5 things you need to know now 5 things you need to know now
Biden administration to restrict travel from India amid COVID-19 surge
Final phase of troop withdrawal from Afghanistan begins
Biden administration completes review of North Korea policy
TSA extends mask requirement until September
Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad dies at 87
The United States will restrict travel from India beginning on May 4 in light of extraordinarily high COVID-19 caseloads and multiple variants circulating there, the White House confirmed Friday. The policy won t apply to American citizens, lawful permanent residents, or others with exemptions, nor will it apply to humanitarian workers. The White House said the administration was taking this step based on advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. India on Saturday reported more than 400,00 new COVID-19 cases, another single-day record and the 10th consecutive day that the country has confirmed more than 300,000 cases. Pres
5 things you need to know now 5 things you need to know now
Biden administration to restrict travel from India amid COVID-19 surge
Final phase of troop withdrawal from Afghanistan begins
Biden administration completes review of North Korea policy
TSA extends mask requirement until September
Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad dies at 87
The United States will restrict travel from India beginning on May 4 in light of extraordinarily high COVID-19 caseloads and multiple variants circulating there, the White House confirmed Friday. The policy won t apply to American citizens, lawful permanent residents, or others with exemptions, nor will it apply to humanitarian workers. The White House said the administration was taking this step based on advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. India on Saturday reported more than 400,00 new COVID-19 cases, another single-day record and the 10th consecutive day that the country has confirmed more than 300,000 cases. Pres
Stephen Hamway May 01, 2021 - 7:02 AM
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Ryan and Cody Dudgeon both grew up in northwest New Mexico. Both left for greener pastures in Missoula, Montana.
But after working as river guides in Montana and Idaho for 14 years, the married couple came to see the rivers that flowed through their New Mexico homes differently.
They moved back to Farmington in 2015 and are planning to start leading river-rafting expeditions on the Animas and San Juan rivers in May through their new company, Desert River Guides.
âWe really fell in love with the lifestyle and the whole scene when we were in Missoula, so we wanted to bring that to Farmington,â Ryan Dudgeon told the Albuquerque Journal.
CP to STB: CN + KCS ‘Plainly Flunks End-to-End Test’
CP to STB: CN + KCS ‘Plainly Flunks End-to-End Test’ Written by William C. Vantuono, Editor-in-Chief
Canadian Pacific President and CEO and CP s legal team (left to right): David L. Meyers, Sophia A. Vandergrift and Jeffrey J. Ellis.
Canadian Pacific on April 30 filed a formal objection with the Surface Transportation Board stating that CN “does not qualify for a waiver of the STB’s rules for major transactions, with respect to CN’s unsolicited proposal for Kansas City Southern.”
CP contends that a CN/KCS transaction “does not satisfy any of the criteria that the STB relied upon in finding that the waiver should apply to a CP/KCS transaction, which the STB granted to CP on April 23, 2021.” CP’s filing, by attorneys David L. Meyers, Sophia A. Vandergrift of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and Canadian Pacific Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary Jeffrey J