A Target store in San Antonio will be among the first to get an Apple 'mini shop' mysanantonio.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mysanantonio.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mother Nature deals another blow to San Antonio businesses
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Traffic moves along Guadalupe Street as the bridge over the railroad tracks remains closed due to icing, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021. Overpasses throughout the area remained closed to traffic due to icing. This week’s blast of arctic weather paralyzed much of San Antonio and did what even the pandemic frequently couldn’t do: It forced residents to stay home.Jerry Lara /Staff photo
This week’s blast of arctic weather paralyzed much of San Antonio and did what even the pandemic frequently couldn’t do: It forced residents to stay home.
What do you do when your stock becomes an inflated joke? Heck, what
can you do? This is the question several companies have pondered over the past few weeks, as a social-media-driven trading frenzy propelled struggling stocks to implausible highs.
The epitome of the trading fever was GameStop, the past-its-prime video game chain whose stock, which was trading as low as $10 in September 2020, hit $347 on January 27, 2021, courtesy in part, of a tweet by influencer and richest human on Earth Elon Musk; as of February 8, the stock’s price had plummeted to $66 – less impressive, but still well above its December valuation.
Inside a Texas center making vaccine components and adding skilled jobs during the pandemic
One of the largest centers for creating vaccine components is right here in Texas and is bringing manufacturing and skilled jobs to the Lone Star State. Author: Kristin Dean, Erica Zucco (KENS 5) Published: 10:14 AM CST January 10, 2021 Updated: 2:46 PM CST January 21, 2021
TEXAS, USA While Texans and people across the country masked up and spaced out to avoid coronavirus, teams across industries raced to find a way to prevent it. A vaccine that would be effective enough to achieve herd immunity could bring hope of, most importantly, saving lives, but also preventing illness, putting people back to work and getting the economy moving again.
Rioters wore Black Rifle Coffee, Grunt Style gear at Capitol siege
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Rioters who stormed the Capitol building on Jan. 6 were wearing apparel sold by two San Antonio companies. The rioter in the foreground, later identified as Eric Gavelek Munchel of Nashville, Tenn., wore a Black Rifle baseball cap.Win McNamee /TNSShow MoreShow Less
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This screenshot taken from Twitter shows one item distributed by a San Antonio company.CourtesyShow MoreShow Less
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Some of the rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 were decked out in apparel from two San Antonio companies Black Rifle Coffee Co. and Grunt Style that celebrate the military.