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Biden Has No Plan To Get His Border Crisis Under Control, Migrants Think They Have

Biden Has No Plan To Get His Border Crisis ‘Under Control,’ Migrants Think They Have Biden Has No Plan To Get His Border Crisis ‘Under Control,’ Migrants Think They Have ‘Open Invitation’: AP Reporter By Mar 9, 2021 Julie Pace, a reporter with the Associated Press, said in an interview at the start of the week that the Biden administration has no plan in place to deal with President Joe Biden’s border crisis and that migrants are reading his policies as an open invitation to come to the U.S. When asked by host Chris Wallace if Biden had a plan to get his border crisis under control, Pace responded, “Well, they don’t have a plan at the moment to get this under control.”

New Movies to Watch This Week: Disney s Raya, Amy Poehler s Moxie and Eddie Murphy s Return

Skip to main content Currently Reading New Movies to Watch This Week: Disney s Raya, Amy Poehler s Moxie and Eddie Murphy s Return Peter Debruge, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail It’s a very different landscape this week than it was a year ago, just before the pandemic forced cinemas to close around the country. Still, with New York cinemas cautiously reopening this week and many other markets determined to bring moviegoing back, the studios and indie distributors alike are bringing many of their long-delayed releases onto screens, albeit in an entirely new way.  For contrasting examples, look at how two of the majors are handling what were intended to be family film tentpoles: Paramount decided to bypass theaters entirely with “The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run,” using the title to launch its new subscription service, Paramount Plus (audiences can also rent it, at a price of $19.99, for a limited time via PVOD platforms). Disney tested a similar approach with

Stocks Waver, Yields Climb After Jobs Report

By Joe Wallace and Karen Langley U.S. stocks swung between gains and losses in a wild trading session Friday after February s stronger-than-expected employment report helped government bond. | March 11, 2021

Threat of more attacks in wake of Novichok poisoning: Wallace

Top Story March 1, 2021 LONDON: The world could face more chemical attacks in the wake of the Novichok poisoning now people can learn how to make such weapons online, the Defence Secretary has warned. Ben Wallace said access to such knowledge “can turn what might be ambitions into realities” for a whole range of attacks. Speaking to the PA news agency three years after the attempted killing of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury on March 4 2018, he said Russia remained an “adversary” of the UK. The then 66-year-old former Russian spy turned double agent for MI6 and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia were left seriously ill after coming into contact with the deadly nerve agent. Dawn Sturgess, 44, died after she and her partner Charlie Rowley fell ill in nearby Amesbury months later.

U S Stocks Open Higher as Bond Markets Calm

By Joe Wallace Stocks climbed in early trading Monday as investors awaited a slate of Federal Reserve speakers and data on the manufacturing sector. The S&P 500 rose about 1.3% and the Nasdaq Composite Index advanced 1.6% after a bruising week for technology stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 397 points, or 1.3%. The broad advance came as the yield on 10-year Treasury notes, the benchmark borrowing cost in global debt markets, slipped to 1.43% from 1.459% Friday. Yields fall when bond prices rise. Stocks, and particularly shares of tech companies, have been buffeted by volatile moves in government-bond markets in recent trading sessions. A lurch higher in yields last week called into question the prospect of a long period of low interest rates, which had underpinned the past year s booming rally in stocks.

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