San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Name that company

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Many optimistic Americans expected a vaccine to be ready by now, especially those who believed Trump’s rhetoric. Some think it is not a serious issue until they are personally in the ICU. For the sciencelea­ning types, there was hope that with discipline and some economic pain, we could control the spread. That turned out to be too optimistic. It will take at least four to six months to reach anything close to herd immunity, and that is all we know at this point.

University of San Diego

NO

It will take at least through the second or third quarter of next year to get enough vaccine and manage the logistics of vaccinatin­g enough people to gain herd immunity. In addition, we will need a significan­t majority of people willing to take the vaccines. What’s more, at this point we don’t know how long immunity lasts. But, since many companies have adapted well to working remotely, there doesn’t appear to be an imperative for returning to the workplace quickly, if at all.

Scripps Health

NO

I trace my roots back to Baltimore in 1889, when a 25-year-old fellow named Willoughby launched me in a basement and began selling spices and extracts door to door. Over the years, I’ve offered cream of tartar and food colorings; “blood purifier,” castor oil, cold cream, liver pills, talcum powder, tooth powder and witch hazel; and ammonia, birdseed, flypaper and roach traps. Today, with a market value recently near $25 billion, I boast brands such as French’s, Frank’s Redhot, Stubb’s, Old Bay, Lawry’s, Zatarain’s, Kohinoor, Club House, Aeroplane and my own name. Who am I?

Last week’s trivia answer: T. Rowe Price

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