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CNN —Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have detected water molecules in the atmosphere of a small, blazing-hot exoplanet 97 light-years from Earth. The planet, named GJ 9827d, is about twice Earth’s diameter, and it’s the smallest exoplanet found to have water vapor in its atmosphere, according to a new study. Starlight filtering through the planet’s atmosphere helped astronomers measure the signature of water molecules. It’s possible that the planet is a mini-Neptune with a hydrogen-rich atmosphere that contains water vapor. Or astronomers suspect that GJ 9827d could be a warmer version of Jupiter’s icy moon Europa, which contains an ocean beneath a thick, icy crust.
Persons: , Laura Kreidberg, Max Planck, Björn Benneke, Hubble, Ian Crossfield, Pierre, Alexis Roy, we’re, ” Benneke, , GJ, Benneke, Thomas Greene, James Webb, Webb, ” Kreidberg Organizations: CNN —, Hubble, Max, Max Planck Institute, Astronomy, University of Montreal’s Trottier Institute for Research, University of Kansas, University of Montreal’s Trottier Institute, GJ 9827d, NASA’s Ames Research, James Webb Space Telescope, , 9827d Locations: Heidelberg, Germany, Lawrence , Kansas, Silicon
The hyper-competitive original song and original score categories include nominees from the films “Barbie'' to ”Oppenheimer'' and beyond. Diane Warren, original song nomination for “The Fire Inside” from “Flamin’ Hot.”Warren describes the song as bringing “a little reggaeton to the Oscars.”"I’m thrilled. Mark Ronson, original song nomination for “I'm Just Ken” from “Barbie”Ronson wrote “I'm Just Ken” with Andrew Wyatt. Thank you.”Academy-award winner Ludwig Göransson, original score nomination for “Oppenheimer”This is Göransson's third nomination. And everyone’s really proud of one another.”Laura Karpman, original score nomination for “American Fiction”This is Karpman's first Oscar nomination.
Persons: Diane Warren, Mark Ronson, Andrew Wyatt, Billie Eilish, Barbie, ” Oppenheimer, Warren, Ronson, Wyatt, “ I’m, Ken ”, “ Barbie, ” Jon Batiste, Dan Wilson, Scott George, “ Wahzhazhe, Eilish, O’Connell, James Bond, ” Mark Ronson, Lady Gaga, Anthony Rossomando, ” Laura Karpman, Indiana Jones, ” John Williams, ” Robbie Robertson, “ Oppenheimer, ” Ludwig Göransson, Jerskin Fendrix, Karpman, It's, Fendrix —, he's, , Dave Mullins, Brad Booker, John, Yoko, ” Warren, I’m, I’ve, It’s, There’s, “ I'm, “ Barbie ” Ronson, , Ken ’, Greta, Ryan, Gosling, Ken, , Batiste, Suleika, Finneas O'Connell, Finneas, Ludwig Göransson, Oscar, Chris Nolan, Nolan, Laura Karpman, Martin Scorsese, Robbie Robertson, Mullins, Booker's, MULLINS, BOOKER, Sean, Lennon Organizations: ANGELES, , Music, Academy, ” Academy Locations:
The House was scheduled to vote Thursday on a GOP plan for cutting income, sales and property taxes by a total of $1.6 billion over three years. Top Republicans want to impose a single personal income tax rate of 5.25%, replacing three rates that top out at 5.7%, starting in 2025. The dispute over the single-rate or “flat” plan blocked a large tax cut in Kansas last year, when a dozen other states cut taxes, according to the conservative-leaning Tax Foundation. Her income tax proposal would increase the standard deductions that all individual filers claim. Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson, a Wichita-area Republican, said retaining an income tax with multiple rates would keep Kansas “behind the eight ball” economically.
Persons: Laura Kelly, Kelly, , Sen, Mike Thompson, Republican Sen, Caryn Tyson, Kelly's, Sam Brownback, “ Kansans, ” Kelly, Brianna Johnson, Neva Butkus, Butkus, Kim Reynolds, Ty Masterson, It's, Hannah Fingerhut Organizations: , Democratic, GOP, Gov, Top Republicans, of Revenue, Tax Foundation ., Kansas City, Republican, Social, Republican Gov, Taxation, Economic, Tax Foundation, Kansas, Associated Press Locations: TOPEKA, Kan, Kansas, Tax Foundation . Kansas, Iowa, Wichita, Des Moines , Iowa
As the 2024 election heats up, President Biden remains weighed down by low approval ratings. But Democratic governors think Biden can raise his numbers by boosting his visibility, per The NYT. The governors believe the president should attend more ribbon-cuttings to further sell the infrastructure law. AdvertisementWhile a swath of Democratic governors across the country enjoy positive approval ratings in their states, President Joe Biden remains in a political rut. Advertisement"The problem is going to be, it's going to take us 20 years to build all this infrastructure out," Walz said.
Persons: Biden, , Joe Biden, Phil Murphy, Biden's, Laura Kelly, Tim Walz, " Walz Organizations: Service, Biden, Democratic, The New York Times, New, New Jersey Gov, The, Kansas Gov, Times, Minnesota Gov Locations: Arizona, New Jersey, Kansas
Nick Leopard, left, founder and CEO of Accordion, and Atul Aggarwal, the company’s president, shown seated in the company’s New York headquarters. Photo: justine knight photographyAs private-equity firms intensify their focus on performance of businesses they back, the finance chiefs at those companies increasingly feel the heat to deliver as markets shift. “CFOs are under more pressure than ever before,” said Nick Leopard , chief executive of private markets consulting firm Accordion. “They’re not expected to [just] close the books anymore. They need to be more focused on strategic issues.”
Persons: Nick Leopard, Atul Aggarwal, justine, , “ They’re Locations: York
British great Laura Kenny sets sights on Paris
  + stars: | 2023-11-27 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
LONDON, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Track cyclist Laura Kenny, Britain's most successful female Olympian, has set her sights on making the team for the Paris Games despite barely having competed in the past two years. Kenny gave birth to her second child in July after suffering a miscarriage in November 2021 and then having surgery following an ectopic pregnancy. Kenny, who is married to now-retired track cyclist Jason Kenny, Britain's most-decorated Olympian with seven golds, competed at the London, Rio and Tokyo Games and was dominant force in the endurance disciplines. Kenny gave birth to her first son Albie in 2017 and Monty was born in July this year. They will never have the burden of thinking, 'Oh, mum had me and then ended her career.'"
Persons: Laura Kenny, Britain's, Kenny, I'm, Jason Kenny, Albie, Monty, Katie Archibald, Albie I, I've, Martyn Herman, Pritha Sarkar Organizations: Paris Games, Team GB, Tokyo Games, Commonwealth Games, Tokyo Olympics, Madison, Thomson Locations: London, Rio, Tokyo
Laura Kusisto — Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
  + stars: | 2023-11-26 | by ( Laura Kusisto | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Laura KusistoLaura Kusisto is the national legal affairs reporter for The Wall Street Journal, where she leads the paper’s abortion coverage and also focuses on transgender issues, voting rights, religious liberty and state courts. Laura led a team of reporters who received the 2022 Newswomen's Club of New York's award for breaking news for coverage of the fall of Roe v. Wade and in 2020 was a co-recipient of the Newswomen’s Club’s Nellie Bly award for a story about fatal errors in New York's coronavirus response. During her time at the Journal, Laura also has covered the U.S. housing market and economic development in New York.
Persons: Laura Kusisto Laura Kusisto, Laura, Roe, Wade, Nellie Bly Organizations: Wall Street, New Locations: New York
Many home buyers do more of the work today finding a property rather than leaving it to their real-estate agents. Photo: Mario Tama/Getty ImagesThe litigation that could end up changing how millions of Americans buy and sell homes was hiding in plain sight for three decades. The current set of rules governing how agents are paid, which effectively mean sellers are the ones who set compensation for buyer agents, date to the 1990s. Those rules have come under significant scrutiny, particularly as commissions have remained around 5% to 6% of the sale price even as home values have skyrocketed and many buyers do more of the work finding a home themselves online.
Persons: Mario Tama
Government borrowing between April and October totalled 98.3 billion pounds ($122.49 billion), the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said on Tuesday. The data meant borrowing was running about 22 billion pounds higher than in the same period last year but almost 17 billion pounds less than the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) forecast in March, giving Hunt some fiscal room for manoeuvre. The ONS said that in October alone, public sector net borrowing, excluding state-owned banks, was 14.9 billion pounds last month. A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to public sector net borrowing, excluding state-owned banks, of 12 billion pounds in the month. The figure was also higher than the OBR's forecast for borrowing of 13.7 billion pounds in the month.
Persons: Jeremy Hunt, Laura Kuenssberg, Isabel Infantes, Hunt, Rishi Sunak, Sunak, Liz, Michal Stelmach, Stelmach, William Schomberg, Kate Holton, Jason Neely Organizations: BBC Broadcasting House, REUTERS, National Statistics, KPMG, Labour Party, ONS, Thomson Locations: London, Britain
The recent verdict against the National Association of Realtors and large residential brokerages is likely to change the amount of commissions paid by home buyers and sellers, as well as how they are paid out. WSJ’s Laura Kusisto joins J.R. Whalen to discuss. Photo: Tamir Kalifa For The Wall Street JournalResidential real-estate brokerages are seeking to reassure investors after last month’s $1.8 billion verdict against the National Association of Realtors, another potential blow to an industry already reeling from a severe housing-market slowdown. Industry analysts say the historic verdict could prompt changes in how real-estate agents are paid and eventually push commissions down. A federal jury on Oct. 31 found NAR and two large brokerages conspired to keep costs artificially high.
Persons: WSJ’s Laura Kusisto, Whalen, Tamir Kalifa, brokerages Organizations: National Association of Realtors, Industry
New York City officials say retailers and food delivery apps must act on unsafe e-bike batteries. There have been hundreds of fires linked to lithium ion batteries in e-bikes and scooters in the city. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. "It's extensively damaged," Kavanagh said, adding that the battery that sparked the fire was for a "scooter of some kind." The city has seen hundreds of fires linked to the lithium ion batteries that power electric bikes and scooters in recent years.
Persons: , Laura Kavanagh, Albertha West, Michael West, Jamiyl West, Kavanagh, haven't, Meera Joshi, They're, Joshi, Josh Gold, Uber, Patrick Burke Organizations: Service, , Fire, Amazon, Walmart, City Hall, UL, Local Locations: York City, — New York City, Brooklyn, New York City
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City officials say retailers and food delivery companies must do more to halt the proliferation of unsafe e-bike and e-scooter batteries, after a fire blamed on an electric scooter's lithium ion battery killed three people over the weekend. Fire officials said the fire broke out on the ground floor of the building. City officials have blamed off-market batteries and chargers that don't meet safety standards for many of the fires, and they have lobbied the federal government to strengthen regulations governing the sale of e-bikes and batteries. City officials haven't said whether the battery that caused Sunday's fire came from a vehicle used to make deliveries for one of the food service apps, and they didn't immediately respond to a Tuesday email seeking further information. Tens of thousands of the city's food delivery workers rely on e-bikes to get dinner to customers quickly, and Deputy Mayor for Operations Meera Joshi singled out the delivery industry during remarks at a City Hall news conference Tuesday, noting that time is money for delivery workers.
Persons: Laura Kavanagh, Albertha West, Michael West, Jamiyl West, “ It’s, ” Kavanagh, Kavanagh, , haven't, Meera Joshi, “ They're, ” Joshi, Josh Gold, Uber, Patrick Burke, “ We’ve Organizations: , Fire, Amazon, Walmart, City Hall, UL, , U.S, Congress Locations: — New York City, Brooklyn, New York City
Fresh off another round of victories in Tuesday’s elections, abortion-rights activists are seeking to put the issue on the ballot in numerous states in 2024, a wild card that could influence next year’s campaigns for the White House and control of Congress. When Ohio voters this week passed a measure to protect abortion under the state constitution, it gave abortion-rights groups seven consecutive victories in ballot initiatives since the Supreme Court last year eliminated a constitutional right to the procedure. Those successes have come in politically diverse states, from Kansas and Kentucky to Michigan and California.
Organizations: White, Ohio Locations: Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, California
Voters cast ballots at a polling location in Virginia on Tuesday, where Democrats retained control of the state Senate and gained control of the House. Photo: Tierney Cross/Bloomberg NewsThey were disparate elections in different states—for governor, state Senate, a supreme court seat and on a constitutional amendment. But the results of off-year races on Tuesday pointed in one direction: Voters will come to the polls to defend abortion rights. In the Republican strongholds of Ohio and Kentucky, as well as politically purple Virginia and Pennsylvania, abortion-rights supporters spent millions of dollars to tell voters that GOP lawmakers couldn’t be trusted to set state abortion policy after the Supreme Court last year eliminated a right to the procedure under the U.S. Constitution.
Persons: Tierney, , couldn’t Organizations: Bloomberg, GOP, U.S, U.S . Constitution Locations: Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, U.S .
Democrats are finding ways to advance their candidates and causes in traditionally red states. Tuesday's elections show that while the party may never reach its former heights in increasing red states, it can still notch victories that continue to claw back power. Some states have long elected Democrats at the local level while rejecting Republicans at the national level and vice-versa. AdvertisementAdvertisementHere are some of the ways Democrats are still winning:Keep it local. Issue 1's proponents, like other previous red state movements, couched some of their appeals in broader language that would welcome Republicans.
Persons: Roe, Wade, , Andy Beshear, Laura Kelly, Raphael Warnock, Tip, Daniel Cameron, Katie Hobbs, Donald Trump's, Hobbs, Sen, Mark Kelly, John Bel Edwards, Kelly, Gabby Giffords, Gretchen Whitmer's, Beshear, it's, Steve Beshear, juiced, Nan Whaley, Sabato Crystal Ball, Perry Bacon Jr, Cameron, Reagan, Glenn Youngkin, Floridians Organizations: Service, GOP, Trump, Democratic Gov, Democratic, Gov, Democrats, Republicans, Louisiana Democrats, Michigan Gov, Ohio, Force, Midwesterners Locations: Ohio , Kentucky, Kansas, New York, Kentucky, In Kansas, Arizona, Louisiana, In Arizona, America, Ohio, Cleveland, Virginia
In the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe. v. Wade, abortion-rights supporters have put their opponents on defense by spending more money on advocacy, passing state-level protections through ballot measures and helping elect Democrats. On Tuesday, two states will test whether the abortion-rights movement can keep up its momentum. In Ohio, a ballot measure will ask voters to protect abortion access, while in Virginia, the issue could help decide which party controls the state legislature.
Persons: Roe, Wade Locations: Ohio, Virginia
An open house at a home for sale in Scarsdale, N.Y., early this year. Photo: Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg NewsHome buyers and sellers face the prospect of major changes to how much and in what way they pay their real-estate agents, following Tuesday’s historic verdict against the National Association of Realtors and large residential brokerages. Those changes could range from minor tweaks to the commission system to a more radical restructuring of the residential real-estate industry, such as more people buying homes without using agents or buyers paying their agents by the hour.
Persons: Tiffany Hagler Organizations: Geard, Bloomberg News Home, National Association of Realtors Locations: Scarsdale, N.Y
Plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit have asked a judge to order changes in how the home-sale industry operates. Photo: Rich Pedroncelli/Associated PressKANSAS CITY, Mo.—A federal jury on Tuesday found the National Association of Realtors and large residential brokerages liable for about $1.8 billion in damages after determining they conspired to keep commissions for home sales artificially high. The verdict could lead to industrywide upheaval by changing decades-old rules that have helped lock in commission rates even as home prices have skyrocketed—which has allowed real-estate agents to collect ever-larger sums. It comes in the first of two antitrust lawsuits arguing that unlawful industry practices have left consumers unable to lower their costs even though internet-era innovations have allowed many buyers to find homes themselves online.
Persons: Rich Pedroncelli, Organizations: Associated Press KANSAS CITY, National Association of Realtors Locations: Mo
Plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit have asked a judge to order changes in how the home-sale industry operates. Photo: Rich Pedroncelli/Associated PressKANSAS CITY, Mo.—A federal jury on Tuesday found the National Association of Realtors and large residential brokerages liable for about $1.8 billion in damages after determining they conspired to keep commissions for home sales artificially high. The verdict could lead to industrywide upheaval by changing decades-old rules that have helped lock in commission rates even as home prices have skyrocketed—which has allowed real-estate agents to collect ever-larger sums. It comes in the first of two antitrust lawsuits arguing that unlawful industry practices have left consumers unable to lower their costs even though internet-era innovations have allowed many buyers to find homes themselves online.
Persons: Rich Pedroncelli, Organizations: Associated Press KANSAS CITY, National Association of Realtors Locations: Mo
(CNN) — The tears were flowing backstage at Phillip Lim’s latest runway show, as the fashion designer made has return to the New York Fashion Week last month after four years away. CNN: Did planning your return to New York Fashion Week take you back to when you launched 3.1 Phillip Lim in the first place? Models pose during the presentation of 3.1 Phillip Lim's Fall-Winter 2006 collection at New York Fashion Week on February 4, 2006. JP Yim/WireImage/Getty ImagesZhou: 3.1 Phillip Lim was founded on the idea of ‘why not?’Phillip and I were both 31-years-old. Does 3.1 Phillip Lim have that roadmap right now, or is the ‘second act’ still being written?
Persons: Phillip Lim’s, Lim, , Phillip Lim, Wen Zhou, Madison McGaw, Phillip Lim’s “, Zhou, it’s, ” Phillip Lim “, ” Lim, , I’m, let’s, couldn’t, Phillip Lim's, JP Yim, ’ Phillip, Phillip, we’d, It’s, Ezra J, William, Tina Leung, Prabal Gurung, Laura Kim —, Slay, Eva Chen, Dimitrios Kambouris, Phillip Lim CNN, Liya Kebede, Liya, Phillip Lim Spring, Victor Virgile, , I’ll, You’ve, John Nacion, , Sou Lai, That’s what’s Organizations: CNN, New York, titans, Zhou, Pacific Islanders, Getty, Sou Lai CNN Locations: New York, New, New York City
After weeks of failed votes, the House selected Rep. Mike Johnson as speaker following the ouster of Rep. Kevin McCarthy. Photo: Win McNamee/Getty ImagesMike Johnson was in a Louisiana courtroom in June 2015 defending tighter abortion restrictions adopted by the state when phones flashed with alerts that the Supreme Court had just recognized a constitutional right to same-sex marriage. Johnson dashed out of the ongoing proceedings to publicly criticize the decision, said opposing counsel Ilene Jaroslaw, who was representing abortion providers in the case. It was a moment, she said, that underscored the depth of Johnson’s zeal for conservative legal causes.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Kevin McCarthy, Win McNamee, Johnson, Ilene Jaroslaw Locations: Louisiana
With winter approaching, Ukrainian officials are desperate for more air defenses to protect their power grids from Russian strikes that could plunge the country into freezing darkness. So desperate, in fact, that they are willing to experiment with a monster of a weapons system that was the brainchild of Ukraine and is now being pursued by the Pentagon. Americans officials call it the FrankenSAM program, combining advanced, Western-caliber, surface-to-air missiles with refitted Soviet-era launchers or radars that Ukrainian forces already have on hand. Two variants of these improvised air defenses — one pairing Soviet Buk launchers and American Sea Sparrow missiles, the other marrying Soviet-era radars and American Sidewinder missiles — have been tested over the past several months on military bases in the United States and are set to be delivered to Ukraine this fall, officials said. A third, the Cold War-era Hawk missile system, was displayed on Ukraine’s battlefield this week for the first time, in an example of what Laura K. Cooper, a senior U.S. defense official, had described this month as a FrankenSAM “in terms of resurrection” — an air defense relic brought back to life.
Persons: Laura K, Cooper Organizations: Pentagon Locations: Ukraine, Soviet, United States, U.S
King's Fine FoodLaura King has run a caviar business for almost 20 years — even supplying Britain's royal family with the coveted foodstuff. Now, she's known as the "caviar queen," and her firm King's Fine Food imports hundreds of kilos of caviar into the U.K. every two to three weeks. Oscietra caviar is the most popular product sold by King's Fine Food. Laura King (left), founder of King's Fine Food, with her daughter Holly King, the company's sales director. "We're two women in business, probably the only two women in the caviar business almost in the world.
Persons: Laura King, King, John King, Holly —, , Conran, Melba, Terence Conran, retails, , You've, you'll, I've, King's, Holly King, Mason, Queen Elizabeth II, Holly, We've Organizations: King's, CNBC, Fine Food, Harrods, Cathay Pacific, Emirates . British Airways, Foods, John King Brain, Royal Locations: London, Dorchester, British, Iran, Russia, Belgium, China
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Persons: Conn ., Conn . Conn, N.M, Roe, Wade, Dobbs Organizations: Iowa Pa, ., . Ill . Utah W.Va, D.C, Jackson, Health Organization Locations: N.H . Maine, Mont, Minn, Ore . Idaho Wis, N.Y, S.D . Mich, Wyo, Iowa, Nev . Ohio, . Ill . Utah, Colo . Va, Kan, Mo, Ky, Calif, Conn, Conn . Conn, N.C, N.J . N.J, Tenn, Ariz, Del, S.C . Md, Md . Ga, Ala . Miss, Texas La, Alaska Fla, Hawaii, R.I, ., S.C . N.J . N.J ., Del . Texas Md, Md, La, Tenn . N.J, Del ., D.C, Conn . N.J, Del . Md
Georgia’s Six-Week Abortion Ban Upheld
  + stars: | 2023-10-24 | by ( Laura Kusisto | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The ruling by Georgia’s Supreme Court was the latest in a flurry of legal battles over abortion. Photo: John Amis/Associated PressGeorgia’s highest court on Tuesday upheld a law banning abortion after about six weeks of pregnancy, a decision that will keep abortion access significantly constrained throughout most of the South. A 6-to-1 majority of the Georgia Supreme Court rejected a claim by abortion providers that the law, enacted in 2019, was clearly unlawful when it was passed because Roe v. Wade, which protected the right to an abortion, was the law of the land at the time.
Persons: John Amis, Roe, Wade Organizations: Georgia’s, Associated Press, Georgia Supreme Locations: Georgia
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