DataBank: Another Dow Record, And S.& P. Comes Close A wave of mergers and acquisitions buoyed the market.... Read Full Article The Goods: Hitting The Links From The Desk A German game inspires golf for the cubicle.... Read Full Article The Goods: For The Converted, And A Few Others Vegetarians who prefer a more whimsical approach at trying to convince their friends that eating meat is cruel or wasteful can now choose Food for Thought dishes.... Read Full Article Troop Buildup, Yielding Slight Gains, Fails To Meet U.S. Goals The U.S. troop ’surge? has slowed, but far from stopped, Iraq’s civil war, repeated visits to Baghdad neighborhoods show.... Read Full Article Wal-Mart Removes Linux PC From Store Shelves Wal-Mart has stopped selling Everex’s Linux-based PC in its stores because of a tepid response from customers, although it will continue to sell the product online, the retailer said.... Read Full Article |
Earliest NewsJapanese Drug Company Bids for U.S. Biotech FirmJapan’s Takeda Pharmaceutical has agreed to pay $8.8 billion in cash for Millennium Pharmaceuticals, one of the earliest American genomics companies.Read Full Article Takeda Pays $8.8 Billion for Biotechnology FirmThe acquisition of Millennium Pharmaceuticals, one of the earliest American genomics companies, by Japan’s largest drug company spurred a rise in biotechnology stocks.Read Full Article French folk song is ’world’s earliest recording’, beating Edison by 11 yearsAmerican researchers have pieced together a 10-second audio clip of a French folk song which they believe is the oldest recognisable recording of the human voice.Read Full Article Just enough power to save themselvesEmerging market evangelism is nothing new, but often it has been based on dodgy data. In the 5th century BC, for instance, Herodotus, the Greek “father of history”, produced what might be regarded as the earliest commodities note. It described “ants bigger than foxes but smaller than dogs” that were mining gold in Asia.Read Full Article Retailers braced for icy blasts a Easter falls at earliest since 1913Chilly weather this weekend will spell gloom for retailers as shoppers stay indoors, an economic consultancy said yesterday.<br/> <br/> Britons are expected to spend £9.1 billion on goods and entertainment over the Easter weekend, some 14 per cent less than last year, when they splashed out £10.6 billion, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) said.<br/> <br/> Garden centres and DIY stores will be particularly hard hit. For retailers, Easter is the most important sales period after Christmas.<br/> <br/> The CEBR said: “The combination of bad economic news and bad weather is unlikely to be the best background for spending.”<br/> <br/> This week the British Retail Consortium (BRC) forecast that sales in the eight days of Easter would be £8 billion – 3 per cent higher than last year. It said that £4.4 billion would be spent in the four days leading up to Easter and a further £3.6 billion over the long weekend. But it, too, gave warning that DIY and gardening sales could fall.<br/> <br/> The CEBR said that DIY stores and garden centres in some areas could see sales fall by 50 per cent compared with last year as shoppers stayed at home and fewer home sellers spruced up their houses to impress viewers.<br/> <br/> Easter is usually a bumper weekend for the housing market, sparking the start of the spring sales season. But forecasts for icy winds and snow are likely to deter all but the most determined househunters.<br/> <br/> This is particularly depressing news for big DIY stores such as B&Q as Easter is their most significant sales period. A spokesman for the BRC said: “Easter is a more important sales season than Christmas for DIY and garden stores, so the combination of the early Easter, terrible weather and the increased pressure on customers’ budgets at the moment is leading to heavy discounts in stores. The fact that we have an early Easter was always going to be difficult.”<br/> <br/> Easter is earlier this year than in any other year since 1913 and it will not fall this early again until 2160.<br/> <br/> The CEBR said that spending was “exceptionally strong” last year as parts of the UK enjoyed higher temperatures than the Costa del Sol but that, even when compared with a normal Easter, spending this year is forecast to be “depressed”.<br/> <br/> Spending on food is expected to hold up or even increase slightly as shoppers stock up on comfort food. Sales of winter dishes such as casseroles, shepherd’s pie and bangers and mash have all risen over the past two days, according to Tesco, the UK’s biggest supermarket.<br/> <br/> Tesco stores have also reported a 25 per cent rise in pudding sales as Britons turn to traditional hot desserts to cope with the grim holiday conditions. Sales of whisky have also shot up, by 39 per cent.<br/> <br/> Consumers are set to spend £280 million on Easter eggs, the BRC said, although sales of the chocolate treats have been more modest this year than in the past.<br/> <br/> Sales increased by only 9 per cent in the first two weeks of the six-week run-up to Easter, down from a 16 per cent rise last year and a 17 per cent rise in 2006.<br/> <br/> Increasing numbers of shoppers are choosing instead to buy other chocolate novelties, such as bunnies and flowers. However, hot cross buns are still a firm favourite. Sales of the seasonal snack rose by 10 per cent in the first two weeks of the Easter period, the same as two years ago. Families are set to spend £20 million on them.<br/> <br/> Retailers hoping for a boost from last-minute errands may be disappointed. Mike Watkins, of the BRC, said: “It is possible that any last-minute rush to buy food and indulgences will be less marked than last year when the weather was unseasonably warm.”<br/> <br/> But there was a glimmer of hope. “The silver lining in the cloud for retailers is that some of the spending that does not happen this weekend may reemerge later in the spring when the weather warms up a bit,” the CEBR said.Read Full Article External News for: earliest50s-era actors showed a generation how to be men - Daily Breeze50s-era actors showed a generation how to be menDaily BreezeAfter all, the people most inspired by these two men in their earliest TV roles are the people now running the country, the people who should have learned ...and more »50s-era actors showed a generation how to be men - Daily Breeze50s-era actors showed a generation how to be menDaily BreezeAfter all, the people most inspired by these two men in their earliest TV roles are the people now running the country, the people who should have learned ...and more »Wood out 6-8 weeks, Perez to close for Tribe - msnbc.comSportsnet.caWood out 6-8 weeks, Perez to close for Tribemsnbc.comHe's not going to be available for big league action until early May, at the earliest. Chris Perez, acquired last season from the Cardinals in a package for ...Shocker! Kerry Wood out 6-8 weeksOff the Record (blog)all 283 news articles »50s-era actors showed a generation how to be men - Daily Breeze50s-era actors showed a generation how to be menDaily BreezeAfter all, the people most inspired by these two men in their earliest TV roles are the people now running the country, the people who should have learned ...and more »Wood out 6-8 weeks, Perez to close for Tribe - msnbc.comSportsnet.caWood out 6-8 weeks, Perez to close for Tribemsnbc.comHe's not going to be available for big league action until early May, at the earliest. Chris Perez, acquired last season from the Cardinals in a package for ...Shocker! 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