Newer stats will drop at 3 p.m. PT Friday. Cheryl will update Friday night. Nathan will also create graph based on those latest figures. He said he can block out the graphic using the current data ahead of time and then update the figures and swap out the chart, so he can get dimensions and designer can just leave hole in the page. https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/vaccination-coverage/ - Jennifer Cole had been counting down the days.
Stanford students sue to stop school from canceling some varsity sports programs
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1of3Stanfords Kelsey Murray, 21, is photographed during practice on Wednesday, May 2, 2018 at Stanford Field Hockey Camps in Stanford University, Stanford, California.Josie Lepe/Special to the ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Stanford’s Shane Griffith, top, celebrates after defeating Pittsburgh’s Jake Wentzel during their 165-pound match in the finals of the NCAA wrestling championships in March. Wrestling is one of the Stanford sports designated for elimination.Jeff Roberson/Associated PressShow MoreShow Less
3of3Olympians Courtenay Stewart, left, and Sara Lowe, of Stanford University perform their techincal duet at the 2005 AFLAC US National Synchronized Swimming Championships at the King County Aquatic Center in Federal Way, WA on April 28,2005. Sara won a bronze medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics.Meryl SchenkerShow MoreShow Less
Opinion: Leger survey explores how British Columbians would fare managing the responsibilities of the provincial health office
Author of the article: Heather Owen and Jason Allsopp
Publishing date: May 09, 2021 • 5 days ago • 3 minute read • British Columbians’ favourite topic to poke holes in is Dr. Bonnie Henry’s public health orders restricting social interactions and business operations. In fact, Leger’s research shows that public support for our province’s pandemic leaders, Dr. Henry and Minister Adrian Dix, is down by 21 points since December. Photo by Don Craig/Province of British Co /PNG
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As the pandemic wears on, we’ve all become armchair pundits, offering our opinions, criticisms and commentary on absolutely every way the pandemic has been/is being/will be managed.
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Investing in stocks and shares always involves an element of risk, but if you are investing money you don’t actually have, then it starts to get seriously dangerous.
Yet that’s exactly what growing numbers of investors are doing. They are borrowing money they do not have and investing in shares they think will make them rich, with the aim of repaying the debt and making a small fortune.
Borrowing to invest is known as gearing or leveraging. While it can magnify your returns in the good times, it also multiplies your losses in the bad.
As US technology stocks coninue to rise and Bitcoin creates billionaires, leveraging up is all the craze.
Three things your clients may call you about this week .
Hunt for £40bn lost savings
Three things your client may call you about this week.
Professional Adviser I tracked down my £14k lost pension - before the Government seized it
More savers are trying to track down forgotten-about pension pots before the government takes the money for other uses, according to
The Telegraph. The Government said in January that pensions that had lain dormant for years would be used to fund good causes in an expansion of its scheme that already does the same thing with old bank accounts.
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