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AdvertisementAuli'i Cravahlo told "Podcrushed" about deferring a Columbia University place in favor of her career. Auli'i Cravalho, the voice of Moana, said she decided to pause her education aspiration over fears her acting career would lose steam. Cravalho began her acting career at 14, debuting as Disney's first Polynesian princess in 2016's "Moana." Still, Moana is her most popular role as she prepares to return the character in "Moana 2," which is out next week. Cravalho told Scary Mommy and The Cut last year she now has to reapply to Columbia because she deferred her place too many times.
Persons: Auli'i Cravahlo, Glen Powell, Anne Hathaway, Auli'i Cravalho, Moana, Cravalho, Scary, she'd, I'm, Jake Gyllenhaal, Timothée, Powell, Kevin Mazur, YouGov, Gen, Joseph Fuller Organizations: Columbia University, Walt Disney Studios, Columbia, University of Texas, New York, National Center for Education Statistics, Deloitte, Business, Harvard Business School Locations: Moana
Home Depot could be a beneficiary of the Federal Reserve's latest rate cutting cycle, according to Telsey Advisory Group. The investment firm upgraded shares of the home improvement retailer to outperform from market perform ahead of Home Depot's third-quarter earnings release on Tuesday. Analyst Joseph Feldman also lifted his price target to $455 from $360, which implies upside of 14% from Thursday's close. As a catalyst, Feldman cited upcoming Fed rate cuts. Home Depot shares are up more than 15% year to date.
Persons: Joseph Feldman, Feldman, Hurricanes Helene Organizations: Advisory, Fed, Traders, Hurricanes, Home Depot Locations: Thursday's, Milton
To navigate this change — and maybe even new job requirements — Mark Cuban says you'll need to be curious, agile and adaptable. And yet, "it's a skill that can be rare to find," Joseph Fuller, a professor at Harvard Business School, recently told CNBC Make it. Honing these three soft skills — curiosity, agility and adaptability — will never stop paying dividends for your career, Cuban adds. "The skills you need for a job today, 10 years, 100 years from now, are always the same," he says. Sharpening your curiosity skills will help you come up with stronger solutions to work problems faster, she added.
Persons: — Mark Cuban, Aneesh Raman, Joseph Fuller, , Barbara Pécherot Organizations: Economic, CNBC, LinkedIn, Employers, Harvard Business School, Arizona State University's Thunderbird School of Global Management
Michael Flynn speaking at a ReAwaken America Tour event in Manheim, Pennsylvania on October 21, 2022. But he is suing the ReAwaken America Tour and The America Project as part of separate defamation lawsuits. Funding a sham 2020 election auditFlynn’s efforts to cast doubt on the 2020 election results were only getting started when Trump left office. Clay Clark on stage at the final stop of the ReAwaken America Tour event 17 days before the 2024 election. ‘Don’t just finish on Election Day’Consequences have mounted for others who echoed Trump election lies during and after the election.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Michael Flynn, Flynn, Eric Coomer, Coomer, ” Flynn, , Chris Cuomo, Alex Jones ’, Rod, Trump, , Katy, ” Flynn –, , MAGA, , they’ve, Mark Peterson, Joseph, Mike Flynn, he’s, Olivia Troye, Mike Pence, Troye, ” Troye, Kamala Harris, Dominion —, “ Eric Coomer, Joshua Steinman, Sidney Powell, Rudy Giuliani, Josh, ” Powell, Joe Biden, Steinman, Guy, Michael Lindell, Patrick Byrne, they’re, Christopher Demspey, William Barr, Dominion, Powell, Donald, Tayfun, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, Joseph Flynn, Overstock.com, Byrne, Dempsey, ” Joseph Flynn, Michael Flynn’s, Joe Biden’s, Biden, Matt York, Doug Logan, Logan, won’t, Clay Clark, Clark, Carrie Schreck, Joe Oltmann, Oltmann, Eric ”, ‘ Don’t, Powell –, Jenna Ellis, Giuliani, retakes, Flynn’s, Elon Musk, We’ve Organizations: CNN, Dominion Voting Systems, Dominion, ReAwaken, Trump, Iron Ministries, Defense Intelligence Agency, Fox News, America, National Security Council, White, Lindell, ReAwaken America, The America, TAP, National, FBI, Justice Department, Department of Homeland, Defense, Capitol, Washington DC, Anadolu Agency, Getty, Democrat, Coomer, America Project, Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Colorado podcaster, Republican National Committee, Elon Locations: ReAwaken America, Pennsylvania, Manheim , Pennsylvania, Afghanistan, Russian, Washington, Arizona, Maricopa, Florida, Phoenix, Georgia, Oklahoma, Tulsa, , Fulton County, Georgia, New York, America, Selma , North Carolina
CNN —Taking care of an elderly parent or seriously ill spouse or family member can be physically and emotionally draining — and expensive for the caregiver in more ways than one. While employers have been expanding their benefits to help employees start families and more easily care for their children, they are now thinking more holistically about what it means to support employees’ family lives, including benefits for things like elder care, Izbicki said. Fuller constructed a return-on-investment model to assess the value of providing caregiving benefits. Given the high cost of replacing employees, reducing turnover can mean the cost of providing caregiving benefits will more than pay for itself. Protecting caregivers’ financesWorking caregivers navigate a lot: Finding doctors, heath care aides and assisted living facilities or nursing homes.
Persons: caregiving, , Melinda Izbicki, Mercer, Izbicki, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, ” Fuller, Danielle Miura, Miura, ” Miura Organizations: CNN, AARP, National Alliance for Caregiving, Harvard Business School Locations: United States
“I know the story of my neighborhood town, and I know the plight that a lot of these people escaped. But I just wanted to set the record straight.”Bartolotta isn’t alone among Republicans fighting these narratives. They’ve pushed for the rhetoric to be toned down as the city deals with a series of bomb threat hoaxes at local schools. Springfield, Ohio, has found itself thrust into the national spotlight over lies about Haitian immigrants. Focus on the major issues that affect everybody.”In Springfield, Rue said he never could have foreseen this attention from the top of his party’s presidential ticket when he won his mayoral election in November.
Persons: Bartolotta, Donald Trump, Trump, Kamala Harris ”, , , ” “, Rob Rue, Melanie Flax Wilt, Sen, JD Vance, Republicans haven’t, Vance, they’ve, They’ve, “ We’ve, ” Rue, Rich, Joseph Facun, ” Trump, Wilt, Rue, he’s, ” Laura Rosenberger, Flax Wilt, you’re, Mike DeWine, DeWine, , ” Bartolotta, ” Sean Logue, Logue, Brian Hughes, Joe Manning, ” Manning, I’m, we’ve, “ I’m Organizations: Republican, Facebook, NBC News, Commission, Republicans, Democratic, Charleroi —, GOP, Springfield, Trump, Washington, Dayton ., NBC News Local, Clark County Republican Party, Ohio Gov, New York Times, Washington County GOP, Pittsburgh Post, Gazette Locations: Pennsylvania, America, Charleroi, , Springfield , Ohio, Clark, R, Ohio, Springfield, Arizona , Georgia, Washington County , Pennsylvania, Clark County , Ohio, Pittsburgh . Springfield, Columbus, Dayton, Clark County, Bartolotta, Butler , Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, Mexico, Washington County,
Successful people are "open to unexpected opportunities and embrace change instead of fearing it," he previously told Make It. Former DoorDash and Google recruiter Nolan Church swears by another trait: continual learning. People who are constantly learning are "able to adapt as the rules of the game are constantly changing," he says. 'Filling skills gaps' is keySimilarly, as the way businesses and customers function is changing, so are the skills that you need to serve them. Constantly learning enables you to continue "filling skill gaps," says Church.
Persons: Joseph Fuller, Benjamin Granger, Nolan Church Organizations: Harvard Business School
Charges against Trump not likely affectedThe people who pushed their way into the Capitol aren’t the only ones who are facing the obstruction charge. But even before the court’s decision was handed down, Smith made clear that the charge was based on different circumstances in Trump’s case. The Supreme Court’s opinion did not address the fake electors scheme specifically. What is far more important for Trump is the Supreme Court’s pending decision on immunity. The Justice Department has taken steps for months in its prosecutions of rioters to shore up the obstruction charges.
Persons: Donald Trump, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh –, Biden, Trump, Jack Smith, Smith, John Roberts, nodded, , General Merrick Garland, Garland, Jackson, Barrett, Fischer, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Roberts, Amy Coney Barrett, , , ” Jackson, Joseph Fischer, Fischer “, ” Barrett, CNN’s Kristen Holmes, Paula Reid Organizations: CNN, Capitol, Trump, Enron, Trump . Trump, Justice Department, Department, The, Republican, Democratic, United States Capitol Locations: Pennsylvania
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of a former police officer who is seeking to throw out an obstruction charge for joining the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021, in a ruling that could benefit former President Donald Trump. Prosecutors in Trump's case said that even if Fischer wins, Trump's conduct would still be covered by a narrower interpretation of the statute. Fischer faces seven criminal charges, only one of which was the focus of the Supreme Court case. Even if the obstruction charge is ultimately dismissed, the other charges, including assaulting a police officer and entering a restricted building, will remain in place. In his election interference case, Trump faces four charges, including one count of obstructing an official proceeding and another of conspiracy to do so.
Persons: Micki Witthoeft, Ashli Babbitt, WASHINGTON —, Donald Trump, Joseph Fischer, Joe Biden's, Fischer, Trump, Trump's Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, Trump, Sarbanes, Oxley, Justice Department, ., Prosecutors Locations: Washington , DC
The nation's highest court typically wraps up its business by the end of June, but court watchers count roughly a dozen major pending decisions. Trump v. United States: The Trump immunity caseThe implications for Trump alone made this the most closely-watched case this term. As Justice Neil Gorsuch said during oral arguments, the court may write "a rule for the ages." Justices heard oral arguments in a case brought by commercial fishermen about a rule requiring them to pay for monitors that track potential overfishing. Justice Elena Kagan said during oral arguments that 70 Supreme Court rulings and more than 17,000 lower-court decisions have relied on Chevron.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Trump, Neil Gorsuch, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Jack Smith's, Smith, Lev Radin, Fischer, Joseph Fischer's, John Roberts, Loper, Raimondo, Biden, Elena Kagan, Andrew Harnik, Moyle, Roe, Joshua Turner, Ken Paxton, Brandon Bell, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, . United, Police, United, Enron, Capitol, Electoral, Biden, Washington Post, Loper Bright Enterprises, FDA, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense, Inc, Getty, Idaho, Labor, Paxton, Industry, Gov, The Washington Post, Court, GOP Locations: . United States, United States, Pennsylvania, Chevron U.S.A, Idaho's, Idaho, Texas, Red, Florida
With the rise of remote and hybrid work following the pandemic, work relationships have forever changed. AdvertisementHow workplace connections have changedWith remote work, developing a work-spouse relationship is much more difficult due to limited in-person interactions. Still, Pillemer said, relationships aren't all lost with remote work. AdvertisementWigert noted that work best friends, work spouses, and similarly strong work connections can lead to being "more engaged, productive, and committed to their organization." What is your experience with work friendships, work spouses, and loneliness at work?
Persons: Erin Mantz, Mantz, Zeno, skews, they'll, Ben Wigert, Wigert, Vicki Salemi, Salemi, Julianna Pillemer, Pillemer, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, X, I'm Organizations: Service, Business, New York University, Harvard's Business School, Work Initiative
What sets high achievers apart from everyone else, Fuller has discovered, isn't their confidence or business acumen — it's their adaptability. "They're not wedded to some predetermined career path that they set when they were a student or starting their first job," he tells CNBC Make It. It's great to set career goals and create timelines for achieving them. In both cases, "you're ignoring what motivates or interests you, and instead letting rigid expectations guide your career," says Fuller. If you fixate on a specific career path, you risk overlooking other fulfilling options for your professional life, Fuller adds.
Persons: Joseph Fuller, Fuller, , They're Organizations: Harvard Business School, Fortune, CNBC
That's normal, Joseph Fuller, a Harvard Business School professor and co-chair of the school's "Managing the Future of Work" initiative, tells CNBC Make It. A common career mistake people make that can leave you "burned out and unhappy," he adds, is not being honest about your priorities and the trade-offs you're willing to make at work. Finding a job where you have a sense of control and are excited about the work you're doing can help you stay motivated and ward off burnout, Fuller adds. The other trick to finding career satisfaction is to work your core values into your day-to-day responsibilities. Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Joseph Fuller, Fuller Organizations: Harvard Business School, CNBC
CNN —The Supreme Court is turning toward the final, frenzied weeks of its term, readying potential blockbuster decisions on abortion, guns and former President Donald Trump’s claims of absolute immunity. Trump claims ‘absolute’ immunityTrump’s appeal for immunity from special counsel Jack Smith’s election subversion charges landed at the Supreme Court late in the term and instantly overshadowed most of the docket. The Supreme Court then put that ruling on hold last year, maintaining the status quo while it decided the case. Government regulation of FacebookThe Supreme Court is confronting a series of cases at the intersection of the First Amendment and social media. The Republican governors who signed the laws said they were needed to keep the social media platforms from discriminating against conservatives.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, , Roe, Samuel Alito, Trump, Jack Smith’s, Biden, Wade, Matthew Kacsmaryk, Kacsmaryk, Joseph Fischer, , Joe Biden’s, Zackey Rahimi, Bruen, Moody, Washington, Raimondo Organizations: CNN, Wade, Conservative, Supreme, White, Trump ., Food and Drug Administration, FDA, Alliance for Hippocratic, US, Pennsylvania, Capitol, Trump, Prosecutors, New York, Rahimi, Facebook, Florida, Biden, Republican, Atlantic, of Commerce, Chevron, Natural Resources Defense, Conservatives, Bright Enterprises, . Department of Commerce Locations: Virginia, New Jersey, Washington, Idaho, Moyle v, Amarillo , Texas, , Texas, New, Louisiana, Florida, Atlanta, New Orleans, Paxton, – Missouri, . Missouri
A Tesla owner posted a video trying out the new Cybertruck frunk update by closing it on his finger. AdvertisementTesla owner Joseph Fay said the trend of sticking body parts in the Cyberfrunk frunk to test if it'll close on them needs to end, following an experiment that left his finger in a splint. Fay told BI he didn't go to the doctor after he hurt his finger, but he probably should have. Related stories"The first couple days, I couldn't move my finger at all and I had it in that splint," Fay told BI. The Cybertruck owner said he closed the frunk on multiple items off-camera before eventually trying his finger.
Persons: , Tesla, Joseph Fay, Fay, frunk, I've, Jeremy Judkins, pinky, Judkins Organizations: Service, Business
It's the busiest week of the earnings season, and it could have major consequences for the stock market. This quarter: The fast-food giant is expected to report single-digit earnings and revenue growth from the year-earlier period, LSEG shows. Amazon is set to report earnings after the close. What history shows: Pfizer earnings beat earnings expectations 87% of the time, per Bespoke. Thursday Apple is set to report earnings after the bell.
Persons: Jeffrey Bernstein, Bernstein, JPMorgan's Andrea Teixeira, Teixeira, AMZN, Joseph Feldman, Feldman, AAPL, , Apple Organizations: Apple, Pfizer, IBM, CNBC, Barclays, Investment, Management, AWS, Amazon, pharma, Food and Drug Administration, UBS Locations: China
Imagine that during a Supreme Court argument, protesters angry about the case storm the court building. Has the court proceeding been obstructed or impeded? Prosecutors charge that by participating in the Capitol riot, Mr. Fischer corruptly obstructed and impeded the joint congressional proceeding to certify the election, in violation of 1512(c)(2). More than 300 other Jan. 6 rioters have faced the same charge. Because Mr. Fischer wasn’t charged with impairing the availability or integrity of any physical evidence, Judge Nichols dismissed the charge.
Persons: Fischer, Donald Trump, Joseph Fischer, Fischer corruptly, Mr, Trump, Carl Nichols, Fischer wasn’t, Judge Nichols Organizations: Capitol, Prosecutors Locations: United States, Washington
The Supreme Court's conservative majority appeared skeptical of a charge federal prosecutors have lodged against hundreds of people who attacked the US Capitol on January 6, 2021. While the court’s three-justice liberal wing signaled support for the charge, the conservative majority raised a series of skeptical questions about its potential scope and whether it would criminalize other conduct, such as protests. The charge can tack up to 20 years onto a prison sentence. Joseph Fischer, a former Pennsylvania police officer and January 6 defendant who brought the case to the Supreme Court, argued that the law at issue, created in response to the Enron scandal in 2001, was intended to stop witness tampering, not riots. During more than an hour and a half of arguments, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Samuel Alito were among those who appeared to take issue with the government’s reading of the law.
Persons: , Joseph Fischer, John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch, Samuel Alito Organizations: Capitol, Enron Locations: Pennsylvania
Some justices expressed similar sentiments during Tuesday's arguments, asking whether the statute in question could be used to prosecute peaceful protesters, including people who at times have disrupted Supreme Court proceedings. Trump himself faces charges of violating the same law, as well as conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding. Fischer faces seven criminal charges, only one of which is the focus of the Supreme Court case. He also faces charges of assaulting a police officer and entering a restricted building, among others. Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh questioned why the Justice Department needed to charge Fischer using the obstruction statute, noting that he faces the six other charges.
Persons: Micki Witthoeft, Ashli Babbitt, Fischer, WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Joseph Fischer, Joe Biden's, Trump, Neil Gorsuch, Clarence Thomas, Brett Kavanaugh, Ginni Thomas, Trump's Organizations: U.S ., Appeals, District of Columbia, WASHINGTON —, U.S . Capitol, State, Trump, Conservative, Justice Department, Sarbanes, Oxley, Capitol, Prosecutors Locations: Washington ,, U.S, Washington, New York, Trump's
The high court’s ruling could also affect the federal election subversion criminal case pending against former President Donald Trump, who was also charged with the obstruction crime. The law, Justice Elena Kagan said, could have been written by Congress to limit its prohibition to evidence tampering. Unless the court rules broadly in a way that undermines the charge entirely, the case against Trump may still stick even if Fischer wins his case. The Fischer case has prompted some liberal critics of the court to demand that Thomas recuse himself. “There have been many violent protests that have interfered with proceedings,” Thomas asked Prelogar, pressing on a theme he returned to repeatedly during the arguments.
Persons: Critics, , Donald Trump, Joseph Fischer, Trump, , Fischer, Brett Kavanaugh, Elizabeth Prelogar, John Roberts, ’ ” Roberts, it’s, Prelogar, Kavanaugh, , ” Prelogar, Neil Gorsuch, Jamaal Bowman, Bowman, Samuel Alito, ” Alito, rioter, Elena Kagan, ” Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Jeffrey Green, Jackson, Jack Smith, Department’s, Smith, Clarence Thomas, Thomas, That’s, Thomas ’, Ginni Thomas, ” Thomas, “ I’m Organizations: CNN, Justice Department, Justice, Capitol, Court, Department, Riot, , New York Democrat, House, Hamas, Trump Locations: Pennsylvania, Gaza, Virginia, DC, Colorado,
Now, the Supreme Court will consider whether the prosecutors’ interpretation of the law can be used against the rioters and whether the convictions already secured will stick. The charge at issue in the Supreme Court case stems from a law Congress enacted in response to a series of corporate accounting scandals, including the 2001 Enron debacle. The case before the Supreme Court involves only that last charge. All three defendants appealed to the Supreme Court, but the justices granted only Fischer’s case. In a filing last week at the Supreme Court in Trump’s immunity case, Smith argued the obstruction charge should stick against Trump even if Fischer wins.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jack Smith, Trump, , Claire Finkelstein, ” Trump, Fischer, Stormy Daniels, , Joe Biden’s, Critics, Joseph Fischer, texted, ” Fischer, Nicholas Smith, Smith, Randall Eliason, Clarence Thomas, Ginni Thomas, Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Samuel Alito, Eliason, Antonin Scalia, ” Eliason Organizations: CNN, Capitol, ” Prosecutors, Trump, Justice Department, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, Enron, Prosecutors, Appeals, DC Circuit, George Washington University, White Locations: Pennsylvania, New York, , Colorado
But as data emerges on degreeless hiring, there are signs that some of these efforts may be falling short. It's based on limited data and doesn't consider alternative pathways that people without degrees use to join organizations, such as through apprenticeships and internships. But it's still a snapshot look at how some of the top employers in the U.S. are doing in their efforts to hire more workers based on skills versus degree attainment. Rather, it implies managers may be reticent to hire people without degrees, absent specific policies to assess these workers' skills. Companies that have been successful with skill-based hiring also articulate clearly the skills they require for a job, even before posting it.
Persons: it's, Matt Sigelman, What's, Sigelman, Schultz, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, Tyson, Lockheed Martin, Kroger, Stellantis, Backsliders, Meijer, Delta Organizations: Burning Glass Institute, Harvard Business School, Glass Institute, Workers, American, Foundation, Walmart, Apple, GM, Koch Industries, General Motors, Target, Tyson Foods, ExxonMobil, Yelp, Bank of America, Oracle, Companies, Lockheed, Stellantis, CNBC, Amazon, Nike, Delta, Uber, HSBC, Novartis, Delta Air Lines, US Foods Locations: U.S, Meijer
On the agenda today:AdvertisementBut first: Job anxiety is gripping the once-cushy Big Tech industry . ReutersDispatchA Big Tech reckoningWondering what happened to the free lunches and merch in Big Tech? The acronym, which stands for Zero Interest Rate Phenomenon, has become Silicon Valley shorthand for a changed workplace. Whereas before Big Tech companies couldn't hire quick enough, now it's laser focused on reducing layers . AdvertisementBut amid increased competition, an end to cushy perks, and the risk that they might wake up one day to find their office badge no longer works, many working in Big Tech feel … well, a little less special .
Persons: Gen, Aki Ito, she'd, Gen Xers, David Vades Joseph, Rob Dobi, doomsayers, they're, Jake Epstein, Scott Stapp, Matt Turner, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb Organizations: Business, Big Tech, Reuters, Microsoft, Meta, BI Boomers, US Navy, Navy, Phoenix Locations: Big Tech, Big, Red, New York
Executives at the online furniture retailer Wayfair told its staff in January that remote workers were likelier to be hit in its latest round of job cuts. Add in long-term trends, like the decline in loyalty between employers and employees , and it's no wonder remote workers feel anxious about cuts. “It’s not too surprising,” Peter Cappelli, a management professor at the Wharton School who has never been a big fan of remote work, said. “That is something remote workers should be thinking about as they’re engaging with supervisors,” she said. Remote workers aren’t doomed to the unemployment line, but they may want to try a little extra to get noticed.
Persons: Wayfair, , Dell, Goldman Sachs, “ It’s, ” Peter Cappelli, , Nick Bloom, ” Bloom, Emily Dickens, ” Prithwiraj Choudhury, ” Joseph Fuller, pang, Emily Stewart Organizations: IBM, Reuters, Google, Wharton School, Stanford, Society for Human Resource Management, Harvard Business School, Employers, Workers, “ Workers, Staff, Business
It will mean fundamentally reevaluating our conception of free will and human agency — and reckoning with our tortured relationship with shame. Many health plans have refused to cover GLP-1s for weight loss , citing limited approval from the Food and Drug Administration. I don't know when I first became overweight, but I remember the moment I was taught to be ashamed of it. They can stop the vicious feedback loop where our food choices and weight drive the shame that drives our food choices and weight. But no matter how heavy that burden was, one thing made it easier to bear: I wasn't weighed down by my shame.
Persons: I'd, They're, , dieters, I've, Wayne LaPierre, David Vades Joseph, Mounjaro, , you'd, would've, Kit Kat, they've, untangling, Stephen Spielberg's Organizations: National Rifle Association, NRA, Food and Drug Administration, New York City Marathon, Harvard Law School, GLP, BI Locations: York, Greenwich Village, darting, GLP
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