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Guggenheim Museum Among 31 NYC Buildings Linked to Legionnaires’ Outbreak as Cases Reach 46 Citywide
The Guggenheim Museum is among 31 Upper East Side buildings where health officials have detected the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease, as New York City’s outbreak of the severe pneumonia-like illness continued to grow to 46 confirmed cases as of Thursday.
The city Department of Health identified the full list of affected properties by address on Friday, marking the first time officials have publicly disclosed every building where cooling towers tested positive for Legionella bacteria since the outbreak was first confirmed July 2. The museum, located at 1071 Fifth Avenue, was among 19 buildings that had already completed cleaning and disinfection of their water-cooling towers as of Friday, according to the health department. The remaining 12 buildings were ordered to complete similar remediation by Saturday, though it was not immediately clear whether all had met that deadline.
The Guggenheim, which draws an average of 1,100 visitors daily, was not ordered to close at any point during the outbreak, the health department said. In a statement to The Post, a museum spokesperson said the Guggenheim took immediate remediation steps after learning Legionella bacteria had been detected. “The city has confirmed that there is no additional action needed at this time, and this poses no risk to anyone inside the building,” the spokesperson said, adding that the museum conducts monthly cooling tower testing and treatment. “The safety of our staff and the public are the utmost priority, and we are continuing to follow all city guidelines.” The museum did not say whether it had contacted visitors who may have been on-site while Legionella bacteria were present in its cooling system.
The outbreak has been traced to a cluster of Manhattan ZIP codes, 10028, 10128 and 10075, spanning the Carnegie Hill, Yorkville and Lenox Hill neighborhoods on the Upper East Side. City health officials said the case count climbed steadily throughout the week, rising from 23 confirmed infections on July 6 to 28 by July 8, then to 36 by midweek and 46 by Thursday, with 22 patients hospitalized as of the most recent count, according to figures reported by Gothamist and NY1. No deaths have been reported in connection with the outbreak.
City Health Commissioner Dr. Alister Martin said the department has moved aggressively since the cluster was first identified. “We identified cluster early. We acted quickly. We have not stopped since,” Martin said, according to CBS News New York. He added that investigators are still working to pinpoint the exact source of the contamination. “We’re still avidly conducting a thorough investigation to confirm which exact location is harboring the live Legionella bacteria which is causing people to get sick,” Martin said.
The 31 identified buildings span a range of property types beyond the Guggenheim, including a Whole Foods location, a summer day camp, medical offices and residential buildings, according to CBS News New York. Health officials cautioned that a positive cooling-tower test does not necessarily confirm that a given building is the source of the outbreak, and additional testing remains underway to determine where the contamination originated. Out of caution, every building on the list has been ordered to drain, clean and disinfect its cooling towers regardless of whether it has been definitively linked to any illness.
The city has tested 183 cooling towers across the Upper East Side since confirming the outbreak, officials said, and more than half of the neighborhood’s cooling towers have been cited for violations during recent inspections, according to city records, including failures to perform regular monitoring and cleaning or to submit required Legionella test results to the health department. The screening method used to identify contaminated towers, a polymerase chain reaction test, can detect the presence of Legionella genetic material but cannot determine whether the bacteria found are alive or dead; only live bacteria can cause illness in humans.
Legionnaires’ disease is a severe form of pneumonia caused by inhaling mist containing Legionella bacteria, which thrive in warm water systems such as cooling towers, decorative fountains and hot tubs. Symptoms typically include fever, chills, muscle aches, cough and difficulty breathing, and in some cases gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea, according to the city health department. Symptoms generally develop between two and 14 days after exposure, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. People over 50, current or former smokers, and those with chronic lung disease or weakened immune systems face a higher risk of severe illness, city health officials said. According to the CDC, roughly one in 10 people who develop Legionnaires’ disease die from complications, a figure that rises to about one in four among patients who contract the illness during a stay at a healthcare facility.
Legionella spreads through inhalation of contaminated water droplets rather than person-to-person contact, meaning residents of the affected buildings and neighborhoods do not need to take special precautions with their tap water, showers or air conditioning units, according to the health department. “Since Legionella bacteria is spread through inhaling contaminated water, not person to person, New Yorkers on the Upper East Side, where the outbreak is concentrated, should pay close attention to public health alerts and be aware of contaminated areas,” Dr. Daniel Knecht, chief medical officer at EmblemHealth, told amNewYork.
City officials have urged anyone who lives, works or has visited the affected ZIP codes since late June, as well as anyone who has spent time on the east side of Central Park between East 76th Street and East 97th Street, to monitor themselves for flu-like symptoms and seek medical attention promptly if symptoms develop. Doctors across the city have also been advised by the health department to consider testing specifically for Legionnaires’ disease in patients presenting with pneumonia-like symptoms who have spent time in the affected area.
The current outbreak follows a separate Legionnaires’ cluster that struck Central Harlem last summer, sickening more than 100 people and killing seven, underscoring the potential severity of the disease when outbreaks go undetected or unaddressed for extended periods. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani and health department officials described their response to the current outbreak as “aggressive action,” including the decision to publicly release the addresses of buildings whose cooling towers tested positive, a step city officials characterized as unprecedented for an outbreak of this kind.
The investigation into the source of the contamination is expected to continue through the weekend, and health officials said additional buildings could be added to the list as more test results come back. Because it can take up to two weeks to receive complete test results, officials cautioned that the full scope of the outbreak, including its ultimate source, may not be known for some time.
Business
Oil prices to hit $150? How Indian stock markets may react as Iran war rages on
Crude oil prices crossed the key psychological mark of $100 per barrel last week, the first time since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Despite attempts by the US administration to reassure markets, the conflict in the oil-rich Middle East continues to intensify.
Iran has warned that oil prices could surge to as high as $200 per barrel if the conflict escalates further. Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s new supreme leader and son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, described the Strait of Hormuz as a strategic “tool of pressure” that must remain shut during the conflict. In a message aired on state television, he also warned that US military bases across the region could face attacks as Iran seeks retaliation for casualties from the conflict.
Oil prices have risen amid growing expectations that the Strait of Hormuz may remain shut, disrupting global energy trade. The narrow 33-km waterway connecting the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman carries more than 20% of the world’s oil and gas shipments, making it one of the most critical chokepoints in global energy markets.
What lies ahead for oil prices
Global crude oil prices could rise to $120 per barrel in the near term and potentially reach $150 per barrel if the war continues for over a month and geopolitical tensions remain elevated in West Asia, said Kayanat Chainwala, Assistant Vice President at Kotak Securities.
“Any prolonged disruption to this trade route will be bullish for crude oil and negative for other commodities, as it fuels inflation concerns and could delay interest rate cuts,” Chainwala said.
A report by Nuvama also noted that crude prices could climb to $150 per barrel if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for four to eight weeks. However, such extreme price levels could eventually lead to demand destruction and trigger alternative supply responses.The report added that Asian economies are likely to bear the brunt of the disruption, as nearly 13 million barrels per day (mbpd) of oil shipments to countries including China, India, Japan and South Korea pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
Meanwhile, Systematix Institutional Equities said global crude markets have entered a phase of heightened volatility over the past two weeks, driven by the destruction of oil and gas assets in West Asia, which has added a strong geopolitical risk premium to prices.
“Tanker freight rates and insurance premiums for vessels passing through high-risk zones have also surged, significantly raising procurement costs,” the brokerage said.
How Indian stock markets may react
The Nifty 50 fell 5.3% last week as the Iran–Israel conflict, a weakening rupee, persistent FII outflows and concerns over fuel supply weighed on sentiment. While Systematix expects near-term volatility to impact valuations, it continues to prefer Reliance Industries, Petronet LNG, Deep Industries and Gulf Oil as long-term bets.
According to Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments, market direction in the coming weeks will largely depend on developments in the Iran conflict and the trajectory of crude prices, given their implications for inflation, corporate margins, the current account deficit and RBI policy flexibility.
“A firm dollar and higher US bond yields may keep FIIs selective and volatility elevated. Selective value opportunities may emerge in fundamentally resilient and domestically driven sectors, while energy-sensitive segments could remain under pressure if crude prices stay elevated,” he said.
He added that domestic institutional buying has provided some cushion, but a sustained market recovery would likely require clear signs of geopolitical de-escalation, stabilisation in crude prices and improved clarity on fuel supply dynamics.
Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research – Wealth Management at Motilal Oswal Financial Services, said market volatility is likely to persist as geopolitical tensions disrupt the energy market and keep risk sentiment fragile.
“Indian equities have seen a sharp correction in 2026 amid heightened global uncertainty, resulting in significant erosion of market value across segments,” Khemka said.
The Nifty 50 has declined over 11% so far this year, while the Nifty Midcap and Smallcap indices are down around 10% each. In March alone, the Nifty has fallen about 8%, marking its steepest monthly decline since the pandemic-driven crash of March 2020.
On the currency front, the Indian rupee recently hit a record low of Rs 92.45 against the US dollar as rising energy prices and risk-off sentiment heightened concerns about India’s current account deficit, given the country imports nearly 88% of its crude oil requirements.
Elevated oil prices have also intensified concerns around inflationary pressures, widening external balances and pressure on corporate margins, prompting investors to trim equity exposure and shift towards safer assets.
“Rate-sensitive and cyclical sectors such as banking, financial services and automobiles have seen notable selling pressure,” Khemka added.
Looking ahead, markets are expected to remain highly sensitive to developments in the West Asia conflict, movements in crude oil prices and trends in foreign fund flows.
“Persistent foreign outflows and elevated oil prices could keep sentiment cautious, while any signs of easing geopolitical tensions may provide relief to markets,” he said.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
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Don’t scare a crow: Crows hold grudges for nearly a decade, they never forget a face, and even teach their chicks to hate the same face
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Behind these odd, unsettling encounters lies a piece of science that most people never think about: crows can recognise a human face, remember what that face did to them, and hold on to the grudge for close to two decades. They even teach their chicks to hate the same face. For anyone who has ever startled, trapped, or annoyed a crow, that is not comforting news.
Brains Behind The Beak
Crows are not just noisy backyard birds. They mimic human speech, use tools to solve problems, and recognise individual human faces even in a crowded street. They also gather in groups that look strikingly like funerals when a member of their flock, known as a murder, is killed.
That same intelligence gives crows an unusually long memory for insults. A crow can live for about a dozen years, but a grudge against a specific person can outlive the bird that started it, passed down to chicks and flockmates who never even met the original offender.
When Payback Follows You Home
Gene Carter, a computer specialist in Seattle, found this out the hard way. He once chased away crows that were bothering a robin’s nest and threw a rake into the air to scare them off. What followed was nearly a year of retaliation. The birds waited outside his kitchen, dive-bombed him on his way to his car, and tracked him down every single day at his bus stop.
“They were waiting for me at the bus stop every single day,” he said.He told The New York Times the birds followed him for several blocks on his walk home from the stop, swooping at him the whole way. The harassment ended only after he moved out of the neighbourhood.
Spring Is Attack Season
Most crow attacks are not really personal, experts say. They spike in spring and early summer, when parent crows are guarding nests full of chicks and treat anyone who walks too close as a threat.
But grudges built outside nesting season can last far longer than a single breeding cycle. Dr John Marzluff, a professor who has spent years studying how humans and crows interact, has tracked one grudge for 17 years and counting. In 2006, he trapped seven crows on the University of Washington campus while wearing an ogre mask, then released them. The experience rattled the birds and the flockmates who watched it happen.
To measure how long the memory lasted, Marzluff and his team kept putting on the same ogre mask and walking across campus over the following years. Each time, crows responded with loud, aggressive calls that researchers describe as “scolding.” By around the seventh year of the experiment, roughly half the crows he came across were cawing furiously at the mask, even though most of them had not even been born when the original trapping happened.
How A Bird Remembers A Face
Crows owe this to extremely sharp eyesight, tuned to pick up fine details in shapes, patterns and movement, including the layout of a human face. When a crow has a strong experience with a person, whether being trapped and harassed or being fed and cared for, its brain links that specific face to that specific outcome.
The bird is not learning to fear people in general. It is learning to fear, or trust, one particular face. What makes crows especially difficult to shake off is that this information does not stay with one bird. When a crow reacts to a threatening face, other crows watching nearby pick up on the alarm and store that same face as dangerous, spreading the warning through the whole flock without the newer birds ever having a bad experience themselves.
Experts stress that none of this is malice. It is simply how a crow’s brain is built to keep it and its flock safe: notice a face, remember what it did, and pass the word along. The same memory works in reverse too. Crows also remember people who feed them or leave out clean water, and tend to treat those humans kindly for years afterwards. A handful of unsalted peanuts left out regularly, experts say, may be a cheaper way to stay on a crow’s good side than moving house.
Business
I changed jobs 10 times in 10 years to get the career I wanted
Nicola Grant, chief people officer at UK insurance provider Hiscox, says she’s noticed a broader shift in how people think about their careers.
Increasingly, individuals – particularly earlier in their careers, she says – want to build a breadth of experience faster, rather than follow a single, linear path. They are building a portfolio of skills.
She’s also found there’s a greater willingness among younger employees to move if they feel their development is slowing, or their options are limited.
“Expectations have changed; people want variety, pace and to build skills that will remain relevant,” she says, “It’s about a desire for growth.”
“That ultimately benefits both the individual and the organisation,” she adds.
Lucy Kemp, a strategic brand and communications leader at the IT company La Fosse and an employee experience specialist, agrees.
To her, lily padding is the future of work, not just a trend, as people who follow the tactic try to reach more senior roles and higher pay.
“Younger people have seen that loyalty doesn’t pay off,” says Kemp. “They want to shape their own careers, based on skills they value.
“There’s a different sense of achievement compared to older generations, a completely different experience of work,” she says.
Kemp also points out that learning in the office from peers isn’t occurring as much since the pandemic, with people working from home and AI taking over basic tasks.
Instead, people are looking at skills that will be relevant in five years’ time. And they’ll get them by switching to a project on another team, a switch to another sector, or a job at another company, Kemp says. “People just want to learn something new and have a purpose.”
That’s how Harris-Nelson feels. “I see my career as an ongoing journey rather than a destination,” she says. “I’m always learning and growing.”
Business
Olive Garden bringing back its ‘Never Ending Pasta Pass’ for first time in years
Zelniker Dorfman Private Wealth senior vice president Ryan Lynch joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to discuss AI-driven market gains, Q2 earnings, inflation and what could influence the Federal Reserve’s next interest rate move.
Olive Garden is bringing back its fan-favorite “Never Ending Pasta Pass,” the company announced this week.
Consumers can nab one of the 10,000 passes for $100, plus tax, on July 16 at 2 p.m. ET. Passholders are able to receive 13 weeks of unlimited pasta, sauces and protein toppings in addition to the chain’s unlimited soup or salad and breadsticks.
The product debuted in 2014 and was last offered in 2019.

An image of Olive Garden’s popular Never-Ending Pasta Pass offering. (Olive Garden)
OLIVE GARDEN PLANS NATIONWIDE ROLLOUT OF LIGHTER PORTIONS MENU FOLLOWING SUCCESSFUL TESTING
“Bringing it back felt like the right way to recognize the loyalty of so many guests who have kept it top of mind all these years,” said Jaime Bunker, Olive Garden’s senior vice president of marketing.
The promotion will only last until all 10,000 passes are claimed. The Never-Ending Pasta Pass isn’t available for redemption with to-go orders, but its in-restaurant redemptions are unlimited.
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DRI | DARDEN RESTAURANTS INC. | 195.74 | -0.95 | -0.48% |
Olive Garden’s corporate parent, Darden Restaurants, in late June forecast full-year profit below Wall Street estimates and reported lower-than-expected fourth-quarter sales, as higher input costs and increased marketing expenses weighed on margins amid persistent inflationary pressures.
The company, which also owns restaurants Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen and Chuy’s among others, now expects annual earnings per share from continuing operations between $11.10 and $11.35, below an expectation of $11.40 per share, according to data compiled by LSEG.

A meal of spaghetti and meatballs served at an Olive Garden restaurant in Maryland. (Deb Lindsey for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
It expects annual same-restaurant sales to grow 2.5% to 3.5%, the midpoint of which is above analysts’ estimates of 2.81%.
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Darden reported overall sales of $3.72 billion for the fourth quarter ended May 31, missing analysts’ estimate of $3.73 billion.

A sign hangs on the front of an Olive Garden restaurant on June 22, 2023, in Chicago, Illinois. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Its total operating costs and expenses rose 10.7% to $3.20 billion in the fourth quarter from the prior year.
Reuters contributed to this report.
Business
Japan manufacturers stay upbeat on chip demand, services hit by costs

Japan manufacturers stay upbeat on chip demand, services hit by costs
Business
T. rex sells for $50M, most expensive dinosaur fossil in auction
“Gus”, a mounted Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton, one of the largest T. rex ever found, is pictured during a press preview at the Sotheby’s Breuer building in New York, on July 1, 2026.
Timothy A. Clary | Afp | Getty Images
A Tyrannosaurus rex specimen sold at Sotheby’s for $50.1 million, becoming the most expensive dinosaur ever sold at auction.
Riding a boom in dinosaur prices at auction, the T. rex, named “Gus,” blew past its price estimate of $20 million to $30 million after a 10-minute bidding war between seven bidders. It broke the record sale by Sotheby’s of a Stegosaurus skeleton nicknamed “Apex” in 2024 for $44.6 million, bought by billionaire hedge funder Ken Griffin.
Gus was discovered in South Dakota and is about 67 million years old. Touted as one of the most complete dinosaur specimens ever found, Gus has 183 fossil bone elements and is about 61% complete by bone count. It is about 38 feet long, about 12.5 feet tall and has a skull length of 54 inches, making it one of the largest T. rex fossils ever found, according to Sotheby’s.
Gus also displayed a number of injuries, including fractured and healed bones in several ribs and gastralia, as well as bite marks to several skull bones.
“Gus is not only an exceptional find, but a specimen that’s been excavated, documented, prepared and cared for with real excellence,” said Cassandra Hatton, Sotheby’s vice chairman and worldwide head of science and natural history.
Dinosaur fossils have become one of the fastest growing segments of the collectibles market, as the wealthy search for rare stores of long-term value and auction houses look to categories beyond art to diversify their sales. A T. rex named “Stan” sold at Christie’s in 2020 for $31.8 million.
While the success of Gus is likely to encourage the sale of more dinosaur bones, paleontologists and other experts warn that there are few safeguards for authenticity or verification in the industry.
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Arista Networks CEO Jayshree Ullal disposes of $43.9m in stock

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Form 4 Disc Medicine Inc For: 14 July

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