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CTV News
4 days ago
- General
- CTV News
Decades after Air India 182 bombing, families fear memories of tragedy are fading
A drifting piece of wreckage is seen floating in the water about 200 kilometres off the Irish coast on Monday, June 24, 1985, following the Air India Boeing 747 bombing which killed all 329 people on board on Sunday, June 23, 1985. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Caulkin and Redman
Yahoo
05-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
The Earth Pantry to close storefront in Augusta
AUGUSTA, Ga. (WJBF) – The Earth Pantry, an eco-friendly store in Downtown Augusta, is closing its storefront this month, according to an announcement from owner Alexia Redman. In a Facebook post on May 28, Redman shared the news with customers that the store's last day in operation would be June 12, 2025. The store is offering a 25% off throughout the store upon closing, and a 'Goodbye Party' is scheduled for June 7 at the location on 1026 Broad Street. The announcement in its entirety can be read below: With over 5000 containers saved from the landfill, The Earth Pantry is closing our storefront. It has been a blessing to be able to connect with this community. If this store opened just so that I could meet so many beautiful people, that would be enough. If this store opened so that one person could meet Jesus, then that would be enough. I am grateful that this little place on Broad St was able to share so much love, feed so many, help so many with eczema, and educate so many on the effects that plastic & chemicals have on the health of ourselves and our planet. I hope that the spirit of The Earth Pantry will continue to stir in your minds as you continue to shop differently knowing that you can save the earth one choice at a time. The Earth Pantry will not be gone forever. I will continue to make our products on our family farm, Pinefield Eco Farm. For now, we will be focusing on wholesale, growing our farm, and nurturing our soon-to-be baby. Our plan is to create a mobile farm market. Some of the products from The Earth Pantry will be coming back in this mobile market. If you would like to stay tuned for updates, please subscribe to our mailing list. Until then, we will not leave you hanging. Please keep your eyes open for a document that contains all our sources, so that you can continue to get the products you trust and love. We are offering 25% off store-wide through June 12th. Please help us to leave without inventory. If you want your pantry to look like our store, all containers will be on sale as well! If you are interested in any furniture/equipment or have a business inquiry, please reach out to us at hello@ Love, Alexia Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
04-06-2025
- Climate
- Yahoo
South Florida's rainfall to taper off this week after days of downpours
South Florida's rainy season started off to an unusually wet start, but the downpours are expected to back off for the rest of the week. Flood watches and advisories were in effect from Sunday to Wednesday morning, with rain totals reaching more than 4 inches in parts of Miami-Dade County on Monday, said National Weather Service meteorologist Will Redman. Yet, no reports of flash flooding have been reported, Redman said. Rather, while some roads saw some minor flooding, the heaviest bands of rain stayed offshore, lessening the chances for actual flooding. And the rest of the week from Wednesday and into the weekend is not expected to be slammed with the level of rainfall the region saw the last few days, Redman said. Cooler air and overcast skies will define the region on Wednesday from 'decaying thunderstorm activity,' according to the National Weather Service. A big reason for the lessened rain can be attributed to the massive cloud of dust from the Sahara Desert making its way over the region. This wave of Saharan dust, which isn't expected to fully dissipate until after the weekend, will dry out the atmosphere and reduce the chances for thunderstorms, Redman said. If the region does get rain, it would be in the form of shallow showers, he said. Chances for scattered showers on Thursday, Friday and into the weekend are between 30% and 40% along the coast and between 60% and 70% in the inland areas, Redman said. Despite the rainy season beginning on May 15, Redman said this period of consecutive, heavy rainfall is unusual. 'This setup, this is not your typical water pattern,' he said. 'A normal situation is what we'll see the next few days with the afternoon and evening showers and storms and then clearing out overnight.'


CNBC
30-05-2025
- Business
- CNBC
A big comeback month ends. Investors might be mistaken thinking all is well
Stocks roared back to life in May, but trouble still looms for Wall Street. The S & P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average are up 6.2% and 3.8%, respectively, in May. Both benchmarks are on pace to snap three-month declines. The Nasdaq Composite advanced nearly 10% this month, on track for its best month since November 2023. The U.S. pausing tariffs on China boosted stocks, easing concerns that protectionist trade policies could tip the economy into a recession. Technology investors in particular, which face a high tariff risk, breathed a collective sigh of relief. The sector is up 11.3% in May, led by gains in Nvidia and Super Micro Computer . .SPX mountain 2025-05-01 SPX in May But CLSA strategist Alexander Redman warns the market could soon be in for a rude awakening. "We fear the current market complacency may prove temporary, replaced by a realization that household and corporate spending plans and thus U.S. growth may disappoint," Redman wrote in a note Thursday. Trade worries flared up once again this week. A U.S. federal trade court struck down Trump's reciprocal levies Wednesday night, then an appeals court reinstated them a day later. Trump also said Friday in a Truth Social post that China " violated " its current trade agreement with the U.S., while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent noted talks between the two countries were "a bit stalled." "We ascribe a striking degree of complacency to the current S & P 500 price action which is seemingly discounting a rapid normalization across multiple sentiment indicators damaged as a consequence of Trump's policy unorthodoxy," Redman at CLSA added. "This extends beyond trade to unfunded tax cuts, some disruption to labor owing to the threat of deportation, and arbitrary cuts to government agencies, among other concerns."

Straits Times
23-05-2025
- Business
- Straits Times
US stock investors ‘astronomically complacent' about trade war, Singapore-based analyst says
TOKTO – US stock investors appear 'astronomically complacent' about the amount of damage the trade war will inflict on corporate earnings, according to CLSA's chief equity strategist. For Alexander Redman, economic data show significant cause for concern about US stock prices. US firms' capital-expenditure intentions have gone negative for only the fourth time this century; the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index is at a multi-decade low; and two-thirds of US households now believe that unemployment will be worse in 12 months' time. 'Real damage was done to corporate and household sentiment during the period that the tariffs were being applied,' Mr Redman said in an interview, adding that it's unlikely they will 'return to where we were back in December.' Even with the trade war hanging over markets, the S&P 500 sits less than 5 per cent off its record high from February, and close to the median year-end forecast of strategists tracked by Bloomberg. What's more, the market currently sees 10 per cent earnings-per-share growth this year and 14 per cent next year, versus the compound annual growth rate of about 6.7 per cent in the past four to five decades, according to Mr Redman, who says expectations are too high. 'The sell-side are not going to tell you this because they were uniformly discredited in 2022 and 2023 for calling a US recession that never arrived,' he said. 'They don't want to stand in front of that train again.' Mr Redman is based in Singapore. Because of concerns about the US economic outlook, the brokerage is underweight export-driven Asian economies such as South Korea and Taiwan, and prefers markets that are more insulated from US risks, such as India and Australia. Mr Redman remains neutral on Japan, seeing the shares as near fair value, and on China, where the outlook is constrained by tepid consumption. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.