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India is in great distress due to the killer second wave of COVID and people are shaken up with the fear of the unknown amidst the crumbling medical infrastructure and facilities. In this heart-rending scenario, corporates from across the world have stepped in to provide help and support , including the much needed medicines and oxygen to Indians.
Pharmaceutical company Pfizer Inc has decided to donate medicines worth over $70 million, which are essential for COVID treatment. In a tweet, Albert Burla, chairman and chief executive (CEO) of Pfizer says, Right now, Pfizer colleagues at distribution centres in the US, Europe and Asia are hard at work rushing shipments of Pfizer medicines that the government of India has identified as part of their COVID treatment protocol. We are donating enough of these medicines to ensure that every COVID patient in every public hospital across India can have access to them in the next 90 days free of charge. This effort has the potent
Retirees and other investors looking for predictable passive income streams have long turned to dividend stocks — which look even better now that it's a struggle to get a 1% yield on a.
Holding
In
Raytheon Technologies Corp. v. General Electric Co.,
2021 U.S. App. LEXIS 10961 (Fed. Cir., Apr. 16, 2021), the Federal
Circuit (Judges Chen, Lourie, and Hughes) reversed the PTAB s
Final Written Decision that certain challenged claims of
Raytheon s U.S. Patent No. 9,695,751 ( the 751
patent ) would have been unpatentable as obvious. The Federal
Circuit held that the relied-upon prior art failed to enable one of
ordinary skill to make and use the claimed invention.
Background
Raytheon s patent is directed to gas turbine engines and
recites a power density range. The claims
read, in relevant part:
A gas turbine engine comprising:
a fan including a plurality of fan blades . . . ; a compressor