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  • What’s in a name? West End casting directors raise concerns about trend for big stars | Theatre

    What’s in a name? West End casting directors raise concerns about trend for big stars | Theatre

    From Ncuti Gatwa in Born With Teeth to Alicia Vikander in The Lady From the Sea and Susan Sarandon in Mary Page Marlowe, there’s no shortage of starry celebrities being cast for the West End right now.

    It is a phenomenon happening in subsidised…

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  • Timberwolves at Lakers: Everything You Need to Know – Injury Updates, Start Time, TV, Stream & Radio Info – NBA

    Timberwolves at Lakers: Everything You Need to Know – Injury Updates, Start Time, TV, Stream & Radio Info – NBA

    1. Timberwolves at Lakers: Everything You Need to Know – Injury Updates, Start Time, TV, Stream & Radio Info  NBA
    2. JJ Redick on Lakers’ preparation for Timberwolves rematch  beritasriwijaya.co.id
    3. Minnesota visits Los Angeles after Doncic’s 43-point…

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  • Fomalhaut, the ‘solitary’ star, announces the arrival of autumn in the night sky. Here’s how to see it

    Fomalhaut, the ‘solitary’ star, announces the arrival of autumn in the night sky. Here’s how to see it

    As night falls on October evenings, glance toward the southeast horizon. If there is one star that serves to announce the arrival of fall as the leaves have begun to turn, unquestionably that title would have to go to the brightest star within…

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  • Eurozone flash PMI rises in October to level not beaten since May 2023 – S&P Global

    1. Eurozone flash PMI rises in October to level not beaten since May 2023  S&P Global
    2. Eurozone October flash services PMI 52.6 vs 51.1 expected  investingLive
    3. German Business Activity Unexpectedly Surges the Most Since 2023  Bloomberg.com
    4. Euro PMIs point to ‘growing dichotomy in performance’ between Germany and France  FXStreet
    5. German Stocks Turning In Mixed Performance; DAX Up Marginally  Nasdaq

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  • Early life sugar restriction lowers risk for heart diseases, study suggests

    Early life sugar restriction lowers risk for heart diseases, study suggests

    Restricting sugar consumption early in life lowers the risks for various heart conditions later in adulthood, including heart attack, heart failure, and stroke, according to new research. The study was based on data from the end of UK sugar…

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  • Samsung’s First Ever Nutrition Tracking Tech for Galaxy Watch – Samsung Newsroom Canada

    Samsung’s First Ever Nutrition Tracking Tech for Galaxy Watch – Samsung Newsroom Canada

    It started with a simple question: What if you could measure your nutrition in real-time, right from your wrist?

     

    Samsung’s Antioxidant Index on Galaxy Watch8 transforms what once seemed like…

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  • Early detection of chronic kidney disease in Mexico, a case for policy

    Early detection of chronic kidney disease in Mexico, a case for policy

    Introduction

    Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a challenge for health systems worldwide, and particularly in Mexico because its attention has focused on attending to the last stages.1 At national level, the numbers of patients in the last stage of…

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  • Biphenyl: 20 years of Restek innovation | Business

    Biphenyl: 20 years of Restek innovation | Business

    Twenty years ago, Restek was the first to bring chromatographers the pioneering Biphenyl LC column. Ideal for bioanalytical testing applications, such as drug and metabolite analyses, its exceptionally unique selectivity made it possible to…

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  • Focus: Novo Nordisk's new chairman has 'carte blanche' after board clear-out – Reuters

    1. Focus: Novo Nordisk’s new chairman has ‘carte blanche’ after board clear-out  Reuters
    2. The Novo Nordisk Foundation proposes new candidates for election as members of the Board of Directors of Novo Nordisk A/S  Novo Nordisk Fonden
    3. Novo Nordisk’s Board Shake-Up | PharmExec  Pharmaceutical Executive
    4. Barclays Says Novo Nordisk’s Board Overhaul Shows ‘Push for Faster Execution’ Amid Competition  富途牛牛
    5. The Power Behind the Scenes at Novo Nordisk Is Back on Top  Bloomberg.com

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  • US inflation rises less than expected to 3% in September

    US inflation rises less than expected to 3% in September

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    US inflation rose less than expected to 3 per cent in September, paving the way for the Federal Reserve to continue cutting interest rates when it meets next week.

    Friday’s annual consumer price index figure from the Bureau of Labor Statistics was up from 2.9 per cent in August but below the expectations of 3.1 per cent among economists polled by Bloomberg.

    The US dollar and Treasury yields fell slightly as the data release cemented expectations of rate cuts at the Fed’s two remaining meetings this year.

    Its publication was delayed by a week due to the shutdown of the US government and the Trump administration said on Friday that, because of the closure, inflation figures would probably not be released next month.

    Eswar Prasad, an economist at Cornell University, said Friday’s data, together with “signs of a weakening labour market, pretty much seals the deal for a rate cut” at the Fed’s next meeting.

    The dollar was down 0.2 per cent against a basket of currencies, while the two-year Treasury yield, which moves inversely to prices, fell 0.04 percentage points to 3.46 per cent.

    US stocks climbed, with the S&P 500 up 0.8 per cent in early trading.

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    The data release comes as the Fed is due to meet next on Tuesday and Wednesday, when it is expected to lower rates by a quarter point.

    The central bank made its first reduction in borrowing costs this year at its last meeting in September, lowering rates by a quarter point to 4-4.25 per cent, and indicated more cuts would follow.

    The Fed’s board has been split this year over how fast and far to cut rates as it weighs the effects of a slowing labour market against the potential for a surge in inflation in the wake of Donald Trump’s tariff drive.

    Fed chair Jay Powell has come under intense pressure from Trump to lower borrowing costs since the US president returned to power in January.

    White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said on Friday that inflation had come below expectations “thanks to President Trump’s economic agenda”.

    Blaming the shutdown on Trump’s Democratic opponents, she added that it “will likely result in no October inflation report, which will leave businesses, markets, families and the Federal Reserve in disarray”.

    Annual core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose to 3 per cent, less than the expected 3.1 per cent. Energy prices were up 2.8 per cent over the period, while food prices climbed 3.1 per cent.

    Gasoline prices increased most compared with the previous month, rising 4.1 per cent.

    Tom Simons, chief US economist at Jefferies, said Friday’s figure was “inconsistent with the expectation that tariffs would raise the price of goods”.

    “There is little pass-through to consumers from tariffs,” he said. “I’m not sure if it can last indefinitely, but retailers are cautious about passing through price increases to consumers.”

    But George Brown, senior economist at Schroders, said he would “caution against complacency” by the central bank because of the risk that tariffs could still push up prices in the months ahead. 

    “An inflation resurgence is at risk of being under-appreciated by the Fed and underpriced by the market,” he said.

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