All posts by StackGiant

Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese make pro debuts as WNBA preseason begins

WNBA fever is within the air, and followers lastly acquired to see Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese swimsuit up as professionals for the primary time Friday night time because the temporary league preseason begins. Clark and Reese had been standouts in school, with the previous breaking the NCAA Division I scoring report and the latter main LSU to an NCAA title in 2023. 

Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever drives to the basket towards the Dallas Wings through the first quarter of a WNBA preseason sport at Faculty Park Heart on Could 3, 2024, in Arlington, Texas.

Getty Pictures


Clark’s Indiana Fever took on the Dallas Wings in Arlington, whereas Reese’s Chicago Sky traveled to Minneapolis to play the Minnesota Lynx

Clark missed a possible game-tying 3-pointer on the buzzer because the Fever misplaced to the Wings 79-76. Regardless of the loss, Clark was the workforce’s main scorer, ending with 21 factors on 6-of-15 from the sphere, together with 5 3-pointers, together with three rebounds and two assists in 28 minutes. 

Reese additionally walked away from her preseason debut with no win because the Sky fell to the Lynx 81-92. Reese completed with 13 factors and 9 rebounds in 24 minutes. 

The WNBA initially indicated, incorrectly because it turned out, that every one its preseason video games can be obtainable on WNBA League Go. 

“Apologies! Our App is incorrectly displaying that each preseason sport (together with CHI vs MIN) is out there on League Go. However you *can* watch IND vs DAL tonight in a FREE preview of WNBA League Go on the WNBA App,” the WNBA posted to social media lower than half an hour earlier than tip off. 

Whereas the Fever sport streamed without cost on the WNBA app as marketed, the Sky vs. Lynx showdown was unavailable anyplace — formally, that’s.

A Lynx fan on the sport got here by means of within the clutch, hosting a livestream which garnered over 170,000 viewers by the fourth quarter.

The Wings introduced on social media final week that tickets to the sport in Arlington had offered out. Clark, the primary total choose on this yr’s WNBA draft, shall be coming to city alongside Aaliyah Boston, final yr’s high draft choose and unanimous rookie of the yr.

Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese on the WNBA Draft held on the Brooklyn Academy of Music on April 15, 2024 in New York, New York.

Cora Veltman/Sportico through Getty Pictures


The Fever haven’t made the playoffs since 2016, and at present sit within the ninth spot in CBS Sports activities’ energy rankings. The Sky, who drafted Reese with the seventh choose, rank lifeless final out of the 12 WNBA groups. Reese’s LSU was eradicated by Clark on this yr’s NCAA Match.

Reese is not the one rookie Chicago is hoping will flip their workforce round. The workforce spent the third choose on 6-foot-7 Kamilla Cardoso, who led the College of South Carolina to a championship over Clark’s Hawkeyes in April.

Caitlin Clark #22 of the Iowa Hawkeyes shoots the ball whereas defended by Angel Reese #10 of the LSU Tigers through the finals of the NCAA Ladies’s Basketball Match in April.

/ Getty Pictures


Daybreak Staley, Cardoso’s coach, credited Clark because the “sole purpose” why viewership in girls’s basketball has grown not too long ago in an interview with 670 The Rating final month. The championship sport netted 18.9 million viewers per ESPN, essentially the most seen school basketball sport ever on the community.

“She’s the best of her time. I need girls’s basketball to develop, and I am not too shy about saying why it grows. She’s made it develop over the previous two years,” Staley mentioned within the interview.

The WNBA preseason will proceed till subsequent Friday, with the common season tip-off on Could 14.

Formule 1 | L’ingénieur Adrian Newey va quitter Red Bull après près de 20 ans de service

(Paris) Artisan des succès de Pink Bull en Formule 1, l’ingénieur britannique Adrian Newey va tourner la web page début 2025 de presque 20 ans d’histoire au côté de l’écurie championne du monde en titre.


Considéré comme l’un des plus grands ingénieurs de la F1, « Adrian Newey partira de Pink Bull en 2025 après 19 années », a annoncé mercredi Pink Bull, avec laquelle l’Anglais était initialement engagé jusqu’à fin 2025.

Newey, 65 ans, travaille pour Pink Bull depuis 2006. Il va dès à présent s’éloigner de la F1 pour se consacrer à plein temps, et jusqu’à son départ, au projet de première voiture hypercar de Pink Bull qui va être dévoilée en juillet, a précisé l’écurie dans son communiqué.

L’ingénieur britannique a conçu les monoplaces qui ont apporté à l’écurie basée à Milton Keynes six titres de champion du monde des constructeurs entre 2010 et 2023 et sept titres pilotes avec Sebastian Vettel (de 2010 à 2013) puis Max Verstappen (de 2021 à 2023). Il avait auparavant notamment travaillé pour les écuries Williams et McLaren.

« Sa imaginative and prescient et son génie nous ont aidés à remporter 13 titres en 20 saisons », a salué le directeur de Pink Bull, Christian Horner.

La raison de son départ, qui n’a pas été spécifiée à ce stade, pourrait être liée à la polémique ayant touché Horner, visé par des accusations de « comportement inapproprié » à l’égard d’une employée plus tôt cette année, et les luttes de pouvoir qu’elle a révélées au sein de l’équipe, selon la BBC.

Christian Horner, qui a toujours nié ces accusations, a été blanchi fin février à la suite d’une enquête interne, tandis que la plaignante a fait appel de la décision, toujours selon le média anglais.

Riche palmarès –

Le web site spécialisé Motorsport revient également sur l’hypothèse d’une dégradation des relations entre Newey et Horner, ce dernier ayant notamment affirmé l’an dernier que, si « Adrian joue un rôle essential dans cette équipe […], son rôle a évolué ces dernières années ».

« L’équipe approach sous ses ordres, dirigée par Pierre Waché (le directeur approach français de Pink Bull, NDLR), fait un travail formidable, de sorte qu’elle ne dépend pas d’Adrian », avait-il ajouté.

Newey avait parfaitement pris chez Pink Bull le nouveau virage réglementaire imposé aux équipes de F1 en 2022, dessinant une monoplace imbattable qui a permis à Pink Bull de remporter 17 des 22 GP disputés en 2022 puis 21, toujours sur 22, l’année suivante.

Quelles suites ? –

D’ici là, libéré de chez Pink Bull, Newey compte-t-il poursuivre l’aventure F1 auprès d’une autre écurie ?

Si aucune annonce n’a encore été faite en ce sens, Motorsport affirme que le Britannique aurait reçu une très grosse offre d’Aston Martin et rappelle que d’autres rumeurs évoquent son passage chez Ferrari ou encore Mercedes ou McLaren.

« Les écuries essayent de se l’approprier depuis très longtemps », souligne Bernie Ecclestone, à l’origine du succès de la F1 moderne qu’il a dirigée du début des années 1980 à 2016. « Après les récents évènements à Pink Bull, il a probablement estimé que c’était mieux de partir maintenant », ajoute-t-il.

L’an dernier, Newey avait aussi expliqué au journal anglais The Telegraph ne consacrer plus qu’« environ 50 % » de son temps à la F1, dédiant notamment la partie restante au design de voitures de sport exclusives, les Supercars.

Le web site rapportait toutefois fin avril que, selon les termes de son contrat – restés confidentiels –, l’arrivée de Newey dans une équipe concurrente ne pourrait pas se faire avant 2027, soit douze mois après la fin officielle de son contrat actuel. Mais le communiqué de Pink Bull mercredi n’y fait pas allusion.

Son départ de Pink Bull pose également la query de l’avenir de Max Verstappen, engagé jusqu’en 2028 avec cette écurie.

Le Néerlandais pourrait partir plus tôt que prévu, certaines rumeurs l’envoyant chez Mercedes dès 2025, pour remplacer la star britannique Lewis Hamilton, qui a signé chez Ferrari.

S’il a affirmé lors du GP de Chine en avril « n’avoir aucune raison de vouloir partir », Verstappen avait aussi déclaré plus tôt que « lorsqu’on a une équipe performante, un bon noyau de personnes, c’est essential de les garder ensemble ». Le génie Newey entraînera-t-il « Mad Max » dans son sillage ?

Clark impresses with 21 points in WNBA debut — ‘A lot to be proud of’

ARLINGTON, Texas — In entrance of a sold-out crowd of 6,251 at UT Arlington’s School Park Middle, 2024 No. 1 WNBA choose Caitlin Clark made her unofficial skilled debut Friday night, scoring 21 factors within the Fever’s slender 79-76 defeat by the hands of the Dallas Wings.

The NCAA’s all-time main scorer scored 11 of Indiana’s first 19 factors earlier than ending with 16 within the first half, highlighted by a stepback 3-pointer in opposition to veteran Natasha Howard. She went scoreless within the third quarter and sat on the bench for a lot of the body after choosing up her third and fourth fouls in fast succession.

Upon re-entering the sport within the fourth, Clark hit one other 3-pointer, her fifth of the night time and located Aliyah Boston for an help on the pick-and-roll. A “welcome to the WNBA” second got here with the sport tied and fewer than 30 seconds to play when Howard blocked Clark’s layup try with the shot clock dwindling.

Clark’s 21 factors (6 for 15 capturing, 5 for 13 from 3) tied for the sport excessive with Dallas rookie Jaelyn Brown, and he or she additionally contributed 3 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals and 5 turnovers. NaLyssa Smith added 20 factors for the Fever.

“My greatest aim coming into tonight was to proceed to be myself, play aggressive,” Clark mentioned. “I assumed that is what I did. I feel there’s quite a bit to be happy with.”

Newcomers could have come out to catch a glimpse of Clark, however Dallas guard Arike Ogunbowale ensured the hometown staff got here up on high, scoring Dallas’ last seven factors and sinking a game-winning, step-back 3-pointer with 3.0 seconds to play. Clark’s off-balanced last shot on the buzzer in an effort to tie the sport fell brief.

It was an enormous day for sports activities within the Metroplex. In downtown Dallas the NBA’s Mavericks hosted a first-round series-clinching Recreation 6 victory in opposition to the LA Clippers, whereas the NHL’s Stars had been in their very own first-round Recreation 6 battle in Las Vegas, which they dropped. Even nonetheless, scores of followers filtered to Arlington with indicators for Clark or sporting No. 22.

Regardless of being from the visiting staff, the NCAA’s all-time main scorer acquired a thunderous cheer as she was launched as a part of the Fever’s beginning 5, as did fellow former No. 1 choose Boston. The group, whereas largely pro-Wings, cheered lots for Clark, particularly as she hit 4 of her eight 3-point makes an attempt within the first half, however stayed engaged because the groups traded the lead seven instances and noticed 9 ties.

“You could not ask for a greater sport, actually, for girls’s basketball to kick off this [WNBA] yr,” Clark mentioned. “An amazing sport coming all the way down to the wire, each groups competing. That is going to be the story of the whole yr.”

Twenty-five miles away from the place Clark’s fame took off within the spring of 2023 with a mesmerizing Closing 4 run with the Hawkeyes, the rookie sensation hit her first two shot makes an attempt of her professional profession, each 3-pointers — the primary on a baseline out-of-bounds play the place Clark’s defender misplaced her, and with Wings followers nonetheless on their ft ready for the hometown squad to get on the board.

“I used to be in a position to get a fairly clear search for my first shot,” she mentioned. “It is at all times good to see your first shot go in once you’re a shooter.”

Earlier than the sport Clark mentioned her primary aim for this early WNBA motion was to remain true to herself; afterwards, she thought she largely did that by being aggressive and enjoying onerous, whereas acknowledging she might clear up on turnovers and that there will be an adjustment to the WNBA’s physicality. Head coach Christie Sides mentioned Clark seemed “gassed” and requested for a sub on the finish of the primary quarter.

It will be a studying course of too, Clark and Sides each added, as Clark will get accustomed to enjoying with and in opposition to such high-level expertise. The purpose guard mirrored postgame she would not must create all the pieces herself and may as an alternative use screens from her teammates or set some herself to make life simpler.

“She works actually onerous to get some photographs that she would not must work as onerous for anymore,” Sides mentioned.

Wings coach Latricia Trammel, in the meantime, attributed Clark’s quieter second half to an uptick in her staff’s defensive communication and depth following a “passive” begin.

These tuning in for Clark additionally had been handled to the memorable performances from Brown and Ogunbowale (19), who paced the Wings.

“I had a horrible capturing day [9 for 24, 1 for 7 from 3] however that is why it is a staff, that is why it isn’t golf,” Ogunbowale mentioned. “Folks like Jaelyn, the remainder of the staff, they saved it collectively, and I used to be in a position to are available in and on the finish hit that 3, the one 3 I hit of the sport truly. However, it is basketball, you simply gotta shake it off and preserve capturing.”

The Fever are hoping Clark and the remainder of their younger core, which incorporates Boston and Smith, the 2022 No. 2 choose, will elevate the franchise to its first postseason berth since 2016, franchise- and league-great Tamika Catchings’ last season earlier than her retirement.

Indiana has a last tune-up Thursday in opposition to the Atlanta Dream in Indianapolis earlier than taking over the Connecticut Solar on the street Could 14 of their common season opener.

“There’s a whole lot of good to remove from it. On the identical time, it is preseason sport, so do not get too dissatisfied by it,” Clark mentioned. “Simply return and watch the movie, study from it, and prepare for our subsequent one.”

Data From The Related Press was used on this report.

LISTEN: The Lonesome Ace Stringband, “May Day” (with The Andrew Collins Trio)

Artist: The Lonesome Ace Stringband with The Andrew Collins Trio
Hometown: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Track: “Could Day”
Launch Date: Could 1, 2024

In Their Phrases: “Andrew and I wrote this tune collectively about 20 years in the past. It was the primary of Could and we spent it within the solar, selecting fiddle tunes, flowers, and getting within the groove with the mycorrhizal community. This melody revealed itself to us within the early afternoon, setting the vibe for the remainder of the day. I’ve at all times discovered this tune beguiling. It’s exhausting to place your finger on its temper; to me, it’s in the end hopeful, nevertheless it has to undergo rather a lot earlier than it will get there! I’ve recorded ‘Could Day’ 3 times now; every model may be very completely different. I can’t appear to steer clear of this tune! It was so fantastic for John and me to have the prospect to collaborate with Andrew, Adam, and James on this launch!” – Chris Coole, the Lonesome Ace Stringband



Monitor Credit:

Andrew Collins – Mandolin
Chris Coole – Banjo
James McEleney – Bass
Adam Shier – Guitar
John Showman – Fiddle


Video Credit: Edited by Chris Coole. P.D. archival footage filmed by Arthur Edward Pillsbur from the Prelinger Assortment.
Photograph Credit score: Andrew Collins Trio by Andrew Collins; the Lonesome Ace Stringband by Jen Squires.

UCLA faces criticism for failure to act to stop attack on pro-Palestinian encampment

Open this photograph in gallery:

Professional-Palestinian demonstrators construct a barricade surrounding the encampment arrange on the campus of the College of California Los Angeles (UCLA) as clashes erupt with counter protesters, in Los Angeles on Might 1.ETIENNE LAURENT/Getty Photographs

Directors and campus police at UCLA confronted intense criticism Wednesday for failing to behave shortly to cease an assault on a pro-Palestinian encampment on campus by counter-demonstrators who threw site visitors cones and chairs, launched pepper spray and tore down boundaries.

Some pro-Palestinian demonstrators fought again, and skirmishes continued for hours earlier than exterior legislation enforcement companies had been known as to intervene. Nobody was arrested, and a minimum of 15 protesters suffered accidents within the confrontation, a part of a latest spate of escalating violence that’s occurring on some faculty campuses nationally over the Israel-Hamas struggle.

“The group must really feel the police are defending them, not enabling others to hurt them,” Rebecca Husaini, chief of workers for the Muslim Public Affairs Council, mentioned in a information convention on the Los Angeles campus later Wednesday, the place some Muslim college students detailed the in a single day occasions.

The decision for extra police intervention at UCLA stood in stark distinction to different campuses throughout the U.S., the place officers’ actions had been strongly condemned. On the College of Wisconsin in Madison, activists clashed with cops who destroyed their tents early Wednesday.

The chaotic scenes unfolded early Wednesday after police burst right into a constructing occupied by anti-war protesters at Columbia College on Tuesday evening, breaking apart an indication that had paralyzed the New York faculty.

Police arrived at UCLA campus in Los Angeles on Might 1 after clashes erupted between pro-Palestinian protesters and a bunch of counter-demonstrators, based on dwell video protection supplied by a U.S. broadcaster.

Reuters

An Related Press tally counted a minimum of 38 occasions since April 18 the place arrests had been made at campus protests throughout the U.S. Greater than 1,600 folks have been arrested at 30 colleges.

UCLA Chancellor Gene Block mentioned in an announcement that “a bunch of instigators” perpetrated the assault, however he didn’t present particulars in regards to the crowd or why the administration and college police didn’t act sooner.

“Nevertheless one feels in regards to the encampment, this assault on our college students, college and group members was totally unacceptable,” he mentioned. “It has shaken our campus to its core.”

Block promised a evaluate of the evening’s occasions after California Gov. Gavin Newsom and the Los Angeles mayor denounced the delays.

Audio system disputed the college’s account that 15 folks had been injured and one hospitalized, saying the variety of folks taken to the hospital was larger. One pupil described needing to go to the hospital after being hit within the head by an object wielded by counter-protesters.

A number of college students who spoke in the course of the information convention mentioned they needed to depend on one another, not the police, for assist as they had been attacked, and that many within the pro-Palestinian encampment remained peaceable and didn’t interact with counter-protesters.

UCLA cancelled courses Wednesday. Within the night, lots of of supporters of the pro-Palestinian protesters, together with college students and alumni, stood on campus steps past the encampment whereas legislation enforcement presence grew. A small group of scholars holding indicators and carrying T-shirts in assist of Israel and Jewish folks gathered close by.

Steel and wood boundaries had been restored across the tent encampment after the scuffle hours earlier. Overhead TV cameras confirmed folks inside the enclosure distributing goggles, helmets and different gear in addition to medical help tents that had been arrange later within the day.

Open this photograph in gallery:

Counter-protesters try to maneuver a barricade amidst clashes with protesters in assist of Palestinians in Gaza at an encampment on the campus of the College of California Los Angeles, Might 1.David Swanson/Reuters

Bulletins broadcasted on the campus advised demonstrators to disperse or they might be arrested and face a misdemeanour cost. The protesters largely stayed in place, chanting pro-Palestinian slogans.

Ray Wiliani, who lives close by, mentioned he got here to UCLA on Wednesday night to assist the pro-Palestinian demonstrators.

“We have to take a stand for it,” he mentioned. “Sufficient is sufficient.”

Tent encampments of protesters calling on universities to cease doing enterprise with Israel or corporations that assist the struggle in Gaza have unfold throughout campuses nationwide in a pupil motion not like every other this century. The following police crackdowns echoed actions many years in the past towards a a lot bigger protest motion protesting the Vietnam Warfare.

In Madison, a scrum broke out early Wednesday after police with shields eliminated all however one tent and shoved protesters. 4 officers had been injured, together with a state trooper who was hit within the head with a skateboard, authorities mentioned. 4 had been charged with battering legislation enforcement.

That is all enjoying out in an election 12 months within the U.S., elevating questions on whether or not younger voters – who’re crucial for Democrats – will again President Joe Biden’s re-election effort, given his staunch assist of Israel.

In uncommon cases, college officers and protest leaders struck agreements to limit the disruption to campus life and upcoming graduation ceremonies.

At Brown College in Rhode Island, directors agreed to think about a vote to divest from Israel in October – apparently the primary U.S. faculty to conform to such a requirement.

The nationwide campus demonstrations started at Columbia on April 17 to protest Israel’s offensive in Gaza after Hamas launched a lethal assault on southern Israel on Oct. 7. Militants killed about 1,200 folks, most of them civilians, and took roughly 250 hostages. Vowing to stamp out Hamas, Israel has killed greater than 34,000 Palestinians within the Gaza Strip, based on the Well being Ministry there.

Late Tuesday, New York Metropolis cops entered Columbia’s campus and cleared a tent encampment, together with Hamilton Corridor, the place a stream of officers used a ladder to climb by way of a second-floor window, and police mentioned protesters inside offered no substantial resistance.

The demonstrators had seized the Ivy League faculty constructing about 20 hours earlier, ramping up their presence on the campus from a tent encampment that had been there for practically two weeks.

Open this photograph in gallery:

Professional-Palestinian demonstrators engulfed in tear fuel on the UCLA campus, Might 1.ETIENNE LAURENT/Getty Photographs

They encountered police clearing tents early on, in addition to greater than 100 arrests and threats of suspension except they deserted the encampment Monday. As an alternative, protesters took over Hamilton Corridor early Tuesday, carrying in furnishings and steel barricades.

New York Metropolis Mayor Eric Adams blamed “exterior agitators” on Wednesday for main the demonstrations and repeatedly cited the presence of a lady on Columbia’s campus whose husband Adams mentioned had been “convicted for terrorism.” The lady, Nahla Al-Arian, wasn’t on Columbia’s campus this week and isn’t among the many protesters who had been arrested.

Al-Arian, a retired elementary faculty trainer, advised The Related Press that Adams misstated each her position within the protests and the information about her husband, Sami Al-Arian, a distinguished Palestinian activist. Nahla Al-Arian mentioned she did go to Columbia for sooner or later on April 25 to see the protest encampment there however left after she bought drained.

In the meantime, protest encampments elsewhere had been cleared by the police, leading to arrests, or closed up voluntarily at colleges throughout the U.S., together with The Metropolis Faculty of New York, Fordham College in New York, Portland State in Oregon, Northern Arizona College in Flagstaff, Arizona and Tulane College in New Orleans.

Israel and its supporters have branded the college protests antisemitic, whereas Israel’s critics say it makes use of these allegations to silence opposition. Though some protesters have been caught on digital camera making antisemitic remarks or violent threats, organizers of the protests, a few of whom are Jewish, say it’s a peaceable motion aimed toward defending Palestinian rights and protesting the struggle.

New York Metropolis police raided Columbia College late on Tuesday to arrest dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators, a few of whom had seized a tutorial constructing, and to take away a protest encampment the Ivy League faculty had sought to dismantle for practically two weeks.

Reuters

After-Hours Earnings Report for April 30, 2024 : AMZN, AMD, SYK, SBUX, MDLZ, RSG, SMCI, OKE, PSA, PRU, FANG, EXR

The next corporations are anticipated to report earnings after hours on 04/30/2024. Go to our Earnings Calendar for a full checklist of anticipated earnings releases.

Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The web firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 13 analysts that observe the inventory is $0.81. This worth represents a 161.29% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months AMZN and beat the expectations the opposite two quarters. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for AMZN is 44.03 vs. an business ratio of 17.50, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Superior Micro Gadgets, Inc. (AMD)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The electrical firm firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 14 analysts that observe the inventory is $0.41. This worth represents a 4.65% lower in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months AMD has met analyst expectations as soon as and beat the expectations the opposite quarter. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for AMD is 60.68 vs. an business ratio of 26.90, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Stryker Company (SYK)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The medical merchandise firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 13 analysts that observe the inventory is $2.35. This worth represents a 9.81% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months SYK and beat the expectations the opposite two quarters. Starbucks Company (SBUX)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The restaurant firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 12 analysts that observe the inventory is $0.79. This worth represents a 6.76% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months SBUX and beat the expectations the opposite two quarters. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for SBUX is 22.14 vs. an business ratio of 41.60.

Mondelez Worldwide, Inc. (MDLZ)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The meals firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the ten analysts that observe the inventory is $0.88. This worth represents a 1.12% lower in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months MDLZ and beat the expectations the opposite two quarters. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for MDLZ is 20.46 vs. an business ratio of 32.90.

Republic Companies, Inc. (RSG)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The waste removing firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the ten analysts that observe the inventory is $1.37. This worth represents a ten.48% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months RSG and beat the expectations the opposite three quarters. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for RSG is 32.18 vs. an business ratio of two.40, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Tremendous Micro Pc, Inc. (SMCI)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The pc storage firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 4 analysts that observe the inventory is $5.62. This worth represents a 295.77% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. SMCI missed the consensus earnings per share within the 1st calendar quarter of 2023 by -3.4%. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for SMCI is 43.99 vs. an business ratio of 24.20, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

ONEOK, Inc. (OKE)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The oil/fuel firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 4 analysts that observe the inventory is $1.18. This worth represents a 49.57% lower in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. OKE missed the consensus earnings per share within the 4th calendar quarter of 2023 by -2.48%. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for OKE is 16.32 vs. an business ratio of seven.10, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Public Storage (PSA)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The reit firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 7 analysts that observe the inventory is $4.07. This worth represents a 0.25% lower in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Up to now 12 months PSA and beat the expectations the opposite three quarters. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for PSA is 15.54 vs. an business ratio of 11.70, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Prudential Monetary, Inc. (PRU)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The insurance coverage firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 8 analysts that observe the inventory is $3.16. This worth represents a 18.80% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. The final two quarters PRU had detrimental earnings surprises; the newest report they missed by -3.29%. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for PRU is 8.37 vs. an business ratio of 5.50, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Diamondback Power, Inc. (FANG)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The oil (us exp & manufacturing) firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the ten analysts that observe the inventory is $4.29. This worth represents a 4.63% improve in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for FANG is 10.93 vs. an business ratio of 1.10, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

Further House Storage Inc (EXR)is reporting for the quarter ending March 31, 2024. The reit firm’s consensus earnings per share forecast from the 7 analysts that observe the inventory is $1.95. This worth represents a 3.47% lower in comparison with the identical quarter final 12 months. Zacks Funding Analysis studies that the 2024 Value to Earnings ratio for EXR is 17.07 vs. an business ratio of 11.70, implying that they’ll have a better earnings development than their opponents in the identical business.

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the creator and don’t essentially replicate these of Nasdaq, Inc.

Police presence at UCLA ramps up again after protesters, counter-protesters clash over Israel-Hamas war

Mounting tensions on U.S. campuses boiled over on Wednesday when pro-Israel supporters attacked an encampment of pro-Palestinian and anti-war protesters at UCLA, simply hours after police arrested activists who occupied a constructing at Columbia College and flattened a tent metropolis on its campus.

Police deployed in power on the College of California in Los Angeles (UCLA) campus on Wednesday morning after Israel supporters attacked a camp arrange by pro-Palestinian protesters.

Witness footage from the scene, verified by Reuters, confirmed folks wielding sticks or poles to assault picket boards getting used as makeshift barricades to guard the pro-Palestinian protesters.

Police have been responding to UCLA chancellor Gene Block’s request for assist, mentioned Los Angeles deputy mayor of communications Zach Seidl on the social media platform X.

The Los Angeles Police Division additionally posted on X it was responding to UCLA’s request “as a result of a number of acts of violence throughout the giant encampment on their campus,” to revive order and preserve public security. By 5 a.m. that they had erected a metallic crowd barrier in entrance of the encampment and the realm was quiet. However on Wednesday evening, a heavy police presence was again as officers known as it a “illegal meeting.”

WATCH | Heavy police presence on UCLA campus: 

U.S. campuses see clashes, arrests as Canadian encampments develop

After arrests at New York’s Columbia College, Los Angeles police look like getting ready to maneuver in on protesters at UCLA. The variety of encampments in solidarity with the Palestinian trigger proceed to develop as college students camped at Montreal’s McGill College say they are not going wherever.

Footage from the early hours confirmed principally male counter-demonstrators, a lot of them masked and a few apparently older than college students, throwing objects and attempting to smash or pull down the picket and metal obstacles erected to protect the encampment.

Some yelled pro-Jewish feedback as pro-Palestinian protesters tried to combat them off.

“They have been developing right here and simply violently attacking us,” mentioned pro-Palestinian protester Kaia Shah, a researcher at UCLA.

“I simply did not assume they might ever get to this, escalate to this degree, the place our protest is met by counter-protesters who’re violently hurting us, inflicting ache on us, when we aren’t doing something to them.”

A professional-Palestinian protester receives water in her eyes of after being maced on the campus of UCLA. (Etienne Laurent/AFP/Getty Photos)

Demonstrators on each side sprayed one another with pepper spray and fights broke out.

One other pro-Palestinian scholar protester, Sophia Sandino, mentioned: “We had folks [spraying] us, beating us with bats and sticks, throwing no matter they might to us and none of this legislation enforcement was right here in any respect. So it is form of disappointing that we’re seen because the perpetrators right here.”

Katy Yaroslavsky, a Los Angeles metropolis council member whose district contains UCLA, posted on X: “Everybody has a proper to free speech and protest, however the state of affairs on UCLA’s campus is uncontrolled and is now not secure.”

Fifteen folks have been injured throughout the UCLA confrontation, together with one one that was hospitalized, in response to College of California system president Michael V. Drake. 

A counter-protester throws a metallic fence at pro-Palestinian protesters subsequent to their encampment arrange on the campus at UCLA. (Etienne Laurent/AFP/Getty Photos)

UCLA is a part of the College of California system. It has about 32,000 undergraduate college students and is positioned within the residential neighborhood of Westwood simply exterior of Hollywood and downtown Los Angeles.

Final weekend, a whole bunch of counter-protesters had turned up there chanting assist for Israel, hoisting indicators and waving blue-and-white Israeli flags.

Supporters of Israel erected a display screen that performed a video loop of scenes from the Hamas Oct. 7 assault. The 2 sides taunted each other, pushed, shoved and threw punches whereas campus police struggled to include the skirmishes.

Arrests in Wisconsin comply with Columbia raid

On Wednesday morning, police have been eradicating an encampment of pro-Palestinian protesters on the College of Wisconsin’s Madison campus. Almost 60 cops, some with riot shields, arrived and started eradicating tents and different objects, WISC-TV reported.

Police push again on demonstrators protesting the battle in Gaza as they work to take away a non-sanctioned encampment on the campus of College of Wisconsin’s Madison campus on Wednesday. (John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal/The Related Press)

Video from WISC-TV confirmed police with riot shields pushing towards protesters and the protesters pushing again whereas chanting slogans, together with “Free Free Palestine.”

Greater than 30 folks have been arrested, most of them launched with out expenses, however 4 have been charged with battering legislation enforcement, police mentioned.

4 officers have been injured, together with a state trooper who was hit within the head with a skateboard, in response to College of Wisconsin police spokesperson Marc Lovicott. Inside hours, protesters had erected extra tents on the UW campus.

The station mentioned that at the very least 10 protesters have been taken away by police with their palms zip-tied by officers.

Police carry a demonstrator protesting the battle in Gaza on the College of Wisconsin-Madison on Wednesday. (John Hart/Wisconsin State Journal/The Related Press)

Protest encampments on campuses have been arrange with higher frequency this month in a number of states in the usin solidarity with college students at Columbia College in New York Metropolis. There have additionally been encampments arrange at some Canadian campuses.

Late on Tuesday, New York Metropolis police arrested dozens of pro-Palestinian and anti-war demonstrators holed up in a tutorial constructing on Columbia’s Manhattan campus and eliminated a protest encampment that the Ivy League college had sought to dismantle for practically two weeks.

New York Metropolis Mayor Eric Adams mentioned Wednesday that about 300 folks have been arrested.

“We’re processing the arrests to differentiate between who have been precise college students and who weren’t speculated to be on the bottom,” mentioned Adams.

Utilizing a tactical automobile, New York Metropolis police enter an higher ground of Hamilton Corridor at Columbia College in New York Metropolis on Tuesday evening after the campus constructing was taken over by protesters earlier within the day. (Craig Ruttle/The Related Press)

White Home condemns violence, occupation

The clashes at UCLA, in New York and elsewhere are a part of the largest outpouring of U.S. scholar activism for the reason that anti-racism rallies and marches of 2020.

There have been confrontations with legislation enforcement and greater than 1,300 arrests. In uncommon situations, college officers and protest leaders struck agreements to limit the disruption to campus life and upcoming graduation ceremonies.

That is all taking part in out in an election 12 months within the U.S., elevating questions on whether or not younger voters — who’re important for Democrats — will again President Joe Biden’s re-election effort, given his staunch assist of Israel.

The White Home, whereas expressing assist for freedom of meeting, criticized “forcibly taking up buildings” in an announcement on Tuesday.

Regulation enforcement officers stand guard amid clashes close to an encampment on the UCLA campus within the Westwood neighbourhood of Los Angeles early Wednesday. (David Swanson/Reuters)

The U.S. protests have been duly famous in Israel, the place Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has known as the demonstration antisemitic and intimidating to Jewish college students.

Many Jewish college students are among the many organizers of the Columbia protest, although, and bristle at allegations of antisemitism. 

About 1,200 folks in southern Israel have been killed within the Oct. 7 assaults in Israel led by Hamas, thought of a terrorist group by many Western governments. The Israeli retaliatory assault has killed practically 35,000 Palestinians in Gaza, in response to well being ministry figures.

WATCH | Reside protection of the altercations on Wednesday morning: 

Supporters of Israel conflict with pro-Palestinian protesters at UCLA

Violence broke out on the College of California Los Angeles in a single day between pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli protesters. Police in riot gear arrived however didn’t instantly intervene.

Rob Marciano Out at ABC News Good Morning America

ABC Information meteorologist Rob Marciano is out on the community.

A supply confirms to The Hollywood Reporter that the meteorologist and Good Morning America common is now not employed by the information division.

The precise circumstances of his departure aren’t clear, although Web page Six reported in March 2023 that he had been “banned” from GMA’s Instances Sq. studio after making a colleague really feel uncomfortable.

Marciano had been with ABC Information and Good Morning America for almost a decade, becoming a member of in 2014 after a short stint because the co-anchor of the syndicated program Leisure Tonight. He beforehand labored as a meteorologist and anchor at CNN.

Puck‘s Dylan Byers first reported the information of Marciano’s exit.

An ABC Information spokesperson declined to remark.

Boxer Ryan Garcia tested positive for banned substance ostarine

Star boxer Ryan Garcia examined constructive for the performance-enhancing substance ostarine the day earlier than and the day of his upset win over Devin Haney final month, per a Voluntary Anti-Doping Affiliation letter despatched to all events Wednesday and obtained by ESPN.

The urine samples have been collected previous to the battle, however the outcomes weren’t recognized till later.

Garcia has 10 days to request that his B-sample be examined. Garcia’s A-sample additionally screened constructive for 19-norandrosterone, however its presence is unconfirmed till additional lab evaluation.

“All people is aware of that I do not cheat,” Garcia said in a video posted on X. “By no means taken a steroid. … I do not even know the place to get steroids. … I barely take dietary supplements. Large lies, I beat his ass.”

Oscar De La Hoya’s Golden Boy Promotions stated in a press release that it’s working with Garcia’s staff to “decide how this discovering got here to be.”

“Ryan has put out a number of statements denying knowingly utilizing any banned substances — and we imagine him,” Golden Boy stated in its assertion.

Garcia, 25, floored Haney thrice and received by majority choice, however that consequence now stands to be overturned except the B-sample returns unfavorable, which is uncommon.

“We discovered about this example not too way back and it is unlucky Ryan cheated and disrespected each the followers and the game of boxing by combating soiled and breaking constructive not as soon as, however twice,” Haney stated in a press release to ESPN.

“… Ryan owes the followers an apology, and by his current tweet he nonetheless thinks it is a joke. We put our lives on the road to entertain individuals for a residing. You do not play boxing. This places the battle in a very completely different mild. Regardless of the drawback, I nonetheless fought on my protect and obtained again up! Individuals die on this sport. This is not a joking matter.”

Garcia (25-1, 20 KOs) additionally missed weight forward of the battle, registering 143.2 kilos for the WBC 140-pound title battle. Garcia paid Haney (31-1, 15 KOs) upward of $600,000 for his failure to make weight. It additionally meant Garcia was ineligible to win the title, although he rose to No. 2 in ESPN’s junior welterweight rankings following the foremost upset.

Haney, who fights out of Las Vegas, remained the junior welterweight champion even in defeat. He fell to No. 4 in ESPN’s 140-pound rankings and misplaced his pound-for-pound recognition after being ranked No. 6 by ESPN going into the battle.

“Security, equity, and integrity in skilled athletic competitors are important,” the New York State Athletic Fee stated in a press release to ESPN. “The Fee is in communication with VADA and is reviewing the matter.”

Ostarine is a selective androgen receptor modulator that attaches to proteins within the physique and successfully tells muscle groups to develop. It’s used to assist efficiency by serving to athletes construct muscle mass and improve their price of fats loss and in addition to extend stamina and restoration potential.

It has been on the World Anti-Doping Company’s banned checklist since 2008 and in 2022 was listed as an anabolic agent by WADA.

Ostarine has been utilized in boxing earlier than. Lucian Bute examined constructive for it in 2016 following a draw with Badou Jack of their WBC tremendous middleweight title battle. The consequence was modified to a DQ win for Jack.

Amir Khan was handed a two-year ban by UK Anti-Doping (UKAD) after he examined constructive for ostarine following his sixth-round TKO loss to Kell Brook in 2022.

Haney was a -900 favourite, in line with ESPN BET, however he closed at -575 after Garcia missed weight. The slick-boxing Haney, the previous undisputed light-weight champion, had by no means been knocked down getting into the battle, however Garcia deposited him on the canvas in Rounds 7, 10 and 11 along with his lightning-quick left hook to tug out the victory.

The win was a career-altering efficiency for Garcia, who has by no means received a world title however boasts an enormous social media presence with greater than 12 million followers on Instagram. His lone profession defeat got here through seventh-round TKO vs. Gervonta Davis final April.

Haney defeated future Corridor of Famer Vasiliy Lomachenko final Might to retain his 4 135-pound titles. He made his 140-pound debut in December with a shutout choice victory over Regis Prograis to win the WBC junior welterweight title.

ABC News Meteorologist Rob Marciano Exits

Rob Marciano, a longtime meteorologist at ABC Information identified for his appearances on weekend broadcasts of “Good Morning America,” has left the community, in keeping with an individual acquainted with the matter.

ABC Information declined to make executives accessible for remark.

Marciano had been with ABC Information since 2014, and stuffed a task on “GMA” that had beforehand been occupied by Ginger Zee, who now seems on the morning franchise throughout weekday applications. Marciano had been the topic of gossipy stories in shops resembling The New York Submit, which reported that he had been ousted from “GMA’s” Instances Sq. Studios after some conflicts with different personnel.

Marciano had beforehand labored as an anchor for “Leisure Tonight” and a meteorologist and anchor for CNN. Previous to taking these roles, he labored at native TV and radio stations together with KATU in Portland, Oregon, KPLC-TV in Lake Charles, Louisiana and WVIT in West Hartford, Connecticut.