Rechercher dans ce blog

Thursday, December 31, 2020

Why Short-Form Ads Work: Because They Always Have 01/04/2021 - MediaPost Communications

lonk.indah.link

As someone who has spent decades in media planning and buying, Richard Whitman’s recent article on Magna’s new study, "Does Every Second Count? Planning Ad Lengths Across Platforms" is interesting on several fronts.

While the Magna study looks exclusively at :06’s vs :15’s on mobile and PCs, ultimately recommending …

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 11:56PM
https://ift.tt/3hxifKr

Why Short-Form Ads Work: Because They Always Have 01/04/2021 - MediaPost Communications
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

Tesla Short Sellers Lost $38 Billion in 2020 as Stock Surged - Yahoo Canada Finance

lonk.indah.link

GlobeNewswire

Malaysia Air Conditioner Market Competition, Forecast & Opportunities Report 2020: Market is Expected to Surpass Market Value of $1.3 Billion by 2025

Dublin, Dec. 31, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Malaysia Air Conditioner Market By Product Type (Splits, VRFs, Chillers, Windows, and Others (Portable, Floor Standing, etc.)), By End Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial), By Region, Competition, Forecast & Opportunities, 2026" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering. The Malaysian Air Conditioner Market is projected to witness a CAGR of more than 11% during 2021 - 2025, and thereby, surpass $1.3 billion by 2025. Anticipated growth in the market is attributed to expanding population, growing disposable income, and increasingly affordable product offerings. Also, due to the increasing product offerings at the e-commerce platforms and easy financing schemes are boosting the use of air conditioners among lower middle class and middle-class income families in Malaysia. Moreover, the rising demand from the commercial sector is also driving the country's air conditioner market. Additionally, changing climatic conditions and construction of inbuilt air conditioner and energy-efficient buildings are the other factors expected to drive the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market during forecast period. Based on the product type, the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market is segmented into Splits, VRFs, Chillers, Windows, and Others (Portable, Floor Standing, etc.). As of 2019, Split type air conditioner category held the largest share in the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market and this trend is expected to continue in the coming years. Based on the region, the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market is bifurcated into Central Region, East Region, Northern Region, East Coast Region, and Southern Region. Until 2019, Central Region accounted for the largest market share in the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market due to its better living standards, urbanization and increasing population. However, other regions are expected to witness faster growth in the coming years during the forecast period. Based on the End-Use segmentation, the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market is categorized into the Residential Sector and Commercial/Industrial Sector. Residential air conditioner segment garnered the maximum share in the Malaysian Air Conditioner Market due to rapidly growing population, household expenditure and income levels of the middle-class population. However, VRFs and chiller type air conditioner are also witnessing higher demand from the big commercial spaces such as malls, offices, and institutions due to higher energy efficiency. Years considered for this report: * Historical Years: 2015-2018 * Base Year: 2019 * Estimated Year: 2020 * Forecast Period: 2021-2025Key Topics Covered: 1\. Product Overview 2\. Research Methodology 3\. Analyst View 4\. Voice of Customer 4.1. Brand Awareness 4.2. Factors Influencing Purchase Decisions 4.3. Brand Satisfaction 4.4. Challenges Faced Post Purchase 5\. Global Air Conditioners Market Overview 6\. Malaysia Air Conditioners Market Outlook 6.1. Market Size & Forecast 6.1.1. By Value & Volume 6.2. Market Share & Forecast 6.2.1. By Product Type (Splits, VRFs, Chillers, Windows, and Others ((Precision AC, Packaged AC, Portable, Floor Standing etc.) 6.2.2. By End-Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial) 6.2.3. By Region (Central Region (West Malaysia), East Malaysia, Northern Region (West Malaysia), Eastern Region (West Malaysia), Southern Region (West Malaysia)) 6.2.4. By Company 6.3. Market Attractiveness Index 6.3.1. By Product Type 6.3.2. By Region 7\. Malaysia Split Air Conditioners Market Outlook 7.1. Market Size & Forecast 7.1.1.By Value & Volume 7.2. Market Share & Forecast 7.2.1.By End Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial) 7.3. Product Benchmarking 8\. Malaysia VRFs Air Conditioners Market Outlook 8.1. Market Size & Forecast 8.1.1. By Value & Volume 8.2. Market Share & Forecast 8.2.1. By End Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial) 8.3. Product Benchmarking 9\. Malaysia Chillers Air Conditioners Market Outlook 9.1. Market Size & Forecast 9.1.1. By Value & Volume 9.2. Market Share & Forecast 9.2.1. By End Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial) 9.3. Product Benchmarking 10\. Malaysia Windows Air Conditioners Market Outlook 10.1. Market Size & Forecast 10.1.1. By Value & Volume 10.2. Market Share & Forecast 10.2.1. By End Use Sector (Residential Vs Commercial/Industrial) 11\. Malaysia Others Air Conditioners Market Outlook 11.1. Market Size & Forecast 11.1.1. By Value & Volume 12\. Supply Chain Analysis 13\. Import-Export Analysis 14\. Market Dynamics 14.1. Drivers 14.2. Challenges 15\. Market Trends & Developments 16\. Policy & Regulatory Landscape 17\. Malaysia Economic Profile 18\. Competitive Landscape 18.1. Company Profiles 18.1.2. Daikin Malaysia Sdn. Bhd 18.1.3. Midea Scott & English Electronics Sdn Bhd 18.1.4. Haier Electrical Appliances (M) Sdn. Bhd. 18.1.5. Hitachi Sales (Malaysia) Sdn. 18.1.6. Mitsubishi Electric Sales Malaysia Sdn. Bhd. 18.1.7. Samsung Malaysia Electronics (SME) Sdn 18.1.8 Panasonic Malaysia Sdn Bhd. 18.1.9. LG Electronics (M) Sdn. Bhd. 18.1.10 Carrier (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. 18.1.11. Sharp Electronics (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd 19\. Strategic Recommendations For more information about this report visit https://ift.tt/38030qf and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research. CONTACT: CONTACT: ResearchAndMarkets.com Laura Wood, Senior Press Manager press@researchandmarkets.com For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 07:07PM
https://ift.tt/3pGqW82

Tesla Short Sellers Lost $38 Billion in 2020 as Stock Surged - Yahoo Canada Finance
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

Covid-19: School closures will be 'as short as possible' - BBC News

lonk.indah.link
Year eight pupils wear face masks as a precaution against the transmission of the novel coronavirus as they queue in a corridor before attending an English lesson at Moor End Academy in Huddersfield
Getty Images
There is "absolutely no reason" schools in England will not be ready to mass test pupils when they return next term, the education secretary has said.

Gavin Williamson said he wanted school closures to be as "short as possible" after

delaying their reopening amid surging coronavirus cases.

It comes as people are being warned to not to gather on New Year's Eve.

Some 20 million people in England have been told to "stay at home" after tier four was expanded at midnight.

They join the 24 million already in the toughest restrictions - meaning non-essential businesses must close, and people should stay home unless they have a "reasonable excuse".

Tier four restrictions also mean people cannot meet others indoors, unless they are part of a support bubble, while indoor entertainment venues and businesses such as hairdressers and nail bars must close.

Areas of the Midlands and northern England, including Greater Manchester, Leicestershire and Warwickshire, are among those added.

On Wednesday the UK recorded a further 50,023 new Covid cases, as well as 981 more deaths within 28 days of a positive test - more than double Tuesday's total.

An intensive care doctor has also urged people not to gather and said those who do not follow social distancing rules or wear masks have "blood on their hands".

Prof Hugh Montgomery, professor of intensive care medicine at University College London, said: "It is making me actually very angry now that people are laying the blame on the virus, and it is not the virus, it is people, people are not washing their hands, they are not wearing their masks."

Map showing new tier areas

NHS England medical director Prof Stephen Powis said it was "absolutely vital" people stayed home and did not mix, saying "Covid loves a crowd", while Health Secretary Matt Hancock said people must take "personal responsibility".

In Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon has said there should be "no gatherings, no house parties" for Hogmanay as all of the mainland remains in the highest level of restrictions.

A six-week lockdown began in Northern Ireland on 26 December, while Wales also has a national lockdown with people banned from visiting other households.

The warnings came after the UK announced the approval of a second vaccine for coronavirus, the Oxford-AstraZeneca jab, with the first doses due to be given on Monday.

The latest figures show 786,000 people have received the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine between 8 December and 27 December, NHS England said.

GPs are to be offered £10 for every care home resident vaccinated and NHS staff will also be prioritised now that the Oxford jab has been approved, the health service said.

Deepti Gurdasani, epidemiologist and senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London, told BBC Radio 5 Live there appeared to be a "bottleneck" in the delivery of the jabs and said the volume of vaccines being given was "six times lower" than the two million target.

A total of 232,169 people tested positive for Covid in England at least once in the week to 23 December, up 33% on the previous week, the latest NHS Test and Trace figures show.

Of the 211,914 people transferred to test and trace, 85.8% were reached and asked for details of recent close contacts.

Chart showing UK Covid case numbers

Mr Williamson announced on Wednesday that secondary schools across most of England are to remain closed for an extra two weeks for most pupils, to help regain control of coronavirus amid concerns about a fast-spreading new variant.

The education secretary told BBC Breakfast that remote learning would be "mandatory" from the week commencing 11 January for all secondary students, other than years 11 and 13 who would physically return to school on that date.

Banner image reading 'more about coronavirus'
Banner

Defending the delay to term, he said the government was "battling this hidden enemy" saying there was £78m of funding for schools to get testing up and running.

Equipment such as personal protective equipment (PPE) would be delivered next week and there would be support from the military.

2px presentational grey line
Analysis box by Nick Triggle, health correspondent

As soon as news emerged of the new faster-spreading variant questions began to be asked about schools.

An analysis by Public Health England released this week showed there was no evidence it was more able to infect children than other variants.

But that does not mean infection rates have not been rising among children.

As with all age groups, the proportion of school children testing positive increased during December - with more virus around there was more transmission.

Primary school children however still remain one of the age groups with the lowest infection rates.

But the sheer scale of the infection levels in the worst-hit areas means ministers wanted to buy themselves time, hence some primaries will remain closed.

If large numbers of pupils and staff need to isolate, it makes the smooth-running of schools impractical.

Ministers are hoping mass testing coupled with the tougher restrictions - three-quarters of England are now in the highest tier - will be enough to curb infection levels and keep a lid on the spread in schools.

But it is clear they will have to tread carefully to achieve that.

2px presentational grey line

Mr Williamson said more than 85% of primary schools were reopening on Monday and that he wanted any closures to be "short".

At a Downing Street press conference on Wednesday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the "sheer pace of spread of new variant means we have to take tougher action in some areas".

But teaching unions said the move did not go far enough, and one labelled it another "last-minute mess".

Pepe Di'Iasio, headteacher of Wales High near Rotherham and vice-president of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: "We've all seen this coming and we would have preferred to have been able to plan for this before the end of last term so that parents can be made aware of it."

Around the BBC iPlayer banner
Around the BBC iPlayer footer

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 05:05PM
https://ift.tt/3rE9a7o

Covid-19: School closures will be 'as short as possible' - BBC News
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

SCORPIO: Don't linger when the time is ripe for change - Lewiston Sun Journal

lonk.indah.link

Eugenia Last

CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Joey McIntyre, 48; Val Kilmer, 61; Bebe Neuwirth, 62; Anthony Hopkins, 83.
Happy Birthday: Resolve pending issues, and move forward with a clean slate so you can focus on what’s important to you. Reaching a place where you feel at ease to do as you please and follow a meaningful path will encourage positive change. Take the initiative and put yourself first. If you are happy, you will spread joy to those you encounter. Your numbers are 6, 19, 24, 27, 31, 34, 48.
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Using emotional tactics will fuel the fire. Be reasonable, and problem-solving will be within reach. Concentrate on being better, not trying to change others. Choose a path that will lead to your happiness. Make peace, love and romance priorities. 2 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Make adjustments at home or to the way you handle your professional affairs. Give others the chance to voice an opinion. It may change your mind as well as improve your relationships. Arguing isn’t the solution; diplomacy will be necessary. 4 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Get along with friends, relatives and peers. At the first sign of trouble, take a step back and evaluate your next move. Don’t trust someone offering false information. Do your due diligence before you commit to anything. Focus on personal improvement. 4 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Avoid spending unnecessarily. A bargain is only useful if you need the product you are purchasing. Don’t believe all the hype about something that sounds too good to be real. Don’t add to your angst; concentrate on diminishing stress. 3 stars
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Refuse to let the little things get to you. Focus on love, self-improvement and preparing yourself for the best year ever. Opportunities are heading your way, but how successful you are will depend on your ability to make things happen. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Reach out to someone from your past. Catching up will help you put your life in perspective and believe in yourself. Put an end to whatever isn’t working for you, and start the new year on a positive note. 3 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Spend time with the ones you love. Put plans for the new year in place, and the changes you want to make to your living arrangements will fall into place. Make love, romance and keeping the peace your priorities. 2 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A new year, a fresh start. Don’t let uncertainty hold you back or unfinished business stand in your way. Embrace new beginnings, and make a decision that will impact your life. Don’t linger when the time is ripe for change. 5 stars
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t let temptation lead to a health risk. You can bring in the new year paying more attention to those you live with and less to those urging you to be indulgent when caution is in your best interest. 3 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You can avoid an emotional scuffle today if you challenge yourself, not others. Do something to occupy your time that will bring about a positive and productive change at home. Set yourself up for success, not failure. 3 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be innovative, do your part and make your life better. Be open to change, but don’t allow someone to push you in a direction that doesn’t suit your needs. Life is about choices; choose to do what’s best for you. 3 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Look for an opportunity that will open doors. Be original in the way you approach others, and you will command the attention and help you require to get things done. Protect against health risks and people trying to undermine you. 5 stars
Birthday Baby: You are determined, proactive and energetic. You are sensitive and protective.
Visit Eugenialast.com, or join Eugenia on Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn.

Comments are not available on this story.

filed under:

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 05:00PM
https://ift.tt/3aVWbYN

SCORPIO: Don't linger when the time is ripe for change - Lewiston Sun Journal
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

More thoughts on travails of short people - CapeGazette.com

lonk.indah.link

I read with interest Wendy Harpster’s Dec. 18 letter, titled “A response to ‘short people” letter,” decrying a “whiney letter about being short.”

I had not seen the “whiney” post and wondered who could be so frivolous during the pandemic as to seriously complain about being short.

When I finally saw Ms. Fisk’s Viewpoint, in the Dec. 14 Gazette, (to paraphrase the poem, “Twas the Night Before Christmas,”) “what to my wondering eyes should appear” was not a “whiney letter” but an obviously funny (at least to me) and self-mocking sendup by Ms. Fisk about the travails of being short.

I get it: lots of people didn’t think “Seinfeld” was funny either. But really, Ms. Harpster, did you think Ms. Fisk was seriously asking the public to celebrate Short  Girl Appreciation Day?

Then, it came to me: this pandemic has killed people’s sense of humor too.

But, beyond not getting Ms. Fisk’s sense of humor,  Ms. Harpster, however, persisted, deciding to attribute to Ms. Fisk characteristics about which she knew nothing, stating, “Put on your big girl panties, get a life, and quit complaining.”  

Actually, Peg has gotten a life, with a career as a renowned and beloved high school English teacher for more than 30 years. In addition, after she retired, she then “put on her big girl panties” for years,  driving from her former  home in Port Chester, N.Y., for over an hour for many years to Sing Sing Penitentiary.

There she was a volunteer teaching English classes to enable inmates and helping them to get degrees. At the end of each semester, the inmates gave her standing ovations. They actually thought Peg was funny, but more importantly, they knew she cared about them.  

I’m sure this is so since I’ve known Peg my entire life - I’m her younger brother. My recommendation, Ms. Harpster, is to “put on your big girl panties,” get a sense of humor and try and be less judgmental in the new year. Merry Christmas!

Dan Toomey
Lewes

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 02:21PM
https://ift.tt/38M3Xln

More thoughts on travails of short people - CapeGazette.com
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

This New Year’s Eve, Times Square Will Be Filled With Hope. But Not People. - The New York Times

lonk.indah.link

Celebrations will be muted as 2020 finally comes to an end, but they will bring much-needed touches of grace.

Last New Year’s Eve, an undulating sea flooded Midtown Manhattan, rippling through the streets and establishments to lap against the peacocking George M. Cohan statue in Times Square. A million people strong, all kissing and cheering in the warm glow of 2020’s promise.

This New Year’s Eve, just a few hundred will gather in the square — dozens of frontline workers among them — and only then by special invitation. With temperatures checked and face masks secured, they will represent a nation holding a mirror to the lips of 2020 to confirm that there is no fogging, that the year has mercifully ceased to be.

But here is an existential question to ponder over your Trader Joe’s hors d’oeuvres and drink of choice: If a ball drops at midnight in Times Square and almost no one is present to see it, has a new year truly begun?

We have been conditioned to believe that with a clock’s tick on one particular midnight, a bent old man hands the baton of time to a sprightly cherub in a top hat. All the travails of 12 months end, and life begins anew.

If only.

“I’m more looking forward to burying 2020 than looking forward to 2021,” said Stephen Hughes, an assistant chief with the New York Police Department who is helping to supervise the night. “I just can’t wait not to see 2020 anymore.”

Juanita Erb, a clinical research nurse invited to attend this year’s Times Square celebration, agreed. But, she added: “The changing of the clock into 2021 is not going to make everything go away.”

The realities that made 2020 among the very worst years in American history will not vanish with 2021’s first dawn.

The racial inequities continue. The trial of four Minneapolis police officers charged in the death of a Black man, George Floyd — a case that set off months of nationwide protests — is scheduled for March, and just this week, a police officer in Columbus, Ohio, was fired after fatally shooting a Black man holding a cellphone.

Vast unemployment and business failures continue as well, as do the political and cultural divisions that informed last month’s presidential election. And any clean psychological break from 2020 is made harder by a president who, having decisively lost his bid for re-election, continues to assert that he actually won by a landslide.

Empty jewelry store windows in the diamond district.

But it is the pandemic that defined the year, with more than 340,000 Covid-related deaths in the country — an average of 930 every day, 39 every hour. And while the year also included the lightning-quick development of vaccines, most Americans will not be inoculated until well into 2021, meaning that deadly infections will continue.

The coronavirus cast its long shadow over Times Square this holiday week, stifling the traditional anticipation. Without the usual crush of tourists, the tip-dependent Batmans and Minnie Mouses were left to commiserate in world-colliding clusters. The theaters of Broadway were dark, the chairs were upturned at Carmine’s Italian restaurant, and the New York Marriott Marquis, which recently laid off more than 800 employees, loomed as a towering monument to a devastated economy.

At the Times Square Wishing Wall, where each year people jot down their hopes on multicolored confetti that will fall like paper rain on New Year’s Eve, a small display of those wishes reflected the protracted disquiet of these times:

“Less Covid; more traveling.”

“That the pandemic will be over.”

“Covid-free and prosperity.”

“To Live.”

But even in a pandemic, certain rituals must continue for the well-being of the collective psyche — among them, the slow descent of a six-ton crystal-paneled sphere along the side of a 25-story Times Square building to mark the end and the beginning. This year, perhaps, think of the ball as a large sedative being swallowed by the body politic.

The event will include other touchstones as well, according to its co-producers, the Times Square Alliance and Countdown Entertainment. Brigadoon-like stages in Times Square will feature the requisite silliness of bantering television hosts, as well as musical performances by, among others, Gloria Gaynor, whose disco-era anthem about heartbreak, “I Will Survive,” is now about life.

The one usual ingredient missing, it seems, will be the presence of hundreds of thousands of revelers. While New York has famously welcomed the world for New Year’s, on this night it is saying, “Stay the hell away.” Or, in the boldface words contained in a New York Police Department statement:

“NYE 2021 will not be open to the public and there are no public spectator viewing areas.”

For the last three decades, the same team of police officers has managed much of the logistics for one of the largest annual events on the planet. They include Sgt. Arthur Smarsch, who has worked every New Year’s Eve since 1989; Sgt. Frank Viscione, who has missed only one — 2001 — since 1986; and Assistant Chief Hughes, who is the commanding officer of Patrol Borough Manhattan South, and who quickly rattled off the times he hasn’t worked the night in the last 39 years: 1983, 1997 and 2010.

They remember when the wooden sawhorses used to control crowds would splinter against the crush of humanity; now interlocking aluminum barriers are used. They remember when corks popped from Champagne bottles caused some safety concerns; that is, until 9/11, after which restrictions cracked down on the free flow of people and booze.

They have seen the numbers steadily grow, the crowds stretching up to 59th Street and beyond. And the night’s mood, Chief Hughes said, “reflects what the city is going through in that year.”

This year it will be small, contained, muted. “A closed set,” he said. “A virtual event.”

Last year, when a million or so people showed up, those interlocking barriers stretched from 38th Street to 59th Street, and from Sixth Avenue to Eighth Avenue. This year, the barriers will run only from 41st to 49th Streets, and the few granted entrance to the stage area will be required to have tested negative for the virus.

Normally, several thousand officers work the night, a choice assignment because they get to interact with people from around the world in a setting of joy. This year, there will be an 80 percent reduction in the police complement, which still means many hundreds of officers working to keep people safe — and out.

“What’s going to happen at midnight?” Assistant Chief Hughes asked. “At midnight, everybody kisses. What are we going to do? Fist bump?”

The night’s touch of grace, though, is in the invitation to a few dozen frontline workers and their families. Among them was Ms. Erb, 44, a clinical research nurse who, for the last several months, has helped oversee trials for the Pfizer vaccine at the N.Y.U. Langone Vaccine Center.

After many years in health care, she left at the beginning of 2020 to work as a diversity and inclusion consultant for Estée Lauder. Then the pandemic struck, and the sounds of ambulances pulling into Lenox Hill Hospital, near her Upper East Side apartment, proved too much.

“I was telling my partner every day: ‘I should be doing this,’” Ms. Erb recalled. “‘My community and country need me now; I need to go back.’”

She quit Estée Lauder, sent out résumés and eventually landed a job as operations manager at the Vaccine Center, where the challenges, she said, are exciting, stressful and nonstop. She basically works, comes home and aches to visit the beach locations she sees while binge-watching “Love Island.”

“I want to dip my feet in some nice blue water,” Ms. Erb said.

Another of the invited guests is Danny Haro, 22, a community college student from Montclair, N.J., who delivers food for an Italian restaurant and provides security for a clothing store. He is among the unheralded whose work allows others to experience vague normality in a pandemic.

As the coronavirus crisis raged in early spring, the Villa Victoria Pizzeria in Montclair began donating pasta and salads to workers at nearby Mountainside Hospital, with Mr. Haro often delivering the food in his 2009 Ford Escape.

In early April, he tested positive for the virus, after which he passed it on to his parents, brother and two sisters. They turned out to be asymptomatic; he did not. There came the fevers, the chest pains, the loss of smell — the long nights fearing he couldn’t breathe.

“I’d stand up gasping for air,” he said.

Mr. Haro is feeling much better now. And tonight he will be in Times Square with his mother and a sister, along with Ms. Erb and her partner. Standing in for hundreds of millions, they will be carrying their own tempered wishes.

Ms. Erb said she hopes that in the new year, people will ward against complacency and follow the public-health practices that can stem the virus. Maybe then she’ll be able to travel to where blue waters beckon.

Mr. Haro said he expects 2021 to look a lot like 2020, at least in the beginning. He wishes, then, for one thing.

“Strength,” the delivery man said. “Just strength, honestly.”

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 04:59AM
https://ift.tt/3hyitBk

This New Year’s Eve, Times Square Will Be Filled With Hope. But Not People. - The New York Times
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Nittany Lions Comeback Falls Short in Overtime at Indiana - Penn State University Athletics - GoPSUsports.com

lonk.indah.link

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The Penn State men's basketball team overcame a 12-point deficit at Indiana in the waning minutes of regulation to force overtime, but the Nittany Lions eventually dropped a tough road contest, 87-85, Wednesday night at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. 

The Nittany Lions (3-4, 0-3) had a pair of chances on the last possession to send the game to a second overtime, but were unable to convert. Indiana's Rob Phinisee made an extremely tough, contested jumper to give the Hoosiers (6-4, 1-2) the two-point lead that ended up standing as the game-winning basket. Indiana's Trayce Jackson-Davis finished the night with a game-high 21 points.

Penn State junior guard Myreon Jones scored 14 of his team-best 20 points in the first half and combined with senior guard Jamari Wheeler's basket for Penn State's five overtime points. Junior  guard Sam Sessoms tied his Penn State best with 17 points and scored seven-straight points to  give Penn State an 80-79 lead with 28 seconds left. Jackson-Davis drew a foul and went to the line, making the first free throw, but missing the second to leave the score tied at 80 at the end of regulation.

Four Nittany Lions finished the night with double-figure scoring. Izaiah Brockington had 15 and sophomore forward Seth Lundy scored 10, all 10 coming in the second half off 4-6 shooting from the field.

"I am really proud of the effort our guys gave tonight," said Penn State interim coach Jim Ferry. "I felt we really scrapped. We played extremely hard, especially in that second half to give ourselves an opportunity to win on the road against a very good Indiana team. I felt the defensive effort down the stretch was really, really good, and we trusted each other and made plays. We made though baskets to try to give ourselves a chance to win the basketball game."

The Nittany Lions overcame a 12-point second half deficit and took the game down to the wire in overtime, but came up just short against the Hoosiers. Jackson-Davis' field goal and foul shot put the Hoosiers up 85-83 with 1:03 left to play in the extra period, but Jones knotted the game at 85 with two made free throws with just 43 seconds left on the clock. For Jones, it was his second-straight 20-plus point game and eighth of his career.

After an Indiana timeout, Phinisee's shot gave the Hoosiers an 87-85 lead and the final tally after a Penn State 30-second timeout and missed attempt.

Penn State's grit was on full display as the Hoosiers extended their lead to 66-54 with 9:58 to play in regulation. A Sam Sessoms 3-pointer spurred the Nittany Lions 10-2 run which trimmed their deficit to four. The Nittany Lions continued to battle as senior John Harrar scored six straight points to keep Penn State within striking distance. Jones and Sessoms drilled treys to bring the deficit to one.

Following a pair of free throws for Indiana, Sessoms made his final two shots to give the Nittany Lions their first lead of the night at 80-79. A free throw by Indiana tied the game and Sessoms' final shot was contested and went off the mark to send the game to overtime.

The Penn State defense kept Indiana at bay in the first half, helping Penn State keep stay close after a slow start offensively.

After going 3-11 from the field to start the game, the Nittany Lions found their stroke over the final 11:30 of the opening stanza. Penn State went 10-16 to finish the half as Indiana held a 38-33 lead going into the locker room.

Keep up to date with the latest information from the Nittany Lions at @PennStateMBB on Twitter and Instagram and on Facebook at @pennstatebasketball.

FOLLOW PENN STATE MEN'S BASKETBALL VIRTUALLY
Please stay connected and follow Penn State men's basketball virtually throughout season. While we are unable to host fans this season due to COVID-19 protocols, fans are able to join the interest list for tickets for the 2021-22 men's basketball season. Sign up for the 2021-22 interest list by clicking here.
 

Print Friendly Version

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 01:11PM
https://ift.tt/3o3dGu1

Nittany Lions Comeback Falls Short in Overtime at Indiana - Penn State University Athletics - GoPSUsports.com
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

Athletic lifestyle resort Life Time looking at late 2021 opening in Frisco - Community Impact Newspaper

lonk.indah.link
By Miranda Jaimes

Miranda has been in the North Texas area since she graduated from Oklahoma Christian University in 2014. She reported and did design for a daily newspaper in Grayson County before she transitioned to a managing editor role for three weekly newspapers in Collin County. She joined Community Impact Newspaper in 2017 covering Tarrant County news, and is now back in Collin County as the editor of the McKinney edition.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 05:46AM
https://ift.tt/383c5yS

Athletic lifestyle resort Life Time looking at late 2021 opening in Frisco - Community Impact Newspaper
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Push for Bigger Stimulus Checks Is Running Out of Time - The Wall Street Journal

Illinois House set to reconvene in January for the first time in months; state senators asked to reserve time - Chicago Tribune

lonk.indah.link

During the May special session, House members were spread across the convention center floor of the Bank of Springfield Center, seated at individual desks and wearing masks for that four-day session. The Senate, meanwhile, met at the Capitol with limited numbers of people in the Senate chamber at any given time.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 06:53AM
https://ift.tt/3n2fwdp

Illinois House set to reconvene in January for the first time in months; state senators asked to reserve time - Chicago Tribune
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

The last week of 2020. - The New York Times

lonk.indah.link

Suggestions for the end of the year.

Welcome. It’s the last week of the year, a time when many of us might normally be visiting with family and friends. This year has required some reconfiguring of holiday plans: You might be staying inside, with your usual brood or on your own; you might be working or looking for work; busy or looking for diversion. If you find yourself with the time and inclination to do some reading, there are a bunch of culture and lifestyle stories in The Times that you should check out.

I love this examination, by Nina Siegal, of the life and work of the artist Ulay. Most of us won’t be visiting the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam to see the retrospective of his work, but this article is the next best thing.

Ben Sisario’s story about the album that the country-rock musician Steve Earle recorded of songs by his son, Justin Townes Earle, who died this summer, is beautiful and transporting.

And don’t miss Dorie Greenspan’s tale of decades of New Year’s Eve dinners in Paris, which finishes with an all-American recipe for mulling-spice cake with cream-cheese frosting.

I hope you enjoy these pieces as much as I did. When you’re done, dive into some more “Best of 2020” recommendations from At Home readers.

  • If you really want to escape, read “Nobody Will Tell You This But Me: A True (as Told to Me) Story,” by Bess Kalb. You will laugh and cry, and I promise you will feel way more hopeful when you are done. —Ricky, 60, Miami Beach

  • I’m on my second listen to the “Dolly Parton’s America” podcast. Because everything is coming up Dolly this year and for good reason — the woman is made of relentless positive energy and joy. And wigs. Lots of wigs. —Rebecca, 48, Centennial, Colo.

  • The book “Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain,” by Betty Edwards. Doing an exercise every day has taught me a long-coveted new skill! —Aurelia, 19, New Haven, Conn.

  • I became an expert in making granola. I handed it out throughout the year to family, neighbors and friends. It was a big hit and very satisfying to provide some joy to others. —David, 58, Scotch Plains, N.J.

  • I tried a meditation app called “Ten Percent Happier,” recommended by my daughters. I hadn’t experienced anything this life-changing in a while. I’m trying hard not to be that lady who tells everyone they should try meditation … but you really should try meditation! —Anne, 62, Hood River, Ore.

  • At the end of March, my husband suggested we have a special meal once a week. It would be fancier than usual, include a first course and dessert, and we’d dress up as if we were going out to dinner. We have done this every week, and at the end of the year will have had 41 such meals. —Marisue, 83, Orono, Maine

  • The Anthropocene Reviewed,” a podcast hosted by John Green, considers specific segments of our human-centered world using a 5-star rating format. It is witty, informative, melancholic, and hopeful. —Amanda, 31, Pittsburgh, Penn.

What’s on your mind? What are you thinking about as 2020 comes to a close? Let us know: athome@nytimes.com. We’re At Home. We’ll read every letter sent. As always, more ideas for leading a full and cultured life at home appear below. Thanks for keeping us company this year. See you in 2021.

Sign up to receive the At Home newsletter. You can always find much more to read, watch and do every day on At Home. And let us know what you think!

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 04:00AM
https://ift.tt/2L8kat3

The last week of 2020. - The New York Times
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Spanish Fort cancer survivor battles COVID-19 for the second time this year - WKRG News 5

lonk.indah.link

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Spanish Fort cancer survivor battles COVID-19 for the second time this year  WKRG News 5

"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 03:10AM
https://ift.tt/3pzGlHp

Spanish Fort cancer survivor battles COVID-19 for the second time this year - WKRG News 5
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Mossimo Giannulli Is Reportedly Having a “Rough Time in Prison” after Wife Lori Loughlin's Release - Vanity Fair

Play Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled for a limited time - Nintendo

lonk.indah.link

Play Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled for a limited time

Want to try before you buy? Nintendo Switch Online members will be able to play the full Standard Edition of Crash™ Team Racing Nitro-Fueled for a limited time! You’ll be able to play it from 12/30 at 11:00 a.m. PT to 1/5 at 11:59 p.m. PT.

If you’ve been eyeing this game, it’s a convenient way to find out what it has to offer, including all online game modes. And if you’re new to Game Trials, please remember that:

  • You can get ahead of the curve by downloading the Game Trial onto your system even if the trial isn’t active yet.
  • If you decide to buy either version of the game later (the Standard Edition or Nitros Oxide Edition), your saves will transfer over. This means that you can pick up right where you let off.

Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled is now 50% off for a limited time

Get 50% off Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled and Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled – Nitros Oxide Edition from 12/30 at 11 a.m. PT to 1/12 at 11:59 p.m. PT. Please note that you do not need a Nintendo Switch Online membership to enjoy the sales prices.

Learn more or purchase on the official pages for each game:

About Nintendo Switch Online

Games Trials are a perk for Nintendo Switch Online members alongside other benefits. Benefits include:

  • Playing compatible games online with your friends.
  • Backing up your save data for compatible games.
  • Playing classic Nintendo Entertainment System™ and Super Entertainment System™ games.
  • Using voice chat with the smartphone app.
  • Member-only offers.

Learn more at https://www.nintendo.com/switch/online-service/.

Everyone 10+

Cartoon Violence, Comic Mischief

In-Game Purchases

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 12:43AM
https://ift.tt/3hwfLfx

Play Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled for a limited time - Nintendo
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Saint Laurent's New Short Film Will Transport You to Summer '21 - ELLE.com

lonk.indah.link

After a year spent surrounded by the same four walls, the latest short film from Saint Laurent is a welcome taste of a different world. On December 30, Saint Laurent unveiled Summer of ’21, a short from Argentine filmmaker Gaspar Noé and guided by brand creative director Anthony Vaccarello. It takes place in a grand estate featuring everything your 2020 was missing—high-fashion, gilded scenery, and glamorous Oscar nominee Charlotte Rampling.

Summer of '21 features looks from Saint Laurent's Summer21 collection, which premiered on December 15 in the desert of North Africa. The collaboration between Vaccarello and Noé follows the director's 2019 Cannes Film Festival release Lux Aeterna. Its "red, hazy, velvety light" evokes the genre of Italian mystery thrillers known as giallo, according to a press release. Set to Donna Summer’s "I Feel Love" performed by SebastiAn, the film leans into the mystifying uncertainty everyone's been feeling as of late.

"A familiar and timeless feeling. Dreaminess and tension, decadence and danger. The unsettling strangeness of those girls gravitating around Charlotte Rampling, the mysterious and haunted priestess," the press release promises.

yves saint laurent summer 21 short film

Yves Saint Laurent

yves saint laurent summer 21 short film

Yves Saint Laurent

yves saint laurent summer 21 short film

Yves Saint Laurent

Throughout the film, several models wander through a mysterious mansion, including Anok Yai, Antonia Przedpelski, Assa Baradji, Aylah Mae Peterson, Charlotte Rampling, Clara Deshayes, Grace Hartzel, Kim Schell, Mica Arganaraz, Miriam Sanchez, Sora Choi and Stefania Cristian. They gather in a theater-like setting, fixated in front of a stage that reveals none other than Rampling, star of films such as 45 Years and The Wings of the Dove.

"I wanted to focus on the essence of things," Vaccarello said in the press release for Saint Laurent's Summer21 collection. "I think it’s a sign of the times, but I didn’t want anything bleak or heavy." Similarly, Saint Laurent's short film ends with Rampling raising her arms in a moment of expression that feels like hope for the year ahead—whatever it may look like.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"short" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 01:27AM
https://ift.tt/3rzwIdw

Saint Laurent's New Short Film Will Transport You to Summer '21 - ELLE.com
"short" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2SLaFAJ

Gov. Wolf Announces Lifting of Time Limited Mitigation on Jan. 4, Dashboard to Track Progress of COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution - Governor Tom Wolf

lonk.indah.link

December 30, 2020

The time-limited mitigation orders put in place on Dec. 12 have helped to begin flattening the curve of new cases following the post-Thanksgiving surge in Pennsylvania. As a result, today Governor Tom Wolf and Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine announced that the time-limited orders as written will expire at 8 a.m., Jan. 4 as planned.

“Our mitigation efforts over the past several weeks are working, and I thank everyone who abided by the restrictions put in place to protect us,” Gov. Wolf said. “Every time we make a small decision to avoid risk – or take steps to make our actions a little bit less risky – we are helping to stop the spread of COVID-19 and save lives. At this time, my intention is to allow the time-limited mitigation orders that went into effect on December 12 to expire as planned on January 4.

With the expiration of the time-limited orders, mitigation efforts will revert to mitigation orders in place on Dec. 11.

Mitigation efforts that will remain in effect on Jan. 4 include:

Business, work, school, child care and congregate settings
  • Child care may open, complying with guidance
  • Congregate care restrictions in place
  • Prison and hospital restrictions determined by individual facilities
  • Schools subject to CDC and commonwealth guidance.
  • Telework must continue unless impossible
  • Businesses with in-person operations must follow updated business and building safety requirements
  • Masks are required in businesses
  • All in-person businesses may operate at 75% occupancy, except where noted
  • Self-certified restaurants may open at 50% capacity for indoor dining; Restaurants that have not self-certified are at 25% capacity for indoor dining,
  • On-premises alcohol consumption prohibited unless part of a meal; cocktails-to-go and carryout beverages are allowed
  • Serving alcohol for on-site consumption must end at 11 p.m., and all alcoholic beverages must be removed from patrons by midnight
  • Personal care services (including hair salons and barbershops) open at 50% occupancy and by appointment only
  • Indoor recreation and health facilities (such as gyms and spas) open at 50% occupancy with appointments strongly encouraged; fitness facilities directed to prioritize outdoor activities.
  • All entertainment (such as casinos, theaters, and museums) open at 50% occupancy.
  • Construction at full capacity with continued implementation of protocol.
  • Hospitals are still being monitored to determine if elective procedure reductions should be ordered regionally.
  • The out-of-state testing requirement is still in place.
  • Local governments may still have more strict guidance in place.
Social Restrictions
  • Gatherings limits determined using maximum occupancy calculator.
  • Face coverings are required to be worn indoors and outdoors if you are away from your home.
  • Unnecessary travel should be limited.

Gov. Wolf also noted that the new Department of Health COVID-19 Vaccine Dashboard launched today. The dashboard provides the number of vaccinations administered by county and demographic information about the people being vaccinated.

“The dashboard and the vaccinations it tracks are two more tools in our toolbox as we stand united against COVID-19,” Gov. Wolf said. “But the fight against this dangerous disease is not over yet. We must stay the course and continue to do everything in our power to slow the spread of COVID-19 and keep our families and our communities safer.”

The data on the dashboard comes from vaccine providers that are reporting information relating to the individuals to whom they administer the COVID-19 vaccine. That information is reported into the Pennsylvania Statewide Immunization Information System (PA-SIIS).

Currently, 142 hospitals, health systems, Federally Qualified Health Centers, and pharmacies have received COVID-19 vaccine, with 56 facilities expected to receive doses this week. To date, more than 90,000 Pennsylvanians have been vaccinated. Some of these facilities have previously received vaccine, and some are receiving vaccine for the first time.

“The Federal Pharmacy Partnership (FPP) also launched this week with 126 Long-Term Care Facilities across the commonwealth scheduled to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, according to information provided by Operation Warp Speed.

Dr. Rachel Levine announced today that she has signed an order to ensure vaccine is available to health care providers not affiliated with a health system, federally qualified health center or pharmacy.

“Effective Jan. 6, the order I signed today requires vaccine providers, such as hospitals, federally qualified health centers and pharmacies to designate at least 10 percent of their vaccine shipments for non-affiliated health care providers to ensure there is supply available,” Dr. Levine said. “It also requires vaccine providers to set up a point of contact for these non-affiliated providers to register for vaccination appointments.,

“Many vaccine providers have already voluntarily begun vaccinating these providers and for that we are grateful. Today’s order formalizes this process and eliminates any confusion between vaccine providers and those health care personnel in Phase 1A.”

Both Dr. Levine and Gov. Wolf focused on the future, emphasizing that we must remain united against COVID.

“We can all have hope that next year will have a brighter ending than this year,” Gov. Wolf said. “And that hope should energize us to keep our guard up and continue the fight against COVID-19 in the months ahead. By working together, we can keep one another safe while we wait for the vaccine.”

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 31, 2020 at 01:40AM
https://ift.tt/37YLylX

Gov. Wolf Announces Lifting of Time Limited Mitigation on Jan. 4, Dashboard to Track Progress of COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution - Governor Tom Wolf
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Forecast: A rainy night will lead to dry time on Wednesday - KOMU 8

lonk.indah.link

We've successfully gotten through a wintry mix and now rain is set to fall through the night into Wednesday morning. This system will slowly push south throughout the day, leaving most areas north of I-70 dry for the better part of Wednesday. Areas south of I-70 will have a chance for lingering showers into the afternoon and a few flurries or a brief snow shower. Any snow that may accumulate is not expected to amount to more than a couple tenths of an inch.

Note that winds will also gust around 25 mph throughout the day from the northwest.

Temp. Graph Tomorrow.png

Therefore, no big issues are expected on Wednesday. Wooo!!

Total rainfall accumulations up to an inch are expected for most areas.

GOODBYE 2020

The year that shall not be named going forward will end with, what else, the chance for snow... and freezing rain.

The vast majority of Thursday will be dry. We may even see the sun! (WOW, I know!)

After 7pm, from the south, our final storm of 2020 and the first of 2021 will begin to move in. This will lead to evening snow or sleet showers which are expected to quickly change to freezing rain, if not start with freezing rain altogether.

NAM ADI 3km Precipcast.png

As the night progresses this freezing rain may intensify. The thing is, if it rains too heavily there isn't enough time for it to stick to anything and accumulate ice. Therefore, we may not end up with much ice. Please stay tuned as we track temperatures throughout the atmosphere for Thursday night over the coming days.

Regardless, travel concerns are certainly there for New Year's Eve festivities. Please be safe.

HELLO 2021

Any freezing rain before sunrise on Friday will change to rain as temps warm. Rain is expected to continue through much of the morning.

As we get more cold air in the afternoon, mainly north of I-70, we may see yet another precipitation switch, this time from rain to snow. 

Areas north of I-70 may see snow in the afternoon and midday on Friday. It is too early to know accumulation potential, but accumulation is possible. We'll have a better idea tomorrow.

Event Details.png

SATURDAY SNOW, TOO??

Yes, another shortwave is looking more and more likely on Saturday which may bring a quick dusting to an inch of snow on Saturday during the day. Still plenty of time for this one to change, it's just a passing energy wave and can easily shift or run into drier air and fizzle, so please stay tuned.

WARMER WEATHER

Okay, if you want it, I've got it. Temperatures will once again go 10 to 15 degrees above average starting Sunday and continuing into the first full week of January. That means highs in the 40s and 50s and lows in the 30s.

INT FCST PM Extended Forecast ON WALL.png

Let's block ads! (Why?)



"time" - Google News
December 30, 2020 at 10:46AM
https://ift.tt/3pCuFUo

Forecast: A rainy night will lead to dry time on Wednesday - KOMU 8
"time" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3f5iuuC

Featured Post

Highland Park Shooting: Latest Updates on Victims, Suspect | Time - TIME

lonk.indah.link T he gunman who opened fire on a Fourth of July parade in the Chicago suburb of Highland Park, Ill., seriously considered ...

Popular Posts