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President Biden will depart New York today and return to Washington, D.C., concluding a campaign trip promoting his economic policies. Mr. Trump stands accused of covering up a sex scandal surrounding the 2016 presidential campaign. “It was breathtaking,” Mr. Trump said in brief remarks to the press. “We have an Infrastructure Decade coming,” Mr. Biden said at the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology, adding, in reference to Mr. Trump, “The last guy had Infrastructure Week and never showed up.”He continued: “American manufacturing is back. He also continued to compare campus protests against the war in Gaza with the violent white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017.
Persons: Biden, Donald J, Trump, David Pecker, Mr, ” Mr, Milton J, , , supremacists Organizations: Washington , D.C, Republican, National Enquirer, Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology, Commerce Department, Nazi Locations: New York, Washington ,, Manhattan, Syracuse, American, Gaza, Charlottesville, Va, ” “ Charlottesville
Biden says he would be 'happy to debate' Trump
  + stars: | 2024-04-26 | by ( Kyla Guilfoil | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
President Joe Biden said Friday during a one-on-one interview with radio host Howard Stern that he is willing to debate Donald Trump ahead of the 2024 presidential election. "I am, somewhere, I don't know when, but I am happy to debate him," Biden said in the interview. When asked in February about Trump's calls for debate, Biden merely said, "If I were him, I'd want him to debate me, too. In response to Biden's remark on Friday, a Trump campaign adviser, Chris LaCivita, said in a post to X, "Ok let's set it up!" The president's new openness for the debate comes after Trump has been advocating for a chance to go head-to-head with Biden on stage.
Persons: Joe Biden, Milton J, Howard Stern, Donald Trump, Biden, Trump's, I'd, He's, Trump, Chris LaCivita Organizations: Rubenstein Museum of Science, Technology Locations: America, Central New York, Syracuse , New York, U.S
Best in months: The S & P 500 and Nasdaq are both higher on Friday, on pace for their best weeks since November. The gains break a three-week losing streak for the broad-based S & P and four straight losing weeks for the tech-heavy Nasdaq. About 46% of the S & P 500 has reported earnings so far, with nearly three quarters beating consensus expectations, according to FactSet. Earnings ahead : The busiest week of the first-quarter earnings season is coming up. But the company will still be buying back stock ahead of better times."
Persons: Jim Cramer, there's, Grace Hopper Superchip, Sanjay Mehrotra, Lam, Sanjay, we'll, Dow, Dupont, Jim Cramer's, Jim, Milton J, Kevin Lamarque Organizations: CNBC, Nasdaq, Microsoft, Intel, Nvidia, Micron, Lam Research, Apple, Coterra Energy, Starbucks, DuPont, Jim Cramer's Charitable, Micron Technology, Rubenstein Museum of Science, Technology Locations: Chevron, Devon, Syracuse , New York, U.S
Brittney Griner’s highly publicized legal woes in Russia and the country’s invasion of Ukraine has the top WNBA players opting to take their talents elsewhere this offseason. For the past few decades, Russia has been the preferred offseason destination for WNBA players to compete because of the high salaries that can exceed $1 million and the resources and amenities teams offered them. Nearly a dozen WNBA players competed in Russia last winter and none of them are heading back this year. Like Stewart, Vandersloot also isn’t headed back to Russia, choosing to play in Hungary where she obtained citizenship in 2016. The Griner situation also is weighing heavily on the minds of young WNBA players.
WNBA players skipping Russia, choosing other places to play
  + stars: | 2022-09-20 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Brittney Griner's highly publicized legal woes in Russia and the country's invasion of Ukraine has the top WNBA players opting to take their talents elsewhere this offseason. For the past few decades, Russia has been the preferred offseason destination for WNBA players to compete because of the high salaries that can exceed $1 million and the resources and amenities teams offered them. Nearly a dozen WNBA players competed in Russia last winter and none of them are heading back this year. Like Stewart, Vandersloot also isn't headed back to Russia, choosing to play in Hungary where she obtained citizenship in 2016. The Griner situation also is weighing heavily on the minds of young WNBA players.
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