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    U.S. to Announce New Tariffs on Chinese Electric Vehicles

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    The Biden administration is set to announce new tariffs as high as 100 percent on Chinese electric vehicles and additional import taxes on other Chinese goods, including semiconductors, as early as next week, according to people familiar with the matter.

    The move comes amid growing concern within the administration that Mr. Biden’s efforts to jump-start domestic manufacturing of clean energy products could be undercut by China, which has been flooding global markets with cheap solar panels, batteries, electric vehicles and other products.

    The long-awaited tariffs are the result of a four-year review of the levies that former President Donald J. Trump imposed on more than $300 billion of Chinese imports in 2018. Most of the Trump tariffs are expected to remain in place, but Mr. Biden plans to go beyond those by raising levies in areas that the president showered with subsidies in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.

    That includes Chinese electric vehicles, which currently face a 25 percent tariff. The administration is expected to raise that to as much as 100 percent in order to make it prohibitively expensive to buy a Chinese EV.

    Mr. Biden has previously raised concerns about Chinese electric vehicles, saying that internet-connected Chinese cars and trucks posed risks to national security because their operating systems could send sensitive information to Beijing. He took steps earlier this year to try and block those vehicles from entering the United States.

    The president is looking to ratchet up pressure on China and demonstrate his willingness to protect American manufacturing ahead of his face-off against Mr. Trump in the November presidential election.

    The fate of the China tariffs has been the subject of intense debate within the White House since Mr. Biden took office, with economic and political advisers often clashing over how to proceed. But this year China has begun ramping up production of the same products — electric vehicles, lithium batteries and solar panels — that the Biden administration has been investing billions of dollars to start producing in the United States. Beijing’s move has re-inflamed trade tensions between the two countries, compelling Mr. Biden to press ahead with more aggressive trade restrictions.

    Mr. Trump has said that he would escalate his trade war with China if re-elected and said earlier this year that he is considering imposing tariffs of 60 percent or more on Chinese imports. In March, Mr. Trump said that he would impose a 100 percent tariff on cars made in Mexico by Chinese companies.

    The scale of the Biden administration’s tariffs, which are expected to be applied to Chinese electric vehicles, batteries and solar products, are not clear. The new tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles are not expected to apply to traditional gasoline powered cars that are made in China, according to a person familiar with the plans.

    The planned release of the review, which is being conducted by the Office of the United States Trade Representative, was reported earlier by Bloomberg News.

    Strategic tariffs are also expected to include new levies on semiconductors, which Mr. Biden sought to boost in the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, which includes grants and other incentives for chip-makers.

    Some Democrats, including Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, have been urging the Biden administration to take more dramatic measures to protect the U.S. automobile industry. Last month, Mr. Brown called for Chinese electric vehicles to be barred from the United States, arguing that they pose an “existential threat” to American carmakers, and on Friday he said that import duties are insufficient.

    “Tariffs are not enough,” Mr. Brown wrote on the social media platform X. “We need to ban Chinese EVs from the US. Period.”

    Mr. Biden said last month that he was asking the trade representative, as part of the review, to also raise tariffs on imported steel and aluminum products from China. The president and his aides have accused the Chinese of selling heavy metals at artificially low prices worldwide in order to gobble up market share, to the detriment of American producers.

    “My U.S. Trade Representative is investigating trade practices by the Chinese government regarding steel and aluminum,” Mr. Biden told steelworkers in Pittsburgh, referring to Katherine Tai, who heads U.S.T.R. “If that investigation confirms these anti-competitive trade practices, then I’m calling on her to consider tripling the tariff rates for both steel imports and aluminum imports from China.”

    The president added: “I’m not looking for a fight with China. I’m looking for competition — and fair competition.”

    The U.S. solar industry has also been lobbying the Biden administration to impose new tariffs on Chinese imports as an influx of cheap solar panels and components have caused prices in that sector to drop by around 50 percent over the last year. Last month, a group of seven leading solar manufacturers filed trade complaints formally requesting that the Biden administration impose tariffs on solar products being imported to the U.S. from Southeast Asia, where Chinese companies have relocated their operations to avoid existing tariffs.

    “We are hopeful the tariff review is done with an eye toward aligning tariffs with strategic priorities including the continued build out of domestic solar manufacturing,” said Philippa Martinez-Berrier, a spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Manufacturers for America coalition

    The prospect of the United States imposing new China tariffs was criticized in Beijing on Friday. The spokesman for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lin Jian, said that the Trump administration’s tariffs “severely disrupted normal trade and economic exchanges between China and the U.S.” and argued that they were in violation of the World Trade Organization’s rules.

    “Instead of ending those wrong practices, the U.S. continues to politicize trade issues, abuse the so-called review process of Section 301 tariffs and plan tariff hikes,” Mr. Lin said, referring to the legal provision that Washington is using to justify the tariffs. “China will take all necessary measures to defend its rights and interests.”

    In 2020, during the Trump administration, the United States and China agreed to a sweeping “phase one” trade agreement that allowed each of the two countries to review their bilateral tariffs after four years. That bilateral agreement remains in force but the United States deferred the outcome of its review when the four-year mark came up in January.

    That pact probably gives Washington the latitude to increase tariffs. Beijing never complied with that agreement’s specific targets for Chinese imports of American manufactured goods, initially citing the onset of the pandemic. It later pursued a policy of replacing imports with domestic production.

    Greta Peisch, a former general counsel at U.S. trade representative’s office who helped oversee the trade investigation for the Biden administration, noted that the European Union is also weighing new tariffs on Chinese electric vehicle imports, and that the anticipated action by Washington is the result of China’s persistently aggressive trade policies. Without higher tariffs, she said, the U.S. auto sector will not be able to compete with heavily subsidized Chinese electric cars.

    “When you look at the impact of China’s longstanding policies on E.V.s, they are producing much more and have a lot more capacity than they can absorb,” Ms. Peisch said. “You really want to go high enough to make sure that you’re counteracting the trend that we’re seeing.”

    Keith Bradsher contributed reporting.

    Novavax stock doubles after Sanofi deal marks ‘new chapter’ for company

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    Novavax stock (NVAX) skyrocketed on Friday, nearly doubling on the news French drug and vaccine giant Sanofi (SNY) would invest $1.2 billion in a deal for Novavax’s COVID-19 vaccine and take a minority stake in the struggling biotech company.

    The deal gave Novavax a much-needed cash boost as the company had flagged after a pandemic-era surge.

    “This is a new chapter in the history of our company,” Novavax CEO John Jacobs told Yahoo Finance in an interview Friday.

    Novavax struggled after its COVID-19 vaccine was delayed by manufacturing issues early in development, which resulted in the company missing out on the multibillion-dollar pandemic boom that Pfizer/BioNTech (PFE/BNTX) and Moderna (MRNA) enjoyed.

    While Novavax’s vaccine did finally reach the market in mid-2022 targeting the booster market, it continued to struggle with $1.7 billion in liabilities of promised COVID doses globally weighing on its books.

    The news, which overshadowed Novavax’s first quarter earnings release on Friday, has turned the company around from near failure.

    “This company was likely headed for real trouble, and we put a going concern on the company my second month on the job,” Jacobs said.

    Jacobs took the helm from longtime CEO Stanley Erck in January 2023. In the 15 months since, he has decreased the company’s liabilities to $1.7 billion, compared to a previous $2.5 billion, and reduced expenses from manufacturing and R&D.

    “[This] in and of itself doesn’t save Novavax, but what it does … is now put us toward a future of growth back on our biotech strength, back on a platform-based growth strategy that allows us to drive growth,” Jacobs said.

    The deal with Sanofi includes a $500 million up-front payment to Novavax and up to $700 million as certain milestones are met for COVID-19 vaccine co-commercialization, the development of a combination COVID-flu vaccine, and royalties. Sanofi is licensing the technology for the combination COVID-flu vaccine, which is separate from the one currently in Novavax’s pipeline.

    In addition to that $1.2 billion, Sanofi is committing up to $200 million for each new vaccine it develops using Novavax’s technology. That represents a multibillion-dollar future for the company, Novavax CFO Jim Kelly said on the company’s earnings call Friday.

    On top of all that, Sanofi is acquiring a minority stake through a $70 million equity investment.

    Novavax logo and COVID-19 virus images photographed off Apple devices. (STRF/STAR MAX/IPx) (STRF/STAR MAX/IPx)

    The investment from Sanofi, a small fraction of the company’s $46.2 billion annual revenue in 2023, is not so significant.

    But Sanofi is one of the world’s largest vaccine makers and has a robust flu portfolio that accounted for $2.8 billion of its total $8 billion in vaccine revenues last year.

    Novavax and Sanofi have similar platforms for their vaccines using recombinant protein, a well-known formula that provides long-term protection. The platform is used in Sanofi’s flu vaccine, Flublok, which along with its Fluzone for older adults, accounts for $2.8 billion of Sanofi’s annual $8 billion vaccine portfolio.

    Amid the vaccine race early in the pandemic, the scientific community was eager to see these types of vaccines reach the finish line.

    “As we headed into December 2020, it was obvious that the first two vaccines we were to consider were mRNA vaccines, where we had no experience with that technology,” said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the vaccine education center and a pediatrician at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

    “Novavax, on the other hand, was a tried-and-true technology,” Offit, who also served as a member on the advisory committee for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told Yahoo Finance.

    Like Novavax, Sanofi similarly missed the pandemic market after its vaccine candidate, in partnership with GSK (GSK), was delayed during clinical trials. The duo was also late to the market with the vaccine in 2022 in Europe and targeted the booster market.

    When asked if Sanofi had previously approached Novavax for partnership, CEO Jacobs said he couldn’t comment.

    “I’m actually not sure if that ever occurred before my time,” Jacobs said. “I have to believe that over time Novavax might have had conversations with other companies, but until these barriers [liabilities] were removed … I don’t think we were a very attractive target for significant business development because there was so much uncertainty.”

    He added that if there were ever a discussion in the future of a sale or acquisition, the board “would always consider appropriately for our shareholders the right path to value.”

    Novavax beat on earnings per share, at $1.08 versus consensus estimates of $1.05, but it missed on revenues, reporting $98.3 million compared to Wall Street expectations of more than $101 million.

    Anjalee Khemlani is the senior health reporter at Yahoo Finance, covering all things pharma, insurance, care services, digital health, PBMs, and health policy and politics. Follow Anjalee on all social media platforms @AnjKhem.

    Click here for in-depth analysis of the latest health industry news and events impacting stock prices

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    UK Shakes Off Recession as Economy Grows Faster Than Expected

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    In the first three months of the year, economic growth was driven by the services sector, which expanded for the first time in a year, the statistics agency said. Transport services, legal services and scientific research all grew strongly, but services that include hotels and restaurants fell slightly, and the construction sector contracted sharply.

    G.D.P. per person grew 0.4 percent in the first quarter, after seven consecutive quarters of decline.

    Still, Britain’s economic data “is incredibly mixed,” said Tera Allas, director of research and economics at McKinsey’s Britain and Ireland office and a former economist in the civil service. Some sectors like professional services and technology have been doing well, but others like hospitality have struggled, she said.

    The economic picture about consumers is “even murkier,” Ms. Allas added. Sentiment is negative, and, by some measures, retail sales are down. But consumer spending has still been a key aspect of the country’s economic resilience. Household spending, adjusted for inflation, grew 0.2 percent after two quarters of declines, the statistics agency said.

    Some of that can be explained by the labor market. Even as interest rates have been at their highest level in 16 years, slowing investment, and business bankruptcies have increased, unemployment has risen only modestly, to 4.2 percent in February, up from recent lows of 3.8 percent.

    On Thursday, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said it anticipated that the economic data on Friday would show that the recession was “in the rearview mirror” but warned that the longer-term outlook for the economy was sluggish. Economists at the institute forecast growth of about 1 percent each year over the medium term.

    The Bank of England said the impact of higher interest rates and constrained public spending would weigh on the economy, and it forecast 0.5 percent growth this year. Even as policymakers said rate cuts were on their way, they plan to take a cautious approach, which suggests rates will go down slowly.

    “There is no doubt it has been a difficult few years, but today’s growth figures are proof that the economy is returning to full health for the first time since the pandemic,” Jeremy Hunt, chancellor of the Exchequer, said in a statement on Friday.

    A general election will take place within the next eight months, and the economy is among the top priorities, with both main political parties vowing to instigate growth. Rachel Reeves of the opposition Labour Party accused the governing Conservative Party of “gaslighting” the British people about the economy’s improving.

    In a speech this week, Ms. Reeves said claims the British economy had turned a corner “do not speak to the economic reality,” as many people tell her that they are struggling to pay bills or high rents or mortgage payments.

    Many households in 2024 will feel that they are emerging from a lengthy cost-of-living crisis. Although prices are still higher than they were before the pandemic, and are expected to stay that way, there has been some relief on consumers’ budgets. Average incomes are rising faster than inflation, household energy bills are coming down, and the government has cut some taxes. On average, living standards, measured by household disposable income, will rise 6 percent this year from last year, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research said this week.

    But the benefits are not shared among everyone. Households in the lowest income groups will see their living standards fall further as they contend with sharply rising rents, the institute said.

    Apple Will Revamp Siri to Catch Up to Its Chatbot Competitors

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    Apple’s top software executives decided early last year that Siri, the company’s virtual assistant, needed a brain transplant.

    The decision came after the executives Craig Federighi and John Giannandrea spent weeks testing OpenAI’s new chatbot, ChatGPT. The product’s use of generative artificial intelligence, which can write poetry, create computer code and answer complex questions, made Siri look antiquated, said two people familiar with the company’s work, who didn’t have permission to speak publicly.

    Introduced in 2011 as the original virtual assistant in every iPhone, Siri had been limited for years to individual requests and had never been able to follow a conversation. It often misunderstood questions. ChatGPT, on the other hand, knew that if someone asked for the weather in San Francisco and then said, “What about New York?” that user wanted another forecast.

    The realization that new technology had leapfrogged Siri set in motion the tech giant’s most significant reorganization in more than a decade. Determined to catch up in the tech industry’s A.I. race, Apple has made generative A.I. a tent pole project — the company’s special, internal label that it uses to organize employees around once-in-a-decade initiatives.

    Apple is expected to show off its A.I. work at its annual developers conference on June 10 when it releases an improved Siri that is more conversational and versatile, according to three people familiar with the company’s work, who didn’t have permission to speak publicly. Siri’s underlying technology will include a new generative A.I. system that will allow it to chat rather than respond to questions one at a time.

    The update to Siri is at the forefront of a broader effort to embrace generative A.I. across Apple’s business. The company is also increasing the memory in this year’s iPhones to support its new Siri capabilities. And it has discussed licensing complementary A.I. models that power chatbots from several companies, including Google, Cohere and OpenAI.

    An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment.

    Apple executives worry that new A.I. technology threatens the company’s dominance of the global smartphone market because it has the potential to become the primary operating system, displacing the iPhone’s iOS software, said two people familiar with the thinking of Apple’s leadership, who didn’t have permission to speak publicly. This new technology could also create an ecosystem of A.I. apps, known as agents, that can order Ubers or make calendar appointments, undermining Apple’s App Store, which generates about $24 billion in annual sales.

    Apple also fears that if it fails to develop its own A.I. system, the iPhone could become a “dumb brick” compared with other technology. While it is unclear how many people regularly use Siri, the iPhone currently takes 85 percent of global smartphone profits and generates more than $200 billion in sales.

    That sense of urgency contributed to Apple’s decision to cancel its other big bet — a $10 billion project to develop a self-driving car — and reassign hundreds of engineers to work on A.I.

    Apple has also explored creating servers that are powered by its iPhone and Mac processors, two of these people said. Doing so could help Apple save money and create consistency between the tools used for processes in the cloud and on its devices.

    Rather than compete directly with ChatGPT by releasing a chatbot that does things like write poetry, the three people familiar with its work said, Apple has focused on making Siri better at handling tasks that it already does, including setting timers, creating calendar appointments and adding items to a grocery list. It also would be able to summarize text messages.

    Apple plans to bill the improved Siri as more private than rival A.I. services because it will process requests on iPhones rather than remotely in data centers. The strategy will also save money. OpenAI spends about 12 cents for about 1,000 words that ChatGPT generates because of cloud computing costs.

    (The New York Times sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, in December for copyright infringement of news content related to A.I. systems.)

    But Apple faces risks by relying on a smaller A.I. system housed on iPhones rather than a larger one stored in a data center. Research has found that smaller A.I. systems could be more likely to make errors, known as hallucinations, than larger ones.

    “It’s always been the Siri vision to have a conversational interface that understands language and context, but it’s a hard problem,” said Tom Gruber, a co-founder of Siri who worked at Apple until 2018. “Now that the technology has changed, it should be possible to do a much better job of that. So long as it’s not a one-size-fits-all effort to answer anything, then they should be able to avoid trouble.”

    Apple has several advantages in the A.I. race, including more than two billion devices in use around the world where it can distribute A.I. products. It also has a leading semiconductor team that has been making sophisticated chips capable of powering A.I. tasks like facial recognition.

    But for the past decade, Apple has struggled to develop a comprehensive A.I. strategy, and Siri has not had major improvements since its introduction. The assistant’s struggles blunted the appeal of the company’s HomePod smart speaker because it couldn’t consistently perform simple tasks like fulfilling a song request.

    The Siri team has failed to get the kind of attention and resources that went to other groups inside Apple, said John Burkey, who worked on Siri for two years before founding a generative A.I. platform, Brighten.ai. The company’s divisions, such as software and hardware, operate independently of one another and share limited information. But A.I. needs to be threaded through products to succeed.

    “It’s not in Apple’s DNA,” Mr. Burkey said. “It’s a blind spot.”

    Apple has also struggled to recruit and retain leading A.I. researchers. Over the years, it has acquired A.I. companies led by leaders in the field, but they all left after a few years.

    The reasons for their departures vary, but one factor is Apple’s secrecy. The company publishes fewer papers on its A.I. work than Google, Meta and Microsoft, and it doesn’t participate in conferences in the same way that its rivals do.

    “Research scientists say: ‘What are my other options? Can I go back into academia? Can I go to a research institute, some place where I can work a bit more in the open?’” said Ruslan Salakhutdinov, a leading A.I. researcher, who left Apple in 2020 to return to Carnegie Mellon University.

    In recent months, Apple has increased the number of A.I. papers it has published. But prominent A.I. researchers have questioned the value of the papers, saying they are more about creating the impression of meaningful work than providing examples of what Apple may bring to market.

    Tsu-Jui Fu, an Apple intern and A.I. doctoral student at the University of California, Santa Barbara, wrote one of Apple’s recent A.I. papers. He spent last summer developing a system for editing photos with written commands rather than Photoshop tools. He said that Apple supported the project by providing him with the necessary G.P.U.s to train the system, but that he had no interaction with the A.I. team working on Apple products.

    Though he said he had interviewed for full-time jobs at Adobe and Nvidia, he plans to return to Apple after he graduates because he thinks he can make a bigger difference there.

    “A.I. product and research is emerging in Apple, but most companies are very mature,” Mr. Fu said in an interview with The Times. “At Apple, I can have more room to lead a project instead of just being a member of a team doing something.”

    How to watch the end of Season 7

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    The series finale of “Young Sheldon,” the CBS hit spinoff of the “Big Bang Theory,” is almost here and while it’ll no doubt be a sad goodbye, seven seasons is an impressive feat in the age of frequent cancellations.

    Tragedy has struck the Coopers, but it’s something the audience has known was coming.

    On the May 11 episode, Sheldon’s (Iain Armitage) father, George Sr. (Lance Barber), died of a heart attack after receiving a big promotion.

    With Sheldon prepping for college, it’s yet to be seen how he and the rest of the Coopers handle the news.

    Thankfully, there are a slew of ways to watch the big sendoff both live and on streaming. If you’ve still held onto your cable subscription with a death grip, you’re all set. Just tune in to CBS at 5 p.m. Arizona time on Thursday, May 16.

    And, if you’ve been living under a rock — or just waiting to binge it all at once — the first six seasons of “Young Sheldon” are available on streaming services as well.

    When is the Young Sheldon finale?

    The “Young Sheldon” Season 7 finale airs on CBS at 5 p.m. Arizona time on Thursday, May 16.

    Is Season 7 of Young Sheldon out?

    “Young Sheldon” has been airing live on CBS every week since the Season 7 premiere aired on Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024. If you’ve cut the cable cord, here’s how you can watch the “Young Sheldon” series finale on streaming:

    • DirecTV Stream: All plans offer livestreaming CBS and other channels. You can get a five-day free trial and plans start at $79.99 a month at www.directtv.com.
    • Paramount+: Episodes are available the next day. You can get a seven-day free trial and plans start at $5.99 a month at www.paramountplus.com.
    • Hulu + Live TV: Episodes are available live along with Hulu’s entire catalog. No free trial; plans start at $76.99 a month at www.hulu.com.
    • Max: Seasons 1-6 are available to stream now; Season 7 will come after “Young Sheldon” wraps. No free trial; plans start at $9.99 a month at max.com.

    Where can I watch all seasons of Young Sheldon?

    The first six seasons of “Young Sheldon” are streaming on Max. A Max subscription will set you back $9.99 per month with ads or you can go ad-free for $15.99 per month.

    You can also watch all of the seasons — including the aired Season 7 episodes — on Amazon Prime. Entire seasons will cost you $24.99 each or individual episodes can be bought for $2.99 each. Visit amazon.com to see all streaming options available.

    Is ‘Young Sheldon’ on Amazon Prime?

    Amazon Prime has seasons 1-6, and all of the Season 7 episodes that have aired so far are available to purchase. You can buy entire seasons to watch whenever you want for $24.99 per season or individual episodes for $2.99 each.

    Visit www.amazon.com to see all streaming options.

    Is ‘American Idol’ on Monday? Who made the Top 5 and who will replace Katy Perry?

    Meredith G. White is the entertainment reporter for The Arizona Republic | azcentral.com. You can find her on Facebook as Meredith G. White, on Instagram and X, formerly Twitter: @meredithgwhite, and email her at meredith.white@arizonarepublic.com.

    Support local journalism. Subscribe to azcentral.com today.

    Rant and Rave: Reader’s phone found in shopping basket

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    RAVE to the person who found my mobile phone and handed it in after I left it in my shopping basket at my local Safeway in Issaquah. My lifeline being returned to me gave me a great feeling of relief and lowered my stress immediately. Thank you so much.

    RANT to yards in West Seattle. Why do most of them resemble an untouched jungle? Weeds are everywhere, and the shrubs and trees are disgracefully overgrown. The homes are worth millions, yet the yards look terrible. Often you can’t see even the windows of the houses! Many of them look like mysterious haunted houses.

    RAVE to the wonderful person who found my wallet on the 10 bus the other day and went out of their way to come to my home to ensure its safe return. You are proof of there still being kindness in this world. Thank you so much!

    Mbappé announces PSG exit ahead of likely Real Madrid move

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    Kylian Mbappé has announced he is leaving Paris Saint-Germain at the end of the season, after which he is expected to join Real Madrid.

    The announcement brings Real Madrid closer to ending their years-long pursuit of the France international, who is widely regarded as one of the best players in world football.

    Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

    PSG face Toulouse at the Parcs des Princes on Sunday, which will be Mbappé’s final home game. His final game for the club is scheduled to be the French Cup final against Lyon on May 15.

    He said in a video posted to Instagram: “Hi everyone, it’s Kylian. I wanted to speak to you, I’ve always said that I would speak with you when the time comes and so I wanted to announce to you all that it’s my last year at Paris Saint-Germain.

    “I will not extend and the adventure will come to an end in a few weeks. I will play my last game at the Parc des Princes on Sunday.

    “It’s a lot of emotions, many years where I had the chance and the great honour to be a member of the biggest French club, one of the best in the world which allowed me to arrive here, to have my first experience in a club with a lot of pressure, to grow as a player of course, by being alongside some of the best in history, some of the greatest champions, to meet a lot of people, to grow as a man as well with all the glory and the mistakes I’ve made.”

    Mbappé thanks all four managers he has played for at PSG — Unai Emery, Thomas Tuchel, Mauricio Pochettino, Christophe Galtier and Luis Enrique — as well as the club’s sporting directors.

    He added: “Despite everything that can happen on the outside, all this media hype that surrounds the club sometimes, there are some real club lovers who want to protect it and make it shine and it’s great and to know that with all these people, this club is in great hands.

    “It’s hard, and I never thought it would be this difficult to announce that, to leave my country, France, the Ligue 1, a championship I have always known but I think, I needed this, a new challenge, after seven years.”

    Boeing Spacecraft Should Be Grounded Over ‘Risk Of A Disaster,’ Warns NASA Contractor

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    Photo: Joe Raedle (Getty Images)

    After a last minute delay of the debut mission of the Boeing Starliner earlier this week, a NASA contractor is warning the space agency that potentially disastrous problems may still lurk in the Atlas V rocket.

    NASA delayed the crewed debut mission for the Boeing Starliner on Monday, just two hours before the scheduled launch at Kennedy Space Center. On Wednesday, space agency contractor ValveTech publicly called for the launch to be put on hold until the Starliner is deemed safe and warned of a potential disaster. The delay was ordered to replace a pressure regulation valve on the Atlas V rocket’s liquid oxygen tank. NASA won’t attempt another launch until at least May 17.

    NASA stated that Monday’s launch was called off because of “the oscillating behavior of the valve during prelaunch operations.” During preparations, the valve was closed to dampen the buzzing but it happened again twice during fuel removal operations. ValveTech sees this oscillating behavior as a possible symptom of a large problem. ValveTech President Erin Faville said in a release:

    “As a valued NASA partner and as valve experts, we strongly urge them not to attempt a second launch due to the risk of a disaster occurring on the launchpad. According to media reports, a buzzing sound indicating the leaking valve was noticed by someone walking by the Starliner minutes before launch. This sound could indicate that the valve has passed its lifecycle.”

    “NASA needs to re-double safety checks and re-examine safety protocols to make sure the Starliner is safe before something catastrophic happens to the astronauts and to the people on the ground.”

    NASA awarded Boeing a $4.2 billion Commercial Crew Transportation contract in September 2014, alongside $2.6 billion to SpaceX. The Starliner’s first crewed launch was initially scheduled for 2017. However, development delays and technical problems pushed back the launch until this month. The delays have cost Boeing $1.5 billion in charges.

    While the Starlined has struggled, the Atlas V rocket is a proven launch vehicle and has been in service since 2002. The Atlas V was designed by Lockheed Martin and is currently produced by the United Launch Alliance, a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin. The rocket is nearing retirement with only 17 launches left before it’s replaced by the ULA’s Vulcan, the collaboration’s first new rocket design.

    ValveTech’s concerns carry the weight that a disaster would endanger the lives of astronauts Barry Wilmore and Sunita Williams as well as people on the ground. Boeing’s quality control woes would be escalated to an astronomic scale far beyond a blown-out door plug on an Alaska Airlines flight, shoddily built airliners and two dead whistleblowers. 

    This group of people should avoid eating grapefruit

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    You may have heard this through the grapevine — grapefruit is healthy but not for everyone. 

    Grapefruit, a citrus fruit, is packed with antioxidants, potassium and fiber, registered dietician Erin Palinsky-Wade, a registered dietitian and author of the “2-Day Diabetes Diet,” told USA Today. 

    “The combination of nutrients found in grapefruit, as well as the low glycemic index, make it a really well rounded beneficial fruit to include,” she explained.

    When something has a low glycemic index it means it’s less likely to make your blood sugar spike.

    Grapefruit is hydrating and can make your skin glow. blackday – stock.adobe.com

    Fiber 

    The fiber in grapefruits has a variety of benefits for health, according to Hopkins Medicine. 

    Fiber can support heart health by reducing inflammation gut health by preventing constipation and encouraging bacterial growth, healthier cholesterol levels by regulating LDL cholesterol and even weight management by helping people feel fuller longer.

    Vitamin C

    Eating one whole medium-sized grapefruit can give you 100% of your daily vitamin C requirement. Vitamin C is an antioxidant that strengthens the immune system and also boosts collagen production for less wrinkled skin. 

    Hydrating 

    Grapefruit is very high in fiber and vitamin C. Africa Studio – stock.adobe.com

    Grapefruit is also known to make the skin glow because it has a lot of water content and is hydrating. 

    “When we eat foods that are hydrating, as well as drinking enough water, it tends to make our skin more radiant and glowing,” Palinsky-Wade explained.

    Who shouldn’t eat grapefruit?

    Grapefruit is acidic and could aggravate symptoms in people with digestive issues like gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

    People who are suffering from an inflammation of the stomach lining, called gastritis, or an ulcer, a sore that develops on the lining of the stomach, small intestine or esophagus also may want to avoid grapefruit, Hopkins medicine explained. 

    Grapefruit can react with certain medications. roger ashford – stock.adobe.com

    Grapefruit can also interact with certain medications because it can block an enzyme that helps your body break down the meds. 

    Those medicines include cholesterol-lowering medicines atorvastatin, lovastatin, and simvastatin, the allergy medication fexofenadine, the blood pressure drug nifedipine and the immunosuppressant cyclosporine. 




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    Yance Ford’s “Power” Documentary Argues That Policing and Politics Are Inextricable

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    “Strong Island,” the 2017 Oscar-nominated documentary directed by Yance Ford, was a deep investigation into the death of Ford’s brother and a jury’s subsequent refusal to indict the man who shot him. There’s a flavor of the same grief and fury that drove that film in Ford’s newest work, “Power” (now in theaters), which methodically builds a case against modern American policing.

    Ford’s documentary is not the first on the subject, nor will it be the last. The intersection of policing and the justice system has been a compelling topic for documentarians for a long while now, spun up alongside investigative reporting that unpacks assumptions about law enforcement. The results have been kaleidoscopic in nature. Just to name a few:

    • Stephen Maing’s Crime + Punishment (2018, on Hulu) followed the whistle-blower police officers known as the “N.Y.P.D. 12.”

    • Peter Nicks’s The Force (2017, on Hulu) captured a seemingly unending chain of crises within the Oakland police department.

    • Ava DuVernay’s 13TH (2016, on Netflix) explored the roots of the prison-industrial complex.

    • Theo Anthony’s All Light, Everywhere (2021, on Hulu) probed the pervasive role of surveillance, like police body cameras, in keeping order.

    • And Sierra Pettengill’s Riotsville, U.S.A.” (2022, on Hulu) took footage from fake towns built to train police to respond to civil unrest in the 1960s and turned it into a startling history of the militarization of law enforcement.

    “Power” is most like “13TH” in its structure and approach, relying largely on historical context, archival footage of network news and political speeches, and a bevy of scholars and experts to explain an array of issues. How did policing and politics get intertwined? Why did American police become more like the military? What does the term “law and order” mean on the ground? How and why are armed officers involved with everything from patrols to strikebreaking?

    But where “13TH” often took a poetic approach, “Power” mixes polemics and the personal. The aim, as the title suggests, is to underline how much of our contemporary conversations about policing are really about power: who is in a position of power, when can that power be used, and when is it given to others. Ford operates as narrator, his voice guiding us through the maze.

    This is heady stuff, even if it’s not particularly new information. As with many documentaries that aim to construct a political and social argument, it’s a little like drinking with a fire hose, even if you’re familiar with the history and questions. The point isn’t the data, but the spider-web nature of the argument; seemingly disparate things (labor strikes, slave patrols, the removal of Indigenous Americans from their land) are drawn together in “Power,” which becomes an act of pattern recognition. It is not easy viewing, but it’s a strong introduction to a topic that seems freshly relevant every day.