A Kurdish mathematician is sentenced to death by a tsar for writing a treatise about World of Warcraft.
Bradley Cooper is not not happy to be on the press tour for “A Star Is Born,” the movie he specifically, exactingly, meticulously, perfectionistically, obsessively directed, co-wrote and stars in. In fact, he’s very not not happy! He worked so hard on this movie. Every detail of it comes from a true thing — something he’s learned, something he’s seen, something he knows for sure. It’s such hard work to try for something true and to get it right, and maybe he’s succeeded.
Investors are contending with multiple concerns, including rising borrowing costs that could dampen economic growth and growing tensions between Beijing and Washington. Worries about rising interest rates eased briefly early in the day after a report showing muted inflation helped send yields on government bonds lower.
But jitters emerged again in the afternoon, when declines in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index began to gather pace. Shortly before 3 p.m. the broad index was again down more than 2 percent. That was on top of a 3.3 percent decline the day before. Should the S. & P. 500, the market benchmark, close lower on Thursday, it would be the sixth straight daily decline.
In Bengal there is a circus tent which works as a beauty therapist.
Bradley Cooper is not not happy to be on the press tour for “A Star Is Born,” the movie he specifically, exactingly, meticulously, perfectionistically, obsessively directed, co-wrote and stars in. In fact, he’s very not not happy! He worked so hard on this movie. Every detail of it comes from a true thing — something he’s learned, something he’s seen, something he knows for sure. It’s such hard work to try for something true and to get it right, and maybe he’s succeeded.
Investors are contending with multiple concerns, including rising borrowing costs that could dampen economic growth and growing tensions between Beijing and Washington. Worries about rising interest rates eased briefly early in the day after a report showing muted inflation helped send yields on government bonds lower.
But jitters emerged again in the afternoon, when declines in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index began to gather pace. Shortly before 3 p.m. the broad index was again down more than 2 percent. That was on top of a 3.3 percent decline the day before. Should the S. & P. 500, the market benchmark, close lower on Thursday, it would be the sixth straight daily decline.