Articles from the March 26, 2020 edition


Sorted by date  Results 26 - 31 of 31

Page Up

  • Drugmaker backpedals on specialty status for COVID-19 drug

    MATTHEW PERRONE|Mar 26, 2020

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Facing public criticism, the maker of a promising coronavirus drug said Wednesday it will waive a special regulatory designation that could have allowed it to block competition and boost profits for its treatment. Gilead Sciences said it will ask U.S. regulators to revoke the so-called "orphan drug" status it received for its experimental drug remdesivir. The status would have entitled the company to financial incentives and exclusive marketing intended for rare disease treatments. The Food and Drug Administration granted the...

  • Rural America watches pandemic erupt in cities as fear grows

    GILLIAN FLACCUS|Mar 26, 2020

    DUFUR, Ore. (AP) — The social distancing rules repeated like a mantra in America's urban centers, where the coronavirus is spreading exponentially, might seem silly in wide-open places where neighbors live miles apart and "working from home" means another day spent branding calves or driving a tractor alone through a field. But as the pandemic spreads through the U.S., those living in rural areas, too, are increasingly threatened. Tiny towns tucked into Oregon's windswept plains and cattle ranches miles from anywhere in South Dakota might n...

  • Census address work succeeded despite trouble hiring staff

    Mike Schneider|Mar 26, 2020

    ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Even though the U.S. Census Bureau had trouble finding workers for its massive address-verification work late last summer, it managed to complete the job under budget because of better-than-expected productivity of its staffers, according to a new report. The 32,000 workers sent out across the U.S. to double-check addresses ahead of the start of the 2020 census verified almost 20 addresses an hour compared with the expected goal of almost 16 addresses an hour, according to the report released this month from the U.S. G...

  • Joe Biden's inner circle: No longer a boys club

    BILL BARROW|Mar 26, 2020

    Weeks before Joe Biden launched his 2020 presidential campaign, he released a social media video to address allegations from women who said his uninvited displays of affection had made them uncomfortable. "Social norms have begun to change. They've shifted," said the former vice president, then 76. Looking straight into a cellphone camera, he added: "I hear what they are saying. I understand." Kate Bedingfield, an adviser the same age as Biden's youngest daughter, was first to propose a direct-to-lens declaration. She joined forces with Anita...

  • Game Zero: Spread of virus linked to Champions League match

    TALES AZZONI and ANDREW DAMPF|Mar 26, 2020

    ROME (AP) — It was the biggest soccer game in Atalanta's history and a third of Bergamo's population made the short trip to Milan's famed San Siro Stadium. Nearly 2,500 fans of visiting Spanish club Valencia also traveled to that Champions League match. More than a month later, experts are pointing to the Feb. 19 game as one of the biggest reasons why Bergamo has become one of the epicenters of the coronavirus pandemic — a "biological bomb" was the way one respiratory specialist put it — and why 35% of Valencia's team became infected. The m...

  • Of America and sacrifice: Is the country ready to step up?

    MICHAEL TACKETT|Mar 26, 2020

    WASHINGTON (AP) — For most Americans alive today, the idea of shared national sacrifice is a collective abstraction, a memory handed down from a grandparent or passed on through a book or movie. Not since World War II, when people carried ration books with stamps that allowed them to purchase meat, sugar, butter, cooking oil and gasoline, when buying cars, firewood and nylon was restricted, when factories converted from making automobiles to making tanks, Jeeps and torpedoes, when men were drafted and women volunteered in the war effort, has t...