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Justice Department Issues Business Review Letter to the Association of Independent Commercial Producers

The Department of Justice announced today that it will not challenge a proposal by the Association of Independent Commercial Producers (AICP) to operate an online platform for advertisers to solicit bids from companies that provide production services for commercial advertisements. The Department’s position was stated in a business review letter from Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim for the Antitrust Division to counsel for the AICP.




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Justice Department Issues Business Review Letter to AmerisourceBergen Supporting Distribution of Critical Medicines Under Expedited Procedure for COVID-19 Pandemic Response

The Department of Justice announced today that it will not challenge collaborative efforts of AmerisourceBergen Corporation (AmerisourceBergen) to identify global supply opportunities, ensure product quality, and facilitate product distribution of medications and other healthcare supplies to treat COVID-19 patients.




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Statement from Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim on the 20th Anniversary of World Intellectual Property Day

This week, the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division celebrates the 20th anniversary of World Intellectual Property Day. The division marks the occasion by remembering the revolutionary ideal that our nation’s founding fathers embedded in the U.S. Constitution: that “securing . . . to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries” will “promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts.” For over 200 years, this “exclusive Right” has served as the foundation of the U.S. system of patent, copyright, and trademark laws.




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Leading Cancer Treatment Center Admits to Antitrust Crime and Agrees to Pay $100 Million Criminal Penalty

Florida Cancer Specialists & Research Institute LLC (FCS), an oncology group headquartered in Fort Myers, Florida, was charged with conspiring to allocate medical and radiation oncology treatments for cancer patients in Southwest Florida, the Department of Justice announced.  This charge is the first in the department’s ongoing investigation into market allocation in the oncology industry.




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Justice Department Requires Divestitures as Dean Foods Sells Fluid Milk Processing Plants to DFA out of Bankruptcy

The Department of Justice announced today the conclusion of its investigation into proposed acquisitions by Dairy Farmers of America Inc. (DFA) and Prairie Farms Dairy Inc. (Prairie Farms) of fluid milk processing plants from Dean Foods Company (Dean) out of bankruptcy.  The department’s investigation was conducted against the backdrop of unprecedented challenges in the dairy industry, with the two largest fluid milk processors in the U.S., Dean and Borden Dairy Company, in bankruptcy, and Dean faced with imminent liquidation.




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Cengage and McGraw-Hill Terminate Merger Agreement in Response to Antitrust Concerns

Cengage Learning Holdings II Inc. and McGraw-Hill Education Inc. mutually agreed to abandon their plans to merge after the Department of Justice informed the companies it had serious concerns that the proposed transaction, as structured, would harm competition.




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Generic Pharmaceutical Company Admits to Fixing Price of Widely Used Cholesterol Medication

Apotex Corp., a generic pharmaceutical company headquartered in Florida, was charged with fixing the price of the generic drug pravastatin, the Department of Justice announced today.  According to the one-count felony charge filed today in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Apotex and other generic drug companies agreed to increase and maintain the price of pravastatin, a commonly prescribed cholesterol medication that lowers the risk of heart disease and stroke.  The conspiracy began in May 2013 and continued through December 2015.




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Interesting photos - 25 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 26 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 27 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 28 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 29 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 30 Apr 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 1 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 2 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 3 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 4 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 5 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 6 May 2020 - Flickr




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Interesting photos - 7 May 2020 - Flickr




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Dancing Horses - 6 May 2020 - Flickr


A beautiful morning in the Dutch Betuwe area with horses playing during sunrise.




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Protesters, Inc.

The Progressive Industrial Complex has its work cut out for it. Having been roundly rejected by the American people, the American left is watching its accomplishments be deconstructed, executive order by executive order. And that which cannot be undone by the pen is slated to be dismantled by legislation. This truly has sent the left over the edge, Astroturfing town hall meetings with the help of its media collaborators.




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GOP Health Bill Short Of Support In Do-Or-Die Vote

Rep. Andy Harris is now leaning yes, but told Derek Hunter the bill won't get a vote Friday.




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Join WBAL's Town Hall: President Donald Trump's First 100 Days

WBAL is hosting a town hall meeting on Thursday, May 4th from 8pm to 10pm that will be broadcast live on 1090 AM and streaming on wbal.com!. Sign up to participate here.




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Classic DHS: Derek Analyzes The Pina Colada Song

Derek take a closer look at a 70's classic.




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Town Hall: One Year Since The Election of Donald Trump as President of the United States

We would like you to come and sit alongside C4, Derek Hunter and other WBAL listeners at the WBAL Penthouse at 3800 Hooper Ave.




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Mayor Catherine Pugh Discusses The Death Of Officer Sean Suiter

Mayor Catherine Pugh joins Jimmy Mathis to discuss the death of the Baltimore police officer Sean Suiter and how to best combat Crime in Baltimore.




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Are you concerned about investing at all-time highs? Don't be...

Are you concerned about investing at all-time highs? Don't be..




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How To Prepare For Financing Your Child’s Private School Education

It’s that time of year again for private school acceptance letters and all the excitement they can bring.




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Jonathan Murray Closing Bell Report: February 6th

Financial Analyst Jonathan Murray describes what happened on what was a roller coaster of a day on the stock market.




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Motions Hearing, Trial Set For Glenelg Hate Crime Suspect

Four graduating Glenelg High School seniors were arrested after allegedly spray painting racist graffiti.




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Man Sought In Rape, Carjacking, Kidnapping Cases Arrested In Virginia

Authorities say details on his capture are forthcoming,




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Speed Camera Tickets, Red Light Cameras Coming Next Week

There are eight red light cameras around the city that will begin issuing warnings for violators for 30 days, before beginning to issue tickets.




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Pugh: State Help, Other Non-Law Enforcement Initiatives Part Of Crime Fight

Mayor Catherine Pugh says the state has agreed to restore 16 parole and probation officers to the city that were cut by the O’Malley administration. She also says there are other, non-law enforcement initiatives, in her plan to fight crime.




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Athletes Serving Athletes Share Bond At Running Festival

The program partners wheelchair bound athletes with able bodied athletes who train and compete in various races, from 5Ks to marathons.




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2 Medical Marijuana Dispensaries Open In Maryland

Two medical marijuana dispensaries opened Friday -- one in Montgomery County and another in Allegany County -- after five years of bureaucracy and delays.




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With Commander In Chief's Trophy On The Line, Navy Seeks Revenge in Army-Navy Game

The competition between the three service academies does not come down this matchup often and Navy will be looking for revenge as they lost to Army last season, 21-17.




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Amtrak Train On New Route Hurtles Off Bridge In Fatal Crash

Seventy-seven passengers and seven crew members were aboard when the train derailed and pulled 13 cars off the tracks.




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7 Maryland Stores Targeted In ICE 7-Eleven Crackdowns

The so-called employment audits and interviews with store workers could lead to criminal charges or fines. A top ICE officials calls the operation "the first of many."




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Poll: Hogan Approval High, Leading Democratic Rivals

While his approval rating among Democrats is above 60 percent, the poll shows Gov. Larry Hogan draws less than 50 percent of the vote, in head-to-head matchups with leading Democratic candidates.




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Snow Creates Traffic, School Closings On Wednesday

Snow continued into early Wednesday morning with a dusting to 1 inch around Baltimore, and higher amounts northwest of Baltimore City.




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National coronavirus updates: Hard-hit areas restrict testing as coronavirus death toll grows in US

In the U.S., there are at least 25,000 cases across all 50 states, plus Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Washington D.C. At least 323 have died from the virus.




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National Coronavirus Updates: President Trump Says He Intends To Reopen Country In Weeks, Not Months

The battle against coronavirus has intensified across the country as more workers are laid off, medical supplies dwindle, and states enact new rules to get Americans to stay home.




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WATCH: Gov. Hogan Says COVID-19 Increases Are ‘Frightening’

A COVID-19 outbreak at a Maryland nursing home contributed to an increase in virus cases Sunday across the state that the governor described as “frightening.”




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President Trump Extends Coronavirus Guidelines, Braces US For Big Death Toll

Bracing the nation for a death toll that could exceed 100,000 people, President Trump on Sunday extended restrictive social distancing guidelines through April.




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TRACKING: Coronavirus Cases In Maryland, See The Latest Numbers

The number of cases of coronavirus in Maryland continues to rise.




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Biomass and Bioenergy in The Netherlands

The study ‘Sustainable biomass and bioenergy in the Netherlands’ was carried out by researchers Goh, Mai-Moulin and Junginger from Utrecht University in the framework of the Netherlands Programmes Sustainable Biomass. It looks at “biomass from the three major categories, i.e. woody biomass, oils and fats and carbohydrates used in different sectors in the Netherlands”.

For each of these three categories a Sankey diagram is presented, like for example this one for oils and fats.
[See image gallery at www.sankey-diagrams.com]
The diagram has a very clear structure. Import streams are from the top and exports leave to the bottom. Domestic Dutch production is from the left, use of oils and fats in the Netherlands is to the right. Flows are in million tons (MT) dry mass. Data is for the year 2014.

See the full report here.




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Interprovincial Migration Flows Canada

From the museum of Sankey diagrams comes this beautiful visualization of migration flows between Canadian provinces in the years 1956 to 1961. Sorry but I didn’t note the source… still wanted to share it with you.
[See image gallery at www.sankey-diagrams.com]
Unfortunately, flows are not to scale: compare, for example, the exits from the Atlantic provinces in the period (86,078 people) which should have an arrow similar to the inflow of 85,476 to British Columbia. Or look at the exodus from Ontario provice, which seemingly is larger than the influx to the provice (but in fact is smaller).




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Energy Use per Industrial Sector, Indonesia

The article ‘Tracing the energy footprints of Indonesian manufacturing industry’ by Yales Vivadinar, Widodo W. Purwanto & Asep H. Saputra from Department of Chemical Engineering, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia (published as Open Access in: Energy Science and Engineering 2016; 4(6): 394–405) looks at typical energy usage in different industrial manufacturing sectors in Indonesia.

There are Sankey diagrams representing “energy maps” for basic chemicals, cement, pulp, paper, spinning, weaving and textile finishing. I am showing two of them below. The first one is for the basic chemical industry.

[See image gallery at www.sankey-diagrams.com]

Flows are in kboe (thousand barrels oil equivalent) for the year 2013. Losses are shown as grey arrows. The second one is for textile finishing:
[See image gallery at www.sankey-diagrams.com]
For those of you interested, please read the full paper here.




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Santa Anita Hoping On-Site ‘Jockey Colony,’ Other COVID-19 Protocols Will Lead To Racing Resumption

Santa Anita Park officials are hoping to get word early this week from the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors and the county's Department of Public of Health on whether racing can resume at the Arcadia, Calif., track. Belinda Stronach, whose family's company owns Santa Anita, and Aidan Butler, the executive director of California Racing […]

The post Santa Anita Hoping On-Site ‘Jockey Colony,’ Other COVID-19 Protocols Will Lead To Racing Resumption appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.