Monday, February 27, 2023

Epoch Booklist: Recommended Reading for Jan. 13–19 - The Epoch Times

This week, we feature the first novel of an iconic fictional spy and a fascinating analysis of the world economy’s most indispensable inventions.
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Casino Royale’
By Ian Fleming
Ian Fleming was a British intelligence officer during World War II and transferred his experiences, although obviously embellished, to pen and paper. “Casino Royale” launched the most iconic fictional spy in literary history and is arguably his best Bond book.
Thomas & Mercer Reprint Edition, 2012, 188 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Shane’
By Jack Schaefer
Among the novels set in the Old West, “Shane” is considered a classic. The stoic Shane drifts into the lives of the Starrett family, works as a hired hand on their homestead, and eventually must revert to his violent past to help his employer and other homesteaders take a stand against the rancher set on driving them away. The novel is also the coming-of-age story of 11-year-old Bob Starrett, the narrator who idolizes Shane and then gradually begins to understand him. A great read for teens and adults.
Clarion Books, 2014, 176 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Fifty Inventions That Shaped the Modern Economy’
By Tim Harford
Today’s economy has many moving parts, and often people are unaware these parts exist. This book examines some of the most important factors in today’s global economy. It contains 50 five-page essays about items Harford feels are the most indispensable to the modern economy. Some, such as the plow, are ancient; others, such as the iPhone, are from the 21st century. All are important. This book reveals some inventions that might be unknown to most readers. It’s a delightful, insightful read.
Riverhead Books, 2017, 336 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Churchill’s American Arsenal: The Partnership Behind the Innovations that Won World War Two’
By Larrie D. Ferreiro
During World War II, the United States and Great Britain forged a unique collaborative association, working together on virtually every important war-winning technology—with inventions primarily by the British but built by Americans. It led Winston Churchill to speak of a special relationship between the nations. A rare book, it shows an unexpected side to World War II’s industrial history and how it still affects technology growth.
Oxford University Press, 2022, 432 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Forest Walking’
By Peter Wohlleben and Jane Billinghurst
German forester and author of the best-selling book “The Hidden Life of Trees” Wohlleben offers new paths into further forest discoveries. Awaken all your senses as you explore behind the bark of trees and beneath the layers of fine twigs on the ground. Learn more about what a walk in the woods can do for body and spirit.
Greystone Books Ltd, 2022, 240 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Christianity for Modern Pagans: Pascal’s Pensées’
By Peter Kreeft
After his death, mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal left behind what we call his “Pensées,” observations and fragments of his thinking, many of them profound. Kreeft takes 203 of the original 993 pensées and gives us a “festooning of Pascal, like decorating a Christmas tree.” Pascal’s wisdom and insight illuminate the mind—he was a master of the epigram—and the witty commentary of Kreeft, a theologian, philosopher, and professor, makes this book a delight. A splendid introduction to one of the West’s great thinkers.
Ignatius Press, 1993, 341 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘Max and Ruby’s Bedtime Book’
By Rosemary Wells
Grandma tells three bedtime stories to these beloved rabbit siblings, Max and Ruby. The book’s gentle tone, the large format, and Wells’s sweet pastel pictures will have the children calling for this story time and again. This book is for ages 2–5.
Puffin Books, 2015, 48 pages
Epoch Times PhotoEpoch Times Photo
‘In Lucia’s Neighborhood’
By Pat Shewchuk
Lucia details her appreciation for her neighborhood and the different people, customs, and aesthetics inherent there. A delightful tour. Readers will find a new appreciation for their own neighborhood and any others they encounter.
Kids Can Press, 2013, 32 pages

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Five critical components for entrepreneurial success - Crain's Cleveland Business

Unlike many cities, Cleveland is uniquely positioned to promote a thriving entrepreneurial ecosystem. This is why I wholeheartedly agree with the majority of Ray Leach's Nov. 14 opinion article in Crain's on what it will take to make these entrepreneurial aspirations into a reality.
From first-hand experience, I can attest not only to the creative approach Leach has to the problem, but also the invaluable partnerships he has introduced to Cleveland. His recent piece features the importance of commitment, collaboration and capital. These "3 C's" are critical components of the formula to build a booming entrepreneurial economy.
However, I would like to comment on two additional components that are absolutely vital to include. The two additional components are merely expanding on the formula Leach has outlined. Without factoring these components into the formula, the highest level of innovation will never be achieved.
What enables an ecosystem to reach success? Talent.
Talent enhances the formula for success because it acts as a stable pipeline of new innovators into the community. Without talent, neither commitment, collaboration, nor capital would be efficient. A concrete pipeline of talent, however, ensures that this efficiency is possible. This is because talent introduces novelty and increases the process of innovation in an ecosystem.
Where does this pipeline start? Higher education.
The Boler College of Business at John Carroll University intersects with the foundation of Cleveland's talent base because it embraces the responsibility of being a citizen in Cleveland's innovative community. Therefore, the college, like others, has a prevalent role to educate and prepare people for careers and to produce talent for Cleveland's entrepreneurial network.
As part of the pipeline, the Boler College of Business can be a source for startups to launch a new idea in Northeast Ohio. One idea can revolutionize and transform the Cleveland area. To successfully catalyze an innovative idea, one last component needs to be included in our formula.
Two ecosystems may have all four components to the equation on paper, yet sometimes one is evidently doing better. For some unknown reason, one community's levels of innovation and success are thriving, while the other community's is not. Why might this optimism be present in one and not the other? Passion is properly leveraged.
Call me a romantic, but I think excluding passion in the formula for success would result in a doomed potential for Cleveland.
The most successful entrepreneurial hubs in the world accommodate passion into their formula. This is due to passion being a multiplier.
In our formula, if one of the components is at zero, then the entire configuration ultimately fails. This is why one ecosystem advances compared to another. The ecosystem that does not advance tries to innovate with zero passion, but with commitment, collaboration, capital and talent still in the formula.
Ultimately, properly leveraging passion enhances the overall success of a region engaged in entrepreneurship.
Passion cannot be artificially manufactured.
One unique thing about Cleveland, however, is that passion is already ingrained into the region's network of collaborators. In the past 10 to 15 years alone, the landscape of passion has only been increasing. Transitions into positions of new leadership in Cleveland are an exemplifier of this. Just to name a few, there is the election of Mayor Justin Bibb, the appointment of Baiju Shah as CEO of the Greater Cleveland Partnership, and even new leadership in multiple nonprofits and the Cleveland Clinic.
When attempting to create a thriving entrepreneurial ecosystem, there is a danger and risk of staying static. Rather than staying complacent, passion builds in a drive to constantly be innovative and regularly oppose regression. This drive is embodied in the talent that is pipelined into an entrepreneurial network.
The Final Formula for Success: Commitment x Collaboration x Capital x Talent x Passion = Thriving Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
Granot is dean of the Boler College of Business at John Carroll University.

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Sunday, February 26, 2023

Home Depot misses revenue expectations for the first time since 2019 - CNBC


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Covid wave building in Europe could throw holiday travel into chaos - The Washington Post

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The summer of 2022 delivered on predictions it would be the season of “revenge travel,” with countries dropping coronavirus restrictions, passengers filling up long-haul flights and cruise ships, and demand soaring to levels not seen since 2019.
With the winter holidays approaching, that demand shows no signs of slowing down. The Transportation Security Administration screened nearly 2.5 million passengers on Sunday, the highest daily figure since February 2020.
Still, the coronavirus has remained persistent, scuttling long-awaited plans, straining the travel industry’s workforce and making many summer trips turn hellish. Now, health experts are warning another winter surge could be ahead, with cases already rising in Europe and researchers keeping an eye on new strains of the virus.
Is it safe to travel while BA.5 spreads? Health experts weigh in.
The uptick comes as many Americans headed abroad will have less protection against the dominant omicron variant because vaccination rates for the new bivalent booster are lagging. As of early October, only about 4 percent of eligible Americans had received the new shot.
Here’s what to know if you plan to take a big trip this holiday season.
Signs point to a surge in Europe, which could foretell another winter wave in the United States. Cases rose by 104 percent in Portugal and 42 percent in Switzerland over the past week, while the virus has also surged in Germany, France, Italy and Austria, according to The Washington Post’s coronavirus tracker.
The World Health Organization and European Center for Disease Prevention and Control warned Wednesday that the continent is probably entering a new covid wave, which will coincide with a resurgence in the flu. In the ECDC’s latest weekly report, it noted “widespread increases were being observed in all indicators,” including cases, hospitalizations and deaths across the continent.
Covid cases are also up in parts of Asia, including South Korea, Taiwan and Japan, which have dropped most of their travel restrictions in recent months. In Singapore, which has seen a 44 percent increase in the average number of daily reported cases over the past week, the Ministry of Health said Saturday that an omicron subvariant known as XBB jumped from a 22 percent share of local cases to 54 percent over the course of a week.
Opinion: A winter pandmemic wave is looming. Get the booster.
When cases rise in Europe, it’s often “just a matter of weeks or months” until a surge follows in the United States, said Sanjana Ravi, a visiting assistant scientist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
“We saw that with the delta variant. We saw that with the omicron variant,” Ravi said. “I think it’s safe to take precautions considering that we’re starting to see those numbers go up again in Europe now.”
A winter covid wave will probably further strain airports and airlines that were plagued by labor shortages over the summer.
Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport has announced that short staffing will force it to cap the number of passengers it can accommodate per day through at least March 2023. Dutch carrier KLM said it would have to reduce winter ticket sales at Schiphol by up to 22 percent because of the limits.
Chaos at European airports strands travelers. Here’s why.
Last winter, U.S. airlines were forced to cancel thousands of flights around Christmas as the omicron variant sickened employees. The following week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention halved the isolation period for asymptomatic coronavirus infections to five days, fearing a breakdown in essential services.
Henry Harteveldt, a travel analyst at Atmosphere Research Group, said this year’s bookings for holiday travel both within Europe and between the United States and Europe appear strong. Still, he noted, airline executives are concerned about a number of factors that could dampen travel, including a covid surge and economic uncertainty.
“It’s as if right now, the travel industry is standing on a plank of wood that can support its weight … but which may splinter at any moment, possibly with little warning,” Harteveldt said in an email.
For young, healthy people who are fully vaccinated, including with the bivalent booster, most travel is safe, said Henry Wu, an associate professor of medicine at Emory University and director of the Emory TravelWell Center.
Elderly and immunocompromised individuals, however, might want to consider shifting their plans to avoid crowded areas and countries without high-quality medical care, even if they are vaccinated, Wu said. Ahead of winter, he recommended travelers look for locales with milder weather that allows them to eat outdoors.
Your guide to planning a European vacation
“Early on in the covid pandemic, a lot of the outbreaks did occur in ski lodges,” Wu said. “We had a lot of people in indoor spaces which probably seem cozy at that moment, but also probably had less than adequate ventilation.”
Ravi recommended postponing all nonessential travel to Europe, especially for those at high risk. If you must travel, she said, test before departing home, wear an N95 mask for the duration of transit and consider bringing an air filter.
Lin H. Chen, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and director of the Travel Medicine Center at Mount Auburn Hospital, recommended travelers consider travel medical insurance in case they have to cancel their trip at the last minute or get sick abroad.
Over the past year, most of the world has relaxed its covid restrictions for travelers, including vaccination, testing and mask mandates. Europe’s top destinations, such as Italy, France, the United Kingdom and Germany, are fully open for tourism.
Mark Fischer, a regional medical director at International SOS, a health and security risk management firm, said he does not expect those restrictions to return, even with a winter surge.
“However, I think there’s a key focus on the overall health-care burden of the winter respiratory season,” with governments monitoring how covid and the flu together affect hospital systems, Fischer said.
Wu said countries dropping their restrictions does not mean measures such as vaccination and wearing a high-quality mask are not “extremely useful” to individual travelers.
“I would advise even travelers who are not concerned with severe illness, covid or influenza can still make you miserable on your trip or your vacation,” he said.
Chen recommended immunocompromised travelers consider Evusheld, a preventive antibody treatment, before their trip to “supercharge their protection.”
After coronavirus precautions kept the flu largely at bay the past two years, Wu said it is “quite possible” seasonal flu makes a major return this winter. He recommended all travelers get their annual flu shots before departing.
“I’ve always told travelers that probably the vaccine that’s most likely to save your life, pre-covid, is the flu shot because the flu is just so common, historically, among travelers,” Wu said.
Ravi said it’s easy to get your flu shot and bivalent booster at the same time at your local pharmacy.
“Just because we’re in the middle of a pandemic at the moment, it doesn’t mean that other respiratory viruses aren’t still a threat,” Ravi said.
The most important thing travelers can do is build flexibility into their itinerary so they can avoid travel if they do test positive, Wu said.
“When you plan your trip, if potentially getting sick and having to stay somewhere an extra four or five or more days is a big problem, then probably that trip is either not the best trip to take, or it means the travelers really should take those precautions to prevent getting sick while traveling,” he said.
You tested positive in a foreign country. Here’s what you should do.
Chen, the former president of the International Society of Travel Medicine, recommended travelers use ISTM’s online clinic directory to find reliable medical care if they get sick abroad. You should also speak to your doctor before traveling, especially if you think you might need antiviral treatment due to a preexisting condition, she said.
The CDC provides recommendations for international travel, which urge travelers to be fully up to date on vaccinations, including boosters; wear masks on public transportation; and test before departure and after arrival.
The CDC recently ended its country-specific covid-19 travel designations but still issues travel health notices for countries where travelers would be at extreme risk for contracting the coronavirus. The State Department also issues country-specific travel advisories, which factor in covid-19 risk and other threats.
Travelers can also check databases such as Sherpa and Kayak for the latest information on coronavirus restrictions in foreign countries.
The latest: The CDC has loosened many of its recommendations for battling the coronavirus, a strategic shift that puts more of the onus on individuals to limit viral spread. A new study on long covid suggests many people don’t fully recover even months after infection.
Variants: BA.5 is the most recent omicron subvariant, and it’s quickly become the dominant strain in the U.S. Here’s what to know about it, and why vaccines may only offer limited protection.
Vaccines: The CDC recommends that everyone age 12 and older get an updated coronavirus booster shot designed to target both the original virus and the omicron variant. You’re eligible if it has been at least two months since your initial vaccine or your last booster. The FDA has cleared updated coronavirus booster shots for children as young as 5. An initial vaccine series for children under 5 became available this summer. Here’s how vaccine efficacy could be affected by your prior infections and booster history.
Guidance: CDC guidelines have been confusing — if you get covid, here’s how to tell when you’re no longer contagious. We’ve also created a guide to help you decide when to keep wearing face coverings.
Where do things stand? See the latest coronavirus numbers in the U.S. and across the world. The omicron variant is behind much of the recent spread.
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Saturday, February 25, 2023

What was new at the New York Tabletop Show? Plenty - HFN

Vietri's handformed and handpainted Sicilian Heads symbolize women's empowerment.
Opening day of the New York Tabletop Show had the look and feel of recent shows—a nod to the Tabletop Association, the group that now runs the event—and a sign that business post-COVID is still strong.
Sales have come down from their lofty 2021 peak, according to some vendors—while others maintained that their business remains on par or even ahead of last year—but all noted continued consumer interest in the tabletop category and said they were optimistic about the months ahead.
Gibson’s earth-toned dinnerware offers a sense of serenity and comfort.
David Zrike, whose eponymous company specializes in licensed products from brands such as Disney and Peter Rabbit, believes his company’s success is driven by consumer nostalgia for products that are like “comfort food,” while Vietri President Holli Draughn credited fast shipments, a strong in-stock position and excellent consumer service for her company’s success.
New floor configurations at 41 Madison Avenue reflected a change in the building’s status as a permanent showroom—as previously reported, several vendors relocated to smaller spaces on consolidated floors, but the building also welcomed a few newcomers, including Stone Lain, a three-year-old Canadian company making its Tabletop Show debut, and Jars, the longstanding French ceramic maker that now has its own U.S. division and its own showroom. Lenox, meanwhile, welcomed Cambridge Silversmiths, which it acquired in July, into the fold. The company had flatware from its Lenox, Oneida, Hampton Forge and Cambridge brands front and center in its showroom, an indication of its evolution from being primarily a dinnerware resource.
There was plenty of new product to go around. A few highlights:
See also:
Fall New York Tabletop Show kicks off with party
Editor-in-Chief Allison Zisko first joined HFN in 1998 and spent many years covering the tabletop category before widening her scope to all home furnishings. In her current role, she oversees all aspects of HFN, including its print and digital products, and represents the brand at home and abroad through presentations, panel discussions and HFN’s podcast, The Inside Scoop.
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