Chris Paul continues to show he still has game
Jared Johnson lays out how much of a big piece Chris Paul has been this season for the Suns, as they're headed to their first playoff berth since 2010.
The coronavirus variant discovered in South Africa can break through the protection provided by Pfizer Inc and BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine to some extent, a real-world data study in Israel released on the medRxiv pre-print site on April 9, which has not been peer-reviewed found. Television footage showed emotional scenes at the airports with families reuniting and scores of passengers thronging the international departure terminals at Australian airports. Hong Kong will suspend flights from India, Pakistan and the Philippines from April 20 for two weeks after the N501Y mutant COVID-19 strain was detected in the Asian financial hub for the first time, authorities said in a statement late on Sunday.
Björn Ulvaeus on the Swedish band's song contest win on British soil, and the future of streaming.
Bam Adebayo's step-back, 13-foot jumper from the baseline at the buzzer lifted the Miami Heat to a 109-107 victory at home against the Brooklyn Nets in a matchup of short-handed teams on Sunday afternoon. Adebayo finished with 21 points, 15 rebounds and five assists to help the Heat snap a three-game losing streak despite playing without Jimmy Butler, who sat out with a sprained right ankle. Landry Shamet scored a career-high 30 points and made 7-of-12 3-pointers to lead the Nets, who lost Kevin Durant early to injury and were already without James Harden (hamstring).
Six English Premier League clubs and three clubs apiece from La Liga and Serie A have been announced for the new European Super League.
The share repurchase programme runs as from 28 January 2021 and up to and including 30 September 2021. In this period, Jyske Bank will acquire shares with a value of up to DKK 750 million, cf. Corporate Announcement No. 2/2021 of 28 January 2021. The share repurchase programme is initiated and structured in compliance with the EU Commission Regulation No. 596/2014 of 16 April 2014, the so-called “Market Abuse Regulation”. The following transactions have been made under the program: Number of shares Average purchase price (DKK) Transaction value (DKK) Accumulated, latest announcement 846,979 265.70 225,039,669 12 April 2021 13,926 304.29 4,237,573 13 April 2021 14,500 307.58 4,459,938 14 April 2021 13,785 302.50 4,170,027 15 April 2021 14,051 297.82 4,184,672 16 April 2021 14,000 302.36 4,232,991 Accumulated under the programme 917,241 268.55 246,324,869 With the transactions stated above, Jyske Bank now owns a total of 917,241 of treasury shares, excluding investments made on behalf of customers and shares held for trading purposes, corresponding to 1.26% of the share capital. In accordance with the EU Commission Regulation No. 596/2014, transactions related to the share buy-back programme are attached to this corporate announcement in detailed form. Yours faithfully,Jyske Bank Contact: Birger Krøgh Nielsen, CFO, tel. +45 89 89 64 44. Attachment Share repurchase programme 20210419
There was a lag in Dan + Shay's performance of "Glad You Exist" at the ACM Awards, which led fans to speculate that the duo was lip-synching. Not so.
Returpack is the company that facilitates over 2 Billion deposits of recyclable PET bottles and cans in Sweden through a network of reverse vending machines. The fintech startup Payer was chosen to develop a new and innovative IoT technology with the ambition to create an easy digital payout experience for consumers. The digital solution, based on Payer's API payments platform, is now being rolled out across Sweden.
Gov. Tim Walz (D) apologized an interview with CBS Minnesota that aired Sunday over allegations that journalists covering unrest in the Twin Cities suburb of Brooklyn Center were assaulted by police. But he added, "Apologies are not enough. It just cannot happen."Stay on top of the latest market trends and economic insights with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.@GovTimWalz This is hideous and entirely unacceptable. What are you doing to ensure accountability and make sure it doesn't happen again? https://t.co/36iSK5244D— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) April 18, 2021 Why it matters: Since violations of press freedoms came to national attention last year, as journalists were arrested and assaulted while covering anti-racism protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, such violent encounters with law enforcement seem to have become the norm.Walz told CBS Minnesota, "We all need to recognize the assault on media across the world and even in our country over the last few years is chilling. ... We cannot function as a democracy if they're not there."Driving the news: Media attorney Leita Walker, representing nearly 30 news outlets and government transparency groups, sent Walz and Minnesota law enforcement leaders a letter Saturday outlining allegations of police assaulting journalists during protests over the fatal police shooting of Daunte Wright on April 11.These include allegations that two New York Times photojournalists were "harassed by officers" and the alleged violent treatment of CNN producer Carolyn Sung, who Walker said was trying to comply with a dispersal order when she was arrested by state troopers.Zoom in: Walker writes that "troopers grabbed Sung by her backpack and threw her to the ground, zip-tying her hands behind her back" while she repeatedly identified herself as a journalists, noting she had shown her credentials.After being zip-tied a trooper allegedly yelled at Sung, who is Asian American, "Do you speak English?""She was patted down and searched by a female officer who put her hands down Sung’s pants and in her bra, fingerprinted, electronically body-scanned, and ordered to strip and put on an orange uniform before attorneys working on her behalf were able to locate her and secure her release, a process that took more than two hours."Excerpt from Walker's letterFreelance photographer Joshua Rashaad McFadden, who was covering the demonstrations for the New York Times, told the outlet Sunday police used batons to bang on the windows of the car he was in last Tuesday to gain entry and get him out, allegedly attacking him and his camera."It was definitely scary — I've never been in a situation like that with so many police officers hitting me, hitting my equipment," he said.What they're saying: Minnesota State Patrol acknowledge in a statement Saturday that, in accordance with a federal judge's temporary restraining order issued a day earlier, members of the press "are exempted from general dispersal orders."Of note: Des Moines Register reporter Andrea Sahouri was last month acquitted of all charges by a jury following her arrest while covering a Black Lives Matter protest last summer.Journalists must be allowed to safely cover protests and civil unrest. I’ve directed our law enforcement partners to make changes that will help ensure journalists do not face barriers to doing their jobs. https://t.co/r4s2VpGp0C— Governor Tim Walz (@GovTimWalz) April 18, 2021 Go deeper: For more coverage, sign up for the Axios Twin Cities newsletter.More from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free
Two passengers were killed when a Tesla with no one in the driver’s seat veered off-road and crashed into a tree at high speed, authorities in Texas said today. Harris County precinct Constable Mark Herman said authorities are certain that no one was driving the 2019 Tesla Model S at the time of the crash. Two men killed after Tesla that may have been in autonomous driving or self driving mode didn’t adhere to a curve, slammed into a tree then burst into flames in the Woodlands, officials say.
From groundbreaking hosts to career-making wins and venue-hopping performances, check out the top moments from the 2021 ACM Awards in Nashville.
MaXpeedingRods, the leading manufacturer and supplier for high-performance automotive parts, recently announced that they will be entering racing event fields as the primary sponsor of top-drivers worldwide.
The world's first major travel bubble set up in the Covid pandemic allows quarantine-free visits.
Renesas Electronics Corp, a major supplier of automotive semiconductors, said on Monday it plans to restore output lost to a fire by end-May after restarting production, relying on other plants to make up for any shortfall. Renesas restarted production on the 300mm chip line at its Naka plant northeast of Tokyo on Saturday, four weeks after a fire caused by an electricity overload burned an area of 600 square meters (6,458 square feet), destroyed 23 machines and filled the sensitive clean room with smoke and soot. A return to full output at the plant will still take around 70 more days, Renesas Chief Executive Officer Hidetoshi Shibata said during an online press conference.
Early in the pandemic, it became clear that oxygen would be one of the most precious commodities in the battle against Covid-19. Yet, it took the Modi government eight months to invite bids for new plants.
Officer Brian B says someone shouldn’t be doing a police job if they can shoot someone in heat of moment
The FTSE 100 Index was set to hold onto the 7000 level it achieved last week with probable modest gains today. Rio Tinto’s shares may react this week as hopes of future riches from its vast Oyu Tolgoi project in Mongolia are coming to a critical phase.
A Saturday morning ceremony for the 115th anniversary of the 1906 earthquake included 30 seconds of fire engine sirens at 5:12 a.m., the moment the earthquake hit.
First-time buyers will get cheaper deals if they can stretch to a bigger deposit, analysts say.
Multiple crews were fighting a large brush fire near Auburn, Washington, on April 18.Local media reported crews were called to a fire at Southeast Green Valley Road, which started when a burn pile got out of control in dry and windy conditions.The video, filmed by Steve Hickey, shows a helicopter conducting water drops in difficult terrain.“On the first big brush fire of the season in King County!” Hickey wrote on his Facebook post. “Gonna be a long night!!” Credit: Steve Hickey via Storyful
Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was appearing before a House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis.