Thursday, Apr 30th, 2020
A fast radio burst is detected from the Magnetar SGR 1935+2154, the first ever detected inside the Milky Way, and the first to be linked to a known source. (Astronomer’s Telegram)
(52768) 1998 OR2, a 2 kilometers (1.2 mi) wide near-Earth asteroid, makes a close approach of 0.042 AU (6.3 million km; 16 LD) to Earth. It will not approach closer than this until 2079. (SKY News)
American movie theater chain AMC Theatres states it will no longer host movies produced by Universal Studios, in response to The Wall Street Journal reporting that NBCUniversal plans to release its movies simultaneously in cinemas and streaming moving forward. (Reuters)
Protests erupt in major cities across Lebanon for the second day over the country’s continuing economic problems. Banks and vehicles are set on fire, and clashes between the protestors and the army in Tripoli leave around 40 soldiers wounded. (Reuters)
FDA reportedly to authorize emergency use of coronavirus treatment drug The Food and Drug Administration will reportedly authorize the emergency use of the antiviral remdesivir on COVID-19 patients as soon as Wednesday. Pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences revealed promising study results involving remdesivir on Wednesday, but the FDA’s reported move would still sidestep the usual testing required to authorize a drug’s usage. Gilead said its trial, as well one overseen by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, met its goals. The Gilead study found at least 50 percent of patients treated with remdesivir improved. The overall mortality rate of the study was 7 percent, and few patients developed bad side effects. The study wasn’t evaluated against a control group, and it’s unclear if those recoveries were natural. A separate study concluded remdesivir was “safe and adequately tolerated” but “did not provide significant benefits over placebo.” Source: The New York Times
U.S. economy contracts 4.8 percent in 1st quarter The Commerce Department said Wednesday that the U.S. economy contracted 4.8 percent in the first quarter of 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic, the largest decline since the Great Recession. This first quarterly drop in six years, which comes after businesses around the country closed their doors and consumer and business spending fell during the crisis, is expected to be followed by a far worse contraction during the second quarter of the year, with experts foreseeing a decline of more than 30 percent. Data from the Labor Department recently showed that more than 26 million Americans have filed initial unemployment claims over five weeks, wiping out all of the job gains since the Great Recession. Source: The Washington Post
Mass workplace, rent strikes planned for May 1 This Friday, employees from major U.S. corporations are staging a mass strike, and asking customers to join in by boycotting their employers. As the coronavirus pandemic rolls on, employees have chosen May 1, International Workers’ Day, to walk out of their jobs at Amazon, Whole Foods, Instacart, Walmart, Target, and Shipt, demanding they be provided with paid leave, protective gear, and hazard pay. Other strikes planned for May 1 include student protests and rent strikes. “May Day is the day you don’t go to work or buy things or pay rent,” Vanessa Bain, a lead organizer of the Instacart walkout, told Vice. “To consumers, we’re saying: ‘Don’t buy from these companies on May 1. Don’t empower them with your dollars.'” Source: Vice News
Michigan governor introduces a GI Bill for frontline workers Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) on Wednesday unveiled what she’s calling “Futures for Frontliners.” It’ll provide a tuition-free college education or technical certification to essential workers who stayed on during the COVID-19 pandemic, much like what the GI Bill does for military members, veterans, and their dependents. Workers “staffing our hospitals and nursing homes, stocking the shelves at grocery stores, providing child care to critical infrastructure workers, manufacturing PPE, protecting public safety, picking up trash or delivering supplies” are among those who’d be eligible for the program, Whitmer said. Whitmer didn’t announce when it’ll take effect or how workers will apply. Federal grant money will be used to cover the program’s costs, she said. Whitmer also indicated support for hazard pay of an additional $13 an hour. Source: Detroit Free Press
The End