox News
  3. Tom Sizemore’s family deciding end of life matters, rep says CNN
  4. Tom Sizemore’s family is now ‘deciding end of life matters,’ as doctors say there’s no hope for recovery Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Tom Sizemore End Of Life Decision Looms After Doctors Say “No Further Hope” Following Stroke Deadline
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When China and Saudi Arabia meet, nothing matters more than oil


Hong Kong
CNN
 — 

Chinese leader Xi Jinping is visiting Saudi Arabia this week for the first time in nearly seven years, during which he signed a comprehensive strategic partnership with the world’s largest oil exporter and met leaders from across the Middle East.

The visit is a sign that China and the Gulf region are deepening their economic relations at a time when US-Saudi ties have crumbled over OPEC’s decision to slash crude oil supply. As Xi wrote in an article published in Saudi media, the trip was intended to strengthen China’s relations with the Arab world.

The partnership agreement signed by the two sides includes a number of deals and memoranda of understanding, such as on hydrogen energy and enhancing coordination between the kingdom’s Vision 2030 and China’s Belt and Road Initiative, according to the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA). It did not provide specific details.

China is Saudi Arabia’s biggest trading partner and a source of growing investment. It’s also the world’s biggest buyer of oil. Saudi Arabia is China’s largest trading partner in the Middle East and the top global supplier of crude oil.

“Energy cooperation will be at the center of all discussions between the Saudi-Chinese leadership,” said Ayham Kamel, head of Eurasia Group’s Middle East and North Africa research team. “There is great recognition of the need to build a framework to ensure that this interdependence is accommodated politically, especially given the scope of energy transition in the West.”

Governments around the world have committed to drastically cutting carbon emissions over the coming decades. Countries such as Canada and Germany have doubled down on renewable energy investments to expedite their transition to net-zero economies.

The United States has significantly increased domestic oil and gas output since the 2000s, while accelerating its transition to clean energy.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February has triggered a global energy crisis that has left all countries racing to shore up supplies. And the West has further scrambled the oil markets by slapping an embargo and price cap on the world’s second biggest exporter of crude.

Energy security has also increasingly become a key priority for China, which is facing significant challenges of its own.

Last year, bilateral trade between Saudi Arabia and China hit $87.3 billion, up 30% from 2020, according to Chinese customs figures.

Much of the trade was focused on oil. China’s crude imports from Saudi Arabia stood at $43.9 billion in 2021, accounting for 77% of its total goods imports from the kingdom. That amount also makes up more than a quarter of Saudi Arabia’s total crude exports.

“Stability of energy supplies, in terms of both prices and quantities, is a key priority for Xi Jinping as the Chinese economy remains heavily reliant on oil and natural gas imports,” said Eswar Prasad, a professor of trade policy at Cornell University.

The world’s second largest economy is heavily reliant on foreign oil and gas. 72% of its oil consumption was imported last year, according to official figures. 44% of natural gas demand was also from overseas.

At the 20th Party Congress in October, Xi stressed that ensuring energy security was a key priority. The comments came after a spate of severe power shortages and soaring global energy prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

As the West shunned Russian crude in the months that followed the invasion, China took advantage of Moscow’s desperate search for new buyers. Between May and July, Russia was China’s No. 1 oil supplier, until Saudi Arabia regained the top spot in August.

“Diversity is a key ingredient for China’s long-term energy security because it cannot afford to put all of its eggs in one basket and turn itself into a captive of another power’s energy and geostrategic interests,” said Ahmed Aboudouh, a nonresident fellow with the Middle East Programs at the Atlantic Council, a research institute based in DC.

“Although Russia is a source of cheaper supply chains, nobody can guarantee, with utmost certainty, that the China and Russia relationship will continue to shore up 50 years from now,” Aboudouh said.

The Saudi Press Agency cited Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman as saying Wednesday that the kingdom would remain China’s “credible and reliable partner in this field.”

Saudi Arabia also has strong motivations to deepen energy ties with China, according to Gal Luft, co-director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security.

“The Saudis are concerned about losing market share in China in the face of a tsunami of heavily discounted Russian and Iranian crude,” he said. “Their goal is to ensure China remains a loyal customer even when the competitors offer [a] cheaper product.”

Oil prices have fallen back to where they were before the Ukraine war on fears of a sharp global economic slowdown. The extent to which the Chinese economy can pick up pace next year will have a huge bearing on how bad that slump will be.

Beyond security of supply, Saudi Arabia could offer Beijing another prize with bigger geopolitical ramifications.

Riyadh has been in talks with Beijing to price some of its oil sales to China in the Chinese currency, the yuan, rather than the US dollar, according to a Wall Street Journal report. Such a deal could be a boost to Beijing’s ambitions to expand the Chinese currency’s global influence.

It would also hurt the long-standing agreement between Saudi Arabia and the United States that requires Saudi Arabia to sell its oil only for US dollars and to hold its reserves partly in US Treasuries, all in return for US security guarantees. The “petrodollar system” has helped preserve the dollar’s status as the top global reserve currency and payment medium for oil and other commodities.

Although Beijing and Riyadh never confirmed the reported talks, analysts said it was logical that the two sides would be exploring the possibility.

“In the near future, Saudi Arabia could sell some of its oil and receive revenues in Chinese yuan, which makes economic sense as China is the kingdom’s top trading partner,” said Naser Al Tamimi, senior associate research fellow at ISPI, an Italian think tank on international affairs.

Some believe it’s already happening, but that neither China nor the Saudis want to highlight it publicly.

“They know too well how sensitive this issue [is] for the United States,” said Luft. “Both parties are overexposed to the US currency and there is no reason for them to continue to conduct their bilateral trade in a third party’s currency, especially when this third party is no longer a friend of either.”

Xi’s visit could mark another step “in the erosion of the dollar’s status” as reserve currency, he added.

Nonetheless, there are limits to the growing ties between Riyadh and Beijing.

“The Biden administration’s approach to the Middle East has concerned the Saudis, and they see a growing relationship with China as a hedge against potential US abandonment and a tool for leverage in negotiations with the United States,” said Jon B. Alterman, director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington DC-based think tank.

The Biden administration has reoriented its policy priorities with a focus on countering China. At the same time, it has indicated its intention to downsize its own presence in the Middle East, sparking worries among allies there that the United States may not be as committed to the region as it used to be.

“All that being said, Chinese-Saudi ties pale in both depth and complexity to Saudi-US ties,” Alterman said. “The Chinese remain a novelty to most Saudis, and they are additive. The United States is foundational to how Saudis see the world, and how they have seen it for 75 years.”

Despite the possibility of shifting to yuan transactions, it’s too early to say Saudi Arabia would ditch the dollar in pricing its oil sales, analysts said.

Eurasia Group’s Kamal believes it’s “highly unlikely” that Saudi Arabia would take such a step, unless there is an implosion on the US-Saudi relationship.

“In essence there could be discussion on pricing of barrels to China in yuan, but this would be limited in size and probably only correspond to bilateral trade volumes,” he said.

Prasad from Cornell University said countries like China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia are all eager to reduce their dependence on the dollar for oil contracts and other cross-border transactions.

“However, in the absence of serious alternatives and with few international investors willing to place their trust in these countries’ financial markets and their governments, the dollar’s dominant role in global finance is hardly under serious threat,” he said.

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Why the jobs report still matters to investors: Morning Brief

This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe

Friday, December 2, 2022

Today’s newsletter is by Myles Udland, senior markets editor at Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @MylesUdland and on LinkedIn. Read this and more market news on the go with the Yahoo Finance app for Apple or Android.Yahoo Finance App.

The November jobs report is due out in just a few hours.

And though monthly inflation numbers have taken the title as the most important piece of economic data for investors over the last year, the jobs report should not be overlooked.

That’s largely because, in the view of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, recent jobs reports have been just too darn good.

In a speech earlier this week, Powell said the labor market “shows only tentative signs of rebalancing, and wage growth remains well above levels that would be consistent with 2% inflation over time.”

“Although job vacancies have moved below their highs and the pace of job gains has slowed from earlier in the year, the labor market continues to be out of balance, with demand substantially exceeding the supply of available workers,” Powell said in a press conference last month.

Economists expect the November jobs report will show the U.S. economy created 200,000 jobs last month, and the unemployment rate is expected to hold at 3.7%. A miss from these expectations will be (relatively) good news for the Fed, which is working to slow inflation by slowing the economy.

Or as Powell said in that same presser last month: “Reducing inflation is likely to require a sustained period of below-trend growth and some softening of labor market conditions.”

U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell attends a press conference in Washington, D.C., the United States, on Nov. 2, 2022. (Photo by Liu Jie/Xinhua via Getty Images)

The current economic expansion — and much-feared recession — is one defined by inflation.

Consumers were unexpectedly flush with cash during the pandemic, forced into new ways of spending that cash because of the pandemic, all while global supply chains faced unprecedented clogs.

A generation of investors and consumers who had never really confronted inflation as a risk suddenly saw their world defined by rapidly rising prices.

In the mid-2010s, investor fears about the global economy tumbling back into recession centered on the risks of deflation. In the current market, stocks cheered a deceleration in annual inflation growth to 7.7% from 7.9%.

Even allowing for the scolds who chide me for not understanding that markets primarily care about the second derivative — i.e., the change in the rate of change, not the rate of change itself — the series of events that led to 7.7% inflation being a good thing for markets would’ve seemed laughable just a few years ago.

And yet here we are.

The recession that followed the Great Financial Crisis, in contrast, was one defined by unemployment. Millions of workers lost their jobs after the housing bust, and it took the better part of a decade for overall employment in the U.S. to recover. Recall this was the decade of the overeducated, underemployed recent graduate.

Back in August, when we noted the labor market’s “astounding” recovery had been completed, this observation was an echo of what had been seen as the most discouraging piece of economic data post-GFC: the interminable grind for the U.S. economy back to pre-crisis employment levels.

In the end, the journey took more than seven years to complete after the GFC. Following the pandemic-induced recession, the economy recovered over 14 million job losses in less than two and a half years.

Federal Reserve officials, of course, have a big role to play in where investors point their attention.

Recent Fedspeak has centered on officials wanting to see another reading on inflation before judging whether a slowdown in the current 0.75% pace of interest rate hikes is warranted later this month.

What you hear less about from most central bankers these days is what kind of job growth they’d like to see. That is, with the exception of Powell.

Because the Fed Chair has been clear about the labor market conditions needed to bring this economy back into balance.

And he signaled signs of weakness would be a welcome development for the central bank and financial markets, which right now want the same thing — for inflation to finally come down.

What to Watch Today

Economy

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Change in Nonfarm Payrolls, November (200,000 expected, 216,000 during prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Unemployment Rate, November (3.7% expected, 3.7% during prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Average Hourly Earnings, month-over-month, November (0.3% expected, 0.4% during prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Average Hourly Earnings, year-over-year, November (4.6% expected, 4.7% prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Average Weekly Hours All Employees, November (34.5 expected, 34.5 during prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Labor Force Participation Rate, November (62.3% expected, 62.3% during prior month)

  • 8:30 a.m. ET: Underemployment Rate, November (60.8% prior month)

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Cell Organization in the Hippocampus Matters for Memory Formation

Summary: Fear memories are formed when cells in the hippocampus form discrete clusters and sleep is important to the stability of these clusters.

Source: University of Tsukuba

Although we know that groups of cells working together in a specific brain region—the hippocampus—are vital for making, storing, and retrieving many types of memories, we still don’t have a clear idea of how these cells are organized.

Researchers in Japan have recently identified an important piece of this puzzle; in rats, fear-based memories were made when cells in the hippocampus formed discrete clusters, suggesting that memory formation requires cells to be organized in a specific arrangement. The research also indicates that sleep is important for the stability of these cell clusters.

Most previous studies looking at the cellular organization of memories have used a technique called electrophysiology, which is based on brain activity that brain cells use to talk to one another.

A major limitation of this technique is that it only allows the examination of a relatively small number of cells at a time, and within a limited area. Researchers from the University of Tsukuba used a different approach.

“A technique called ‘immediate early gene imaging’ allowed us to visualize cells that were active at a specific time within the entire rat hippocampus, rather than just a small part of it,” explains Dr. Jiyeon Cho, lead author of the study.

“We were able to see that, when memories were being formed, groups of active cells were organized in small, compact clusters throughout the hippocampus.”

The researchers had previously used the same technique to identify similar small clusters of active cells during the formation of two other kinds of hippocampal-dependent memory. Together, their findings suggest that memory-encoding cells in the hippocampus need to be organized in a certain way in order to form memories.

Together, their findings suggest that memory-encoding cells in the hippocampus need to be organized in a certain way in order to form memories. Image is in the public domain

Because sleep is vital for memory formation, the research team then decided to examine whether sleep had any effects on cluster organization. When rats were allowed to sleep after being trained to remember a fear-inducing stimulus (a small electric shock to the paws), they had much stronger memories of the fear, and there were also more clusters of active cells in their hippocampi.

“Together, our results demonstrate that the organization of cell clusters in the hippocampus is important for memory formation, and suggest that sleep helps to stabilize cell clusters to improve memory,” says senior author of the study Professor Constantine Pavlides.

“These findings take us one step closer to understanding exactly how memory works.”

A better understanding of memory at a cellular level and how the network in the brain works together to perform memory may help us to improve the quality of life one day of millions of people living with dementia and other memory-related disorders, which are currently very difficult to treat.

About this memory research news

Author: Press Office
Source: University of Tsukuba
Contact: Press Office – University of Tsukuba
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
“Hippocampal cellular functional organization for fear memory: Effects of sleep” by Jiyeon Cho et al. Hippocampus


Abstract

See also

Hippocampal cellular functional organization for fear memory: Effects of sleep

Memory is vital to our daily existence. Although a large number of studies have suggested that the hippocampus is dedicated to long-term memory, understanding how memory is anatomically encoded within the hippocampal neuronal network is still lacking.

Previously our laboratory showed that hippocampal pyramidal cells are organized in cell clusters to encode both spatial and episodic memory.

Based on these findings, we hypothesized that “cluster-type” is a functional organization principal in the hippocampus to encode all types of memory.

Here, we tested whether contextual fear, another hippocampus-dependent memory, is also organized in cell clusters. We further investigated the possibility that post-learning sleep may affect functional organization. Cluster formation was examined by assessing the topographic localization of active cells using immediate early gene (IEG, Zif268) imaging methods.

The first experiment provides evidence of a cluster-type organization in the hippocampus for fear memory by showing a spatial distribution of adjacent Zif268 positive cells.

Exposure to the context itself, without electric shocks, induced a similar cellular formation; however, the degree of clustering was significantly lower. The second experiment provides evidence that sleep plays a role in the refinement and long-term stability of the clusters.

The present results confirm the existence of a cluster-type topographic functional neuronal organization in the hippocampus for memory, and further suggest that post-learning sleep enhances the cluster-type organization.

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Weight Loss Stats Don’t Tell The Full Story. Experts Explain Why That Matters : ScienceAlert

It is often said that 95 percent of weight-loss measures don’t work. Only, it’s not true. Advances in behavioural treatments (such as cognitive behavioural therapy) for obesity and weight-loss drugs mean there are lots of approaches that help people lose weight.

In fact, weight loss is the easy part (relatively speaking). The problem is that when you come off a diet or stop taking a weight-loss drug, the weight will invariably creep back up.

To be clear, this does not mean that diets and other obesity treatments are useless. Far from it.

In a recent study, published in Lancet Public Health, researchers checked in on participants five years after they took part in a 12- or 52-week WW programme (formerly called Weight Watchers).

Although, on average, people’s weight had crept back up, some weight loss – about 2 kilograms, on average – was sustained for up to five years.

Even this short time at a lower weight can substantially reduce a person’s lifetime risk of developing diabetes, heart disease and other weight-related diseases. But for people with obesity, and their healthcare providers, weight regain can be demoralising.

The stigma surrounding obesity, which views a person’s weight as their responsibility, means that this ‘failure’ of treatment is often felt as a personal failing. This is not true. So why does the weight come back on?

Your brain doesn’t want you to lose weight

There are a few reasons why the weight creeps back on. First, our brain hates it when we lose weight. It considers this a reduction in our chances of survival, so it does everything in its power to drag your weight back up.

As you lose weight, your brain reduces your metabolic rate (the rate at which your body burns calories), making you subtly more efficient. The reality is, if there are two people of identical weight, one weight stable and the other having just lost weight, the latter will have to eat less food to remain the same weight.

It turns out that a hormone secreted from fat called leptin is largely responsible for this. One of leptin’s key roles is to let the brain know how much fat you are carrying. The more fat you have, the more leptin is produced. So when you lose weight, your brain senses the corresponding drop in leptin.

What is exciting is that scientists have shown that if you administer just enough leptin to fool your brain into thinking you haven’t lost any weight, then many of these weight-loss-related changes are mitigated. There is no treatment based on these findings yet – but watch this space.

As well as these biological causes, each person with obesity has their own combination of psychological, social, environmental and economic factors that have contributed to them gaining weight. Most of these will not resolve during a weight-loss treatment.

People with obesity who have lost weight still live in an environment where energy-dense, nutritionally poor food is widely available, heavily promoted, cheaper and more convenient. Social activities often centre around food. We celebrate with food, commiserate with food, and use food as both comfort and reward. Eating less requires continuous thought and considerable effort.

Behavioural treatments for obesity, such as commercial group programmes or cognitive behavioural therapy, teach us strategies that can help us to manage this, but they don’t stop it from being difficult. They also can’t make our lives easier.

Daily stressors and life events can disrupt the healthy habits and routines that people establish when trying to lose weight, while drugs that work to target biological drivers only work while they are being taken. Surgery also works to address biological drivers, but biology fights back.

Chronic treatments

It is unrealistic to expect that a one-off intervention will lead to permanent weight loss. If we take the example of high blood pressure medication, which is very effective, no one is countenancing stopping the treatment once your blood pressure has normalised. It would simply come back up again. The same is true for weight-loss treatment.

Obesity is perhaps best thought of as a chronic relapsing condition. People with obesity need lifelong access to treatment and support. Rather than dismissing effective treatment options because of weight regain, we should be honest with people about what treatments can achieve and the likelihood of needing ongoing support. After all, chronic conditions require chronic treatments.

The prevailing view of society is that obesity is a simple problem: simply eat less and move more. Thus, people with obesity just need to be “fat shamed” into becoming thin. However, people with obesity are not bad, lazy or morally bereft; they are fighting both their biology and their environment. Obesity is not a choice.

Amy Ahern, Principal Research Associate, MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge and Giles Yeo, Professor of Molecular Neuroendocrinology, MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit, University of Cambridge, University of Cambridge

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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