He calls it, they pulled a congress. Waiting for goodow, and a lot of others said sticking their heads somewhere else. Its trough. Jim, thanks for coming on. Well see you on the set in pebble. Thank you for having me here. I appreciate it. Thank you for coming. Join us tomorrow. Squawk on the street is next. Good wednesday morning. Welcome to squawk on the street. Im melissa lee, with carl quintanilla, jim cramer and david faber here at the new york Stock Exchange. Take a look at u. S. Futures. We should note the dow is posting its bst january in 17 years. We are looking to go higher on the dow here. Investors are awaiting the house vote this afternoon on postponing the debt ceiling. News in europe, David Cameron vowing a referendum on whether britain remains in the eu. In japan, longest losing streak in two months. China awaits data, thats out tonight. The road map in the u. S. Starts off at the golden arches. U. S. Samestore sales up 9 for mcdonalds, helped by the dollar menu and mcr
As a librarian, I am lucky to be surrounded by comics. I grew up reading
Archie and the weekend comics in the
Winnipeg Free Press, spending many afternoons drawing the characters and making paper dolls of them.
In my late teens, reading the work of creators such as Julie Doucet, Adrian Tomine, Geneviève Castrée, Lynda Barry, and Gabrielle Bell helped me through difficult times. Until then, I had no idea that comics could be so varied and speak so frankly about topics like depression, identity, and sexuality. Comics have a unique intimacy that connects readers through their layered and often visceral communication of experiences, narratives, and ideas.