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Mark Zaleski/The Tennessean/USA Today Network Snow falls on parked cars in Concord, New Hampshire, on January 16. Gary Hershorn/Corbis News/Getty Images Snow and ice dust a worker who was removing snow from a sidewalk in Des Moines on January 13. Dan Powers/USA Today Network Firefighters rescue a man after his car was stuck in a flooded area in Charlotte, North Carolina, on January 9. Gregg Pachkowski/USA Today Network Snow covers the trees around the Holy Hill Basilica and National Shrine of Mary in Hubertus, Wisconsin, on January 9. Tariq Zehawi/NorthJersey.com/USA Today Network Flooding is seen at an intersection in Spartanburg, South Carolina, on January 9.
Persons: Nikki Haley, Deb Cram, Andrew Kelly, Mark Zaleski, Snow, Will Lanzoni, Rogelio V . Solis, Amanda Andrade, Rhoades, Reuters Isaac Hammond, Geoff Stellfox, Brandon Bell, Christian Monterrosa, Daniel Cole, Dan Busey, Crews, RJ Sangosti, Jeffrey T, Barnes, Chip Somodevilla, Barbara J, Al Drago, Gary Hershorn, Brendan McDermid, Joseph Prezioso, Jim Vondruska, Andrew Harnik, Eric Seals, Rebecca Zimmerman, Antonio Perez, Zuma Snow, Erin Hooley, Drake, Sam Wolfe, Bryan Woolston, Kelly, Jo St, Aubin, Dan Powers, Peter Zay, Floyd Bennett Field, Spencer Platt, Scott Olson, County Sheriff Tommy Ford, Jaide Garcia, CNN Linda Cox, Gregg Pachkowski, of Mary, Mike De Sisti, Joe Raedle, Michael Gordon, Michael Gordon Workers Brian Henderson, Phil Murphy, Tariq Zehawi, Alex Hicks Jr, Nouran Salahieh, Joe Sutton, Sarah Dewberry, Raja Razek, Jennifer Henderson Organizations: CNN, National Weather Service, Oregon -, . Maine, Police, Rockies, South Washington Cascades, Omni Mount Washington, USA, Reuters, Mississippi State Capitol, Reuters Isaac Hammond braves, Austin, Bergstrom International Airport, Iowa State Capitol, Getty, Denver International Airport, MediaNews, Denver Post, NFL, Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers, AP, Columbus Dispatch, Bloomberg, Corbis, Reuters Storm, AP Vehicles, Chicago Tribune, TNS, Storm Bros, Network Firefighters, County Sheriff, National, of, Milwaukee Journal, People, Michael, Michael Gordon Workers, New, New Jersey Gov, Spartanburg Herald Locations: Pacific Northwest, Pacific, Oregon, Northwest, Portland , Oregon, Columbia, Oregon - Washington, Maine, • Buffalo , New York, Buffalo, Tennessee , Mississippi , Arkansas , Kansas, In Tennessee, Knoxville, Washington, Washington , Idaho, Montana, Portland, South, Bretton Woods , New Hampshire, New, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Nashville , Tennessee, Concord , New Hampshire, Jackson, Wheeling , Illinois, Washington ,, Malcolm , Iowa, Austin , Texas, Des Moines, AFP, Florence , Alabama, Orchard Park , New York, Williamsburg , Iowa, Worthington , Ohio, Atlantic , Iowa, Hudson, Jersey City , New Jersey, Winthrop , Massachusetts, Ankeny , Iowa, Iowa, Northwestern, Farmington Hills , Michigan, Oak Park , Illinois, Chicago, Bamberg , South Carolina, Annapolis , Maryland, Kaukauna , Wisconsin, Charlotte , North Carolina, Anadolu, Brooklyn , New York, Iowa City , Iowa, Panama City Beach , Florida, Florida's Bay County, County, Myrtle Grove , Florida, Hubertus , Wisconsin, Bay County , Florida, Florida , Alabama, Georgia, Totowa , New Jersey, New Jersey, Spartanburg , South Carolina, Cincinnati, Detroit, Texas, Gulf, Buffalo , New York, Watertown , Massachusetts, Midwest
The Politicized EV Charger ‘Revolution’
  + stars: | 2024-01-16 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Images: Getty Images/Zuma Press Composite: Mark KellyThe government rollout of EV chargers has been a slow-motion affair, and as you’d expect the reason is politics. The feds are throwing billions of dollars to build charging stations, but they’ve added social-justice and union mandates that make the build-out more complicated than necessary. In a better Washington, there would be no subsidies for EV chargers. The market would meet demand, as it did with gasoline stations. But we live in the age of subsidy, and the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) last week announced $623 million in new awards for charging stations.
Persons: Mark Kelly Organizations: EV, Federal Highway Administration Locations: Washington
Apple faces an array of challenges in China. Photo: Cfoto/NurPhoto/Zuma PressApple is offering rare discounts in China, including on its latest iPhones, in a bid to beat back growing competition in the high-end market. The tech giant is running a promotion from Thursday through Sunday in China in which it is cutting the price of iPhones by the equivalent of up to $70. Other products will be discounted by up to $110. The promotion comes ahead of the weeklong Lunar New Year holiday beginning Feb. 10, a customary gift-giving season in China.
Persons: NurPhoto, Zuma Press Apple Organizations: Apple, Zuma Press Locations: China
Biden Took New Hampshire for ‘Granite’
  + stars: | 2024-01-16 | by ( John Fund | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Wonder Land: Surveying the record of his three years in office, Mr. Biden has decided his re-election turns on two events: the Capitol riot of 2021 and Mr. Trump’s efforts to reverse the 2020 presidential election results in several states. Images: Getty Images/Zuma Press Composite: Mark KellyJoe Biden is running as if he were unopposed for the Democratic presidential nomination, but he may face a comeuppance in New Hampshire. In the name of “diversity,” the Democratic National Committee demoted the Granite State from its traditional status as the first-in-the-nation primary in favor of South Carolina, where Mr. Biden’s 2020 campaign took flight. New Hampshire decided to hold its primary on Jan. 23 anyway, much to the DNC’s chagrin. Mr. Biden decided not to put his name on the ballot, forcing allies to run a write-in campaign against Rep. Dean Phillips and self-help author Marianne Williamson .
Persons: Biden, Mark Kelly Joe Biden, Biden’s, Dean Phillips, Marianne Williamson Organizations: Democratic, Democratic National, DNC, Rep Locations: New Hampshire, Granite State, South Carolina
Journal Editorial Report: Paul Gigot interviews pollster Mark Penn. Images: AP/Zuma Press Composite: Mark KellyThe Supreme Court has been trying to restore the proper constitutional balance of power, and its next opportunity comes Wednesday when it hears two cases challenging its own landmark Chevron doctrine (Loper Bright Enterprises, Inc., v. Raimondo and Relentless, Inc. v. Dept. In 1984 in Chevron v. NRDC, the Justices ruled that courts should defer to administrative agencies’ interpretation of laws when the statutory text is silent or ambiguous. In practice this has become a license for Congress to write vague laws that delegate legislative power to administrative agencies. Over the last 40 years the federal register of regulations has grown by tens of thousands of pages.
Persons: Paul Gigot, pollster Mark Penn, Mark Kelly, Raimondo Organizations: Zuma, Bright Enterprises, Inc Locations: Chevron v
Kate Moss at 50: A supermodel through the decades
  + stars: | 2024-01-16 | by ( Amy Woodyatt | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
CNN —British supermodel Kate Moss turns 50 today — and she remains as much a cultural icon as when she emerged as a breakout star more than three decades ago. Johnny Green/PA/Getty Images Kate Moss and her then-boyfriend, the actor Johnny Depp, attend the Golden Globe Awards in 1995. Dave M. Benett/Getty Images Kate Moss and Jamie Hince pose with bridesmaids after getting married on July 1, 2011 in Southrop, England. Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images Moss arrives for a screening of the movie "Loving" at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival. Scroll through the gallery above to see some of the most memorable moment’s from Kate Moss’ life and career.
Persons: Kate Moss, Moss, it’s, , Corinne Day, Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, Claudia Schiffer, Chanel, Calvin Klein, Johnny Green, Johnny Depp, Ron Davis, Pierre Verdy, Donatella Versace, De, UPPA, Zuma Moss, Pete Doherty, MJ Kim, Alexander McQueen's, Andy Paradise, Banksy, Andy Warhol's, Marilyn Monroe, Carl De Souza, Marc Jacobs, Patrick McMullan, Mario Testino, Kate Who, Dave M, Jamie Hince, bridesmaids, Neil Mockford, Stella Tennant, Lily Cole, Karen Elson, Jourdan Dunn, David Gandy, Jewel Samad, Antonin Thuillier, Stella McCartney, Chris Joseph, Louis Vuitton's, Peter White, Lila, Princess Eugenie of York, Jack Brooksbank, George's, Alastair Grant, Stephane De Sakutin, Amber Valletta, Daniele Venturelli, Amber Heard, Evelyn Hockstein, Jamie McCarthy, David Bailey, Kate, ” Moss, Jefferson Hack, Marc Quinn, Lucian Freud, Johnny Cash, Paul McCartney, Elton John Organizations: CNN, Vogue, Burberry, British Vogue, Getty, Globe, Glastonbury Music, Olympic, London, Louis, Milan, BBC, Forbes, Stripes Locations: British, South London, Croydon, London, Couture, Paris, AFP, Glastonbury, New York City, Southrop, England, St, Windsor , England, Fairfax, Fairfax , Virginia, Arizona, Egypt
Deere has been investing billions of dollars in building out computer-assisted services for farmers. Photo: Alan Look/Zuma PressDeere said it would tap SpaceX’s satellite fleet to propel the tractor maker’s digital farming push and help automate planting and harvesting in remote locations. The world’s largest farm machinery manufacturer signed a deal with SpaceX’s Starlink business to connect tractors, seed planters, crop sprayers and other equipment in areas that lack adequate internet service, allowing them to use Deere’s digital products.
Persons: Deere, Alan Look, Zuma Press Deere, SpaceX’s Organizations: Zuma Press
Chip Wars Boost Europe’s Top Tech Company—for Now
  + stars: | 2024-01-15 | by ( Stephen Wilmot | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Not even the ASML’s most advanced competitors have managed to copy its extreme-ultraviolet equipment. Photo: Cfoto/DDP/Zuma PressThe more the U.S. government worries about China’s ambitions in the chip industry, the more equipment for making chips that China seems to buy. When ASML, the Dutch company that makes the world’s most advanced lithography machines for manufacturing microchips, reports fourth-quarter results next week, one of the most eye-catching numbers will be the share of sales it made in China. This reached an extraordinary 46% in the third quarter, up from just 8% in the first three months of the year.
Persons: ASML Organizations: DDP, Zuma Locations: China
Coca-Cola, which had a truck at a London stadium in December, is considered a steady performer. Photo: Zuma PressAfter an everything rally that pushed major stock indexes near new highs, some investors just want the good stuff. They are looking for quality stocks, broadly defined as shares of companies with some combination of growth, reliable profits and strong balance sheets. Those run the gamut from recent highfliers such as Microsoft and Nvidia to steady performers such as Coca-Cola and Johnson & Johnson .
Persons: Johnson Organizations: Microsoft, Nvidia, Johnson
Is There a Constitutional Right to Vagrancy?
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Journal Editorial Report: The week's best and worst from Kim Strassel, Bill McGurn and Dan Henninger. The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear an appeal challenging a judicial ruling that established a de facto constitutional right to vagrancy. ( City of Grants Pass v. A panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2022 blocked the Oregon town of Grants Pass from enforcing “anti-camping” laws on public property. The judges said the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment prohibits cities from arresting or imposing penalties on homeless people for squatting on public property if there aren’t enough shelter beds for every vagrant.
Persons: Kim Strassel, Bill McGurn, Dan Henninger, Mark Kelly, Johnson Organizations: Zuma, Mark Kelly Good, West, Ninth Circuit Locations: West Coast, Grants, Oregon
WSJ Opinion: The Pandemic Killed Biden’s Presidency
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Wsj Opinion | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
WSJ Opinion: The Pandemic Killed Biden’s PresidencyWonder Land: Covid-19 disrupted people’s private lives. Biden addressed concerns with a $6 trillion spending spree that's had little effect on them. Images: SMG/Zuma Press/AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly
Persons: Biden, that's, Mark Kelly Organizations: SMG, Zuma Press, Getty
WSJ Opinion: Will Trump ‘Destroy’ Democracy?
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Wsj Opinion | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
WSJ Opinion: Will Trump ‘Destroy’ Democracy? Wonder Land: Surveying the record of his three years in office, Mr. Biden has decided his re-election turns on two events: the Capitol riot of 2021 and Mr. Trump’s efforts to reverse the 2020 presidential election results in several states. Images: Getty Images/Zuma Press Composite: Mark Kelly
Persons: Will Trump, Biden, Mark Kelly
Gavin Newsom Objects—to Us
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Wonder Land: Surveying the record of his three years in office, Mr. Biden has decided his re-election turns on two events: the Capitol riot of 2021 and Mr. Trump’s efforts to reverse the 2020 presidential election results in several states. Images: Getty Images/Zuma Press Composite: Mark KellyThese columns caught Gavin Newsom ’s attention this week, we’re delighted to say. The California Governor is upset that we reported on the wealth-tax proposal in the state Assembly because Mr. Newsom says he doesn’t support such a tax. Mr. Newsom on Wednesday presented his budget for the coming year, including ideas to close a $68 billion shortfall. He called us “ideological warriors,” “a broken-clock” and “shameful” for criticizing a wealth-tax bill that was getting an Assembly hearing that day.
Persons: Biden, Mark Kelly, Gavin Newsom ’, we’re, Newsom, Locations: California
Anthony Fauci Fesses Up
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Biden addressed concerns with a $6 trillion spending spree that's had little effect on them. Images: SMG/Zuma Press/AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyAnthony Fauci has never struggled to speak his mind. For instance, the six-feet rule for social distancing “sort of just appeared” without a solid scientific basis. It’s not news that the six-feet rule lacked scientific rhyme or reason. It noted that the virus’s transmissibility depends on many factors, including ventilation, the host’s viral load and symptoms, and the duration of exposure, among other things.
Persons: Biden, that's, Mark Kelly Anthony Fauci, National Institutes of Health potentate Organizations: SMG, Zuma Press, Getty, National Institutes of Health
Biden Strikes the Houthis, at Last
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
The '2023 Reagan National Defense Survey' highlights China as the greatest national security threat to the U.S. and finds strong support for arming Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. Images: Zuma Press/AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark KellyThe press is reporting that Thursday’s U.S.-British strikes against the Houthis in Yemen risk escalating the current conflict in the Middle East. The conflict was already escalating. The question has been whether the U.S. and its allies would respond to Houthi efforts, backed by Iran, to hijack commercial shipping and shoot at the U.S. Navy. The Houthis have been using these weapons depots, radars and launch sites to “endanger freedom of navigation in one of the world’s most vital waterways,” as the White House said in a statement.
Persons: Mark Kelly, Biden’s Organizations: Reagan National Defense Survey, Zuma Press, Getty, U.S . Navy, White Locations: China, Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan, U.S, Yemen, Iran,
Why Big Tech Is Still Minding Its Bills
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Dan Gallagher | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Google began laying off hundreds of employees this week across several divisions. Photo: Gene Blevins/Zuma PressEven the deepest pockets have their limits. Amazon and Google-parent Alphabet sit on a combined $184 billion in cash and short-term investments. Those two, along with big tech peers Microsoft , Apple and Facebook -parent Meta Platforms, hold the highest such balances among nonbanking companies on the S&P 500, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Amazon and Alphabet are also currently generating just under $95 billion combined in annual free cash flow.
Persons: Gene Blevins Organizations: Google, Microsoft, Apple, Facebook, P Global Market Intelligence
AI Has a Trust Problem. Can Blockchain Help?
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Isabelle Bousquette | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Blockchain is best known as the ledger of cryptocurrencies. Some tech vendors say the technology could track in granular detail the data that artificial intelligence is trained on, and could be useful when AI churns out dubious results. Photo: Omar Marques/Zuma PressThe difficulty of ensuring artificial intelligence algorithms are safe, unbiased and accurate is turning some companies to a technology once hyped as transformative, but that has failed to catch on in business: blockchain. Known for underpinning bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, blockchain is a data structure that makes it possible to create a digital ledger of transactions and share it among a network of computers. Once a transaction is made, the blockchain remains an immutable record of it.
Persons: Blockchain, Omar Marques Organizations: Zuma
Investors Hope the Dogs of the Dow Can Find Their Bite
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Charley Grant | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Chevron’s stock is one of this year’s 10 Dogs of the Dow. Photo: Paul Hennessy/Zuma PressThe Dogs of the Dow weren’t the best in show last year, but the recent rally in beaten-down corners of the stock market is giving hope to fans of the popular contrarian investment strategy. The approach calls for buying the 10 stocks with the highest dividend yields of the 30 Dow components at the beginning of a year—the Dogs of the Dow—and holding them over the next 12 months. The group of stocks is rebalanced at the end of each year to maintain an investment in the top 10 dividend payers.
Persons: Paul Hennessy Organizations: Dow, Zuma
The U.S. builds only a little more than one nuclear submarine a year. Photo: U.S. Navy/Zuma PressWhen the Center for Strategic and International Studies simulated a war between the U.S. and China over Taiwan, the wargame ended with Taiwan still free, at grievous cost. The U.S. loses two aircraft carriers and up to 20 destroyers and cruisers; China sees more than 50 major surface warships sunk. As Eric Labs, a navy analyst for the Congressional Budget Office explains, China can replace lost ships far more quickly. In the past two years, its navy has grown by 17 cruisers and destroyers; it would take the U.S. six years to build the same number under current conditions, he said.
Persons: Eric Organizations: U.S . Navy, Zuma, Center for Strategic, International Studies, U.S, Eric Labs, Congressional Locations: U.S, China, Taiwan
Is NBC Rooting for Trump?
  + stars: | 2023-12-05 | by ( James Freeman | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Florida Governor and Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis campaigns in Ames, Iowa last month. Photo: Fritz Nordengren/Zuma PressA recurring phenomenon of this election cycle is that the same media outlets promoting regular allegations that Donald Trump is the greatest threat to the country also regularly encourage news consumers to view the next most popular candidate among Republican voters as doomed to fail. The loss of media credibility in the Trump era is an old story but isn’t there any journalistic interest in at least allowing a non-Trump alternative to receive a fair hearing? Witness Sunday’s questioning on Meet the Press by NBC’s Kristen Welker, who in interviewing Gov. Ron DeSantis (R., Fla.) seemed determined to confirm the theory that media companies want another Trump candidacy to boost ratings while enhancing the chances of a Democratic victory.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Fritz Nordengren, Donald Trump, Trump, NBC’s Kristen Welker Organizations: Republican, Trump, Gov, Democratic Locations: Florida, Ames , Iowa, Fla
Cape Canaveral in Florida. Photo: Miguel RodrÃGuez/Zuma PressHines is developing a sprawling industrial park near Florida’s Cape Canaveral, aiming to cash in on the booming aerospace industry. The giant Texas real-estate firm is betting that companies such as Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Elon Musk’s SpaceX and their suppliers will pay high rents for warehouses and manufacturing space close to launch sites that can store rockets, space shuttles, satellites and any parts used to build and maintain them.
Persons: Miguel RodrÃGuez, Zuma Press Hines, Jeff Bezos Organizations: Zuma Press, Origin, Elon, SpaceX Locations: Cape Canaveral in Florida, Florida’s Cape Canaveral, Texas
The Rise of Temu’s Chinese Parent Will Reshape E-Commerce
  + stars: | 2023-12-05 | by ( Jacky Wong | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Temu has 52 million monthly active users in the U.S., just a year after its launch. There’s a new online-shopping champion in China: PDD , the company behind discount-retailing app Temu, is now the country’s most valuable e-commerce company. After a 78% rise this year, PDD’s market value has hit $193 billion, snatching the crown from Alibaba. Though PDD’s revenue last quarter was still less than a third of Alibaba’s, it’s growing much faster. Revenue for the three months ended in September surged 94% from a year earlier—Alibaba’s only grew 9%.
Persons: Temu, Nikos Pekiaridis Organizations: Revenue, Alibaba, P Global Market Intelligence Locations: U.S, There’s, China, Alibaba
About a dozen trucking companies bought properties at a bankruptcy court-supervised auction that unloaded 75% of Yellow’s properties. Above, a Yellow terminal in Orlando, Fla. Photo: Paul Hennessy/Zuma PressYellow is set to raise more than $2 billion after a bankruptcy auction that will disperse much of its national network of truck terminals among rivals, casting deeper doubt on a long shot bid to revive the trucker. About a dozen trucking companies bought properties at a court-supervised auction that unloaded 75% of Yellow’s properties for a total of just under $1.9 billion, according to a filing Monday evening in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. The bids must be approved by the court, which is scheduled to hold a hearing Dec. 12.
Persons: Paul Hennessy, Zuma Organizations: Bankruptcy Locations: Orlando, Fla, U.S, Delaware
Beneath Gaza, a labyrinth of tunnels used by Hamas has complicated Israel’s ground offensive in the Palestinian enclave. WSJ’s Rory Jones—who visited the tunnels in 2014—explains the unique challenge they pose for Israel. Photo: Yousef Mohammed/Zuma PressWASHINGTON—Israel has assembled a system of large pumps it could use to flood Hamas’s vast network of tunnels under the Gaza Strip with seawater, a tactic that could destroy the tunnels and drive the fighters from their underground refuge but also threaten Gaza’s water supply, U.S. officials said. The Israel Defense Forces finished assembling large seawater pumps roughly one mile north of the Al-Shati refugee camp around the middle of last month. Each of at least five pumps can draw water from the Mediterranean Sea and move thousands of cubic meters of water per hour into the tunnels, flooding them within weeks.
Persons: Rory Jones —, , Yousef Mohammed Organizations: Zuma Press WASHINGTON, Israel Defense Forces Locations: Gaza, Israel
Rep. Patrick McHenry was thrust into the spotlight this year when he was tapped to be speaker pro tempore. Photo: Tom Williams/Zuma PressWASHINGTON—Rep. Patrick McHenry , who steered the House through unprecedented turmoil as the temporary speaker for three weeks earlier this year, said he wouldn’t run for re-election. “I will be retiring from Congress at the end of my current term,” McHenry said in a statement Tuesday. “This is not a decision I come to lightly, but I believe there is a season for everything and—for me—this season has come to an end.”
Persons: Patrick McHenry, Tom Williams, , ” McHenry, Organizations: Zuma Press WASHINGTON — Rep
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