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UNIVERSITY PARK — As No. 4 Penn State went through warmups at Beaver Stadium ahead of Saturday afternoon’s regular-season finale vs. Maryland, No. 2 Ohio State and Michigan were locked in a low-scoring duel with significant implications. A loss by the Buckeyes coupled with a Nittany Lions win would propel Penn State into the Big Ten championship game Dec. 7 vs. No. 1 Oregon. The Nittany Lions got the help they needed from Michigan, which upset Ohio State, and Penn State took things from there, overcoming a sluggish start to dispatch Maryland, 44-7, on senior day while punching a ticket to the league title game for the first time since 2016. Only 11 seconds into the game, Penn State (11-1, 8-1) was down 7-0, but the Nittany Lions scored 44 unanswered points. Drew Allar finished the day 17 of 26 for 171 yards and two total touchdowns, and Tyler Warren became the Big Ten’s single-season record holder for catches by a tight end (76) in addition to Penn State’s all-time leader in touchdowns by a tight end (17). Warren caught six passes for 68 yards and a touchdown, rushing three times for an additional 32 yards. Penn State amassed 412 yards of total offense and held Maryland to 194. Nick Singleton fumbled on Penn State’s first play of the game, with Maryland recovering at the 25-yard line before MJ Morris threw a touchdown pass to Kaden Prather on the Terrapins’ opening play. Penn State answered with a 49-yard field goal by Ryan Barker, making the score 7-3 with 12 minutes, 47 seconds left in the first quarter. Neither Penn State nor Maryland (4-8, 1-8) was productive for a large chunk of the opening quarter. However, the Nittany Lions eventually got their wheels turning, embarking on a 13-play, 60-yard touchdown drive, which Singleton capped with a short run from the 2-yard line to give his team a 10-7 lead with 12:53 left before halftime. Though Penn State’s offense didn’t shower itself in glory early, the defense came up with several big plays, including three first-quarter sacks and two picks in the first half. A few minutes after Singleton’s touchdown run, Penn State stuffed a Maryland fourth-and-1 try from the Terrapins’ 30-yard line. On Penn State’s ensuing drive, Allar scored on a keeper at the goal line, giving the Nittany Lions a 17-7 lead at the 10:11 mark. A wacky play on Penn State’s next possession set up a short Beau Pribula rushing touchdown, making the score 24-7. Faking a handoff to Singleton in the backfield, Allar lost the football, with Maryland’s defense swarming the backfield. But Allar shook off the pressure and, as he was being dragged down, managed to toss the football to Warren, who turned the broken play into a 29-yard gain, with Singleton adding another 18 on the ground to get the Nittany Lions to the goal line. Pribula did the rest as Penn State went up by 17 with 6:53 remaining in the first half. Audavion Collins intercepted Morris on the Terrapins’ next drive, leading to a 7-yard scoring pass to Warren and a 31-7 advantage. The Terrapins got themselves in good position to put some points on the board at the end of the half, but Tony Rojas intercepted Morris at Penn State’s 9-yard line. Maryland made a change at quarterback in the third quarter, inserting Champ Long, but it did not lead to improved offense. Following a scoreless third, Singleton put Penn State up 38-7 with an 18-yard touchdown run 46 seconds into the fourth. Singleton led the Nittany Lions backfield with 13 carries for 87 yards and two scores. Penn State pulled Allar from the game in the fourth quarter, and the Pribula-led offense penetrated as far as Maryland’s 12-yard line before being stopped on fourth down with 3:42 to play. With Morris back in the game late, Penn State picked him off for the third time. Dejuan Lane returned it 54 yards deep into Terrapins territory. Pribula hit Tyseer Denmark for a 15-yard score as time expired in the blowout.Racial and geographic health disparities in the US have increased over the last two decades, research shows
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NoneFamily of Lyle and Erik Menendez told a judge Monday they want the men freed from the life sentences they are serving for the shotgun murders of their parents, as their court case suffered a delay. The pair have been in prison since a blockbuster trial in the 1990s that became almost compulsory viewing for millions of Americans. Television audiences were riveted by the gruesome details of the slayings of Jose and Kitty Menendez at the family's luxury Beverly Hills mansion. The two men, who have spent more than three decades behind bars, had been due to appear by videolink at a hearing in Los Angeles, their first court appearance in 28 years as a campaign to set them free gathers pace. But technical difficulties scuppered the appearance and the hearing was pushed back to the end of January. Nevertheless, Judge Michael Jesic called the two men's elderly aunts to the stand to hear them plead for the brothers to be freed. "I would like to be able to hug them and see them," Jose Menendez's older sister Terry Baralt, 85, said. "I would like them to come home." Kitty's sister, Joan Vander Molen, echoed that. "No child should go through what Erik and Lyle went through," she said. "They never knew if tonight will be the night when they would be raped." Prosecutors painted the crime as a cold-hearted bid by the then-young men -- Lyle was 21 and Erik was 18 -- to get their hands on their parents' $14 million fortune. But their attorneys described the 1989 killings as an act of desperate self-defense by young men subjected to years of sexual abuse and psychological violence at the hands of an abusive father and a complicit mother. The case saw a huge surge of renewed interest this year with the release of the Netflix hit "Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story." The hearing comes after a campaign to secure their release, supported by Kim Kardashian and other celebrities. "Set them free before the Holidays!" wrote Tammi Menendez, Erik's wife, on social media last week. Public interest was such that the court held a lottery for the 16 seats in the public gallery. Nick Bonanno, a former high school classmate of Erik's, was the first to arrive at the court, taking his place at the head of the line at 4:30 am (1230 GMT). "I wanted to show support to... Eric and Lyle," he told AFP ahead of the hearing. "It's all about supporting and healing, not just for the families, but for us as a culture." Elena Gordon, 43, said she wanted "to witness a part of our local history." The hearing was intended as a starting point for lawyers working on three routes to free Erik Menendez, 53, and Lyle Menendez, 56. Attorney Mark Geragos has filed a writ of habeas corpus, an attempt to effectively vacate the brothers' first-degree murder conviction, which could free the brothers immediately. Another route is an effort to get the men re-sentenced on the same conviction, which would open the way for them to request parole. Finally, Geragos has submitted a clemency request to California Governor Gavin Newsom. Journalist Robert Rand, who wrote a book about the case, and who is in regular touch with the brothers, said the family was optimistic. But, he said, no one was expecting any quick fixes. "They're hopeful," he said. "They don't know what's going to happen. "I believe this could take much longer than was originally anticipated. It could be six months, could be eight months, could be a year, but eventually they will get out." With excitement over the case near fever pitch, tourists are regularly making pilgrimages to the Beverly Hills home where the killings took place. Australian Christian Hannah, who was born almost two decades after the double murders, made sure the home was a stop on his tour of celebrity hotspots, because of his fascination with the Netflix show. "It's really awesome seeing it in person," he told AFP last week. "It's just because you see it on TV and you see it in person, just feels really cool." pr-hg/amz/jgcTech stocks help lift S&P/TSX Friday, U.S. stock markets mixed after jobs reportTrump taps Charles Kushner, father of his son-in-law, as envoy to France
US stocks mostly rose Friday after a report showed a healthy jobs market, and Paris rallied as President Emmanuel Macron vowed to serve out his full term and end France's political crisis. Oil fell on concerns of oversupply and Bitcoin held at a level over $100,000 after hitting records Thursday. The world's biggest economy gained 227,000 jobs in November, more than analysts expected and up from a revised 36,000 in October, said the US Department of Labor. "The US jobs market has emphatically rebounded following October's disappointing data," said Neal Keane, head of global sales trading at ADSS. October's figures had been depressed by hurricanes and workers' strikes, while November's increases may have been exaggerated by the end of a strike at Boeing in particular -- and by retail hiring ahead of the holiday season. US stocks mostly closed higher, with the broad-based S&P 500 and tech-focused Nasdaq both hitting fresh records, although the Dow retreated slightly. Investors are mostly betting that November's jobs numbers, while comforting, are probably not strong enough to deter the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates again this month. "Investors needed a reassuring jobs report and that's exactly what they got," said eToro analyst Bret Kenwell. "The market still favors a rate cut from the Fed later this month and this report may not change that expectation." The Paris stock market closed up 1.3 percent on "hope that President Emmanuel Macron will serve out his term and that a (French) budget can be passed in the coming weeks," noted Derren Nathan, head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown. Macron on Friday was holding talks with French political leaders on the left and right as he seeks to quickly name a new prime minister after Michel Barnier's government was ousted in a historic no-confidence vote. Macron adopted a defiant tone in an address to the nation Thursday evening, just 24 hours after parliament voted out Barnier over his 2025 budget plan, which included unpopular austerity measures forced through without a vote using special powers. The luxury sector benefitted also from hopes of a pickup in Chinese demand. Gucci owner Kering topped the Paris CAC 40 as its shares gained more than six percent, while LVMH rose more than three percent. French video game company Ubisoft jumped 13 percent on takeover speculation. Frankfurt closed slightly higher, other continental markets were mixed, and London slid. In Asia, shares in Seoul sank more than one percent and the won weakened to about 1,420 per dollar as lawmakers prepared to hold an impeachment vote Saturday after President Yoon Suk Yeol's dramatic, short-lived imposition of martial law this week. While analysts said the economic fallout from the crisis would likely be limited, a political storm is ongoing. Hong Kong and Shanghai rallied as investors grew hopeful of fresh stimulus when top Chinese leaders including President Xi Jinping meet to discuss economic policy next week. Bitcoin hovered above $100,000 after having blasted to the historic peak of $103,800 Thursday on news that US President-elect Donald Trump had picked crypto proponent Paul Atkins to head the nation's markets regulator. New York - Dow: DOWN 0.3 percent at 44,642.52 points (close) New York - S&P 500: UP 0.3 percent at 6,090.27 (close) New York - Nasdaq Composite: UP 0.8 percent at 19,859.77 (close) Paris - CAC 40: UP 1.3 percent at 7,426.88 (close) Frankfurt - DAX: UP 0.1 percent at 20,384.61 (close) London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.5 percent at 8,308.61 (close) Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.8 percent at 39,091.17 (close) Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: UP 1.6 percent at 19,865.85 (close) Shanghai - Composite: UP 1.1 percent at 3,404.08 (close) Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.0566 from $1.0591 on Thursday Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.2740 from $1.2760 Dollar/yen: DOWN at 149.97 yen from 150.09 yen Euro/pound: DOWN at 82.93 from 82.97 pence West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 1.6 percent at $67.20 per barrel Brent North Sea Crude: DOWN 1.4 percent at $71.12 per barrel gv/rl/bys/ahaSports on TV for Sunday, Dec. 22
Inventus Mining Commences 80-Hole Drill Program at Pardo Receives OJEP Funding Support and Grants Stock OptionsNEWARK, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec 3, 2024-- Prudential Financial, Inc. ( NYSE: PRU ) today announced that the Board of Directors has appointed Andrew Sullivan as its next CEO, effective March 31, 2025. Sullivan, who currently serves as executive vice president and head of International Businesses and Global Investment Management, will succeed Charles F. Lowrey. Lowrey will remain as Executive Chairman of the Board for 18 months, working with the Board and supporting and advising Sullivan. This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241203419178/en/ Charles F. Lowrey will step down as CEO of Prudential Financial on March 31, 2025 and will remain as Executive Chairman of the Board for 18 months. (Photo: Business Wire) As part of Prudential’s executive leadership team, Sullivan has played an important role in driving the company’s strategy. He currently oversees both the company’s International Insurance segment and PGIM, the firm’s $1.4 trillion global investment management business. Since joining the company in 2011, he has held successive leadership positions, including heading all of the firm’s U.S.-based businesses. “Andy is an exceptional leader who brings a deep understanding of our businesses, our strategy, our people, and our customers to this role, and I have every confidence that he is the right leader to take Prudential into the future,” said Lowrey. “As we approach the 150th anniversary of Prudential’s founding, now is the right time to elevate the next generation of leadership, and I look forward to continuing to support Andy in my role as Executive Chairman.” “I am honored to have the opportunity to lead this company as it embarks on its next chapter,” said Sullivan. “I would like to thank Charlie and the Board of Directors for their confidence and trust in me. Under Charlie’s leadership, Prudential has made substantial progress towards becoming a higher growth, more capital-efficient company, refined its business mix, invested in technology, and innovated new products. I look forward to working with Prudential’s leadership team and employees to advance our strategy and expand Prudential’s position as a leader in investing, insurance, and retirement security,” said Sullivan. Having successfully led Prudential’s U.S. Businesses since 2021, Caroline Feeney will expand her role to become Global Head of Insurance and Retirement, a newly created position overseeing Prudential’s market-leading domestic and international insurance and retirement businesses, effective March 31, 2025. Feeney and incoming head of PGIM Jacques Chappuis will both report to Sullivan in his role as CEO. “We see significant synergies across our U.S. and international insurance and retirement businesses, and bringing these capabilities together in one global division under Caroline’s leadership will create additional opportunities for collaboration and growth. I want to congratulate her on this expanded role,” said Sullivan. The Board also announced that Vice Chair Robert Falzon will step down from the Board, effective March 31, 2025, and retire from Prudential, effective July 11, 2025. Falzon’s 42-year career with Prudential has seen him serve as executive vice president and CFO of Prudential, as well as company treasurer and managing director of PGIM Real Estate, head of PGIM’s Global Merchant Banking and Global Real Estate Securities groups and CEO of its European business. “On behalf of the Board, I would like to thank Charlie for his leadership and continued commitment to Prudential,” said Michael A. Todman, Prudential’s Lead Independent Director. “Among many other achievements, Charlie was the principal architect of a complex strategic transformation that has positioned Prudential to be a nimble, dynamic, and high-growth company for years to come. After thoroughly considering a diverse array of candidates for the CEO role, the Board is confident that Andy is the right leader to continue this progress. I also want to thank Rob for his leadership and his many contributions to Prudential and wish him well in his retirement.” ABOUT PRUDENTIAL Prudential Financial, Inc. ( NYSE: PRU ), a global financial services leader and premier active global investment manager with approximately $1.6 trillion in assets under management as of Sept. 30, 2024, has operations in the United States, Asia, Europe, and Latin America. Prudential’s diverse and talented employees help make lives better and create financial opportunity for more people by expanding access to investing, insurance, and retirement security. Prudential's iconic Rock symbol has stood for strength, stability, expertise, and innovation for nearly 150 years. For more information, please visit news.prudential.com . View source version on businesswire.com : https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241203419178/en/ CONTACT: Media Bill Launder Head of Corporate Communications bill.launder@prudential.com KEYWORD: UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA NEW JERSEY INDUSTRY KEYWORD: PROFESSIONAL SERVICES INSURANCE FINANCE SOURCE: Prudential Financial, Inc. Copyright Business Wire 2024. PUB: 12/03/2024 04:30 PM/DISC: 12/03/2024 04:28 PM http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241203419178/en
CHICAGO — Eight people were shot, three of them fatally, when gunfire erupted Monday during a house party in Chicago, sending screaming people fleeing from the home, authorities and a witness said. Officers responded about 2:10 p.m. and found that eight people had been shot during a “social gathering” at the home in the city’s southwest Chicago Lawn neighborhood, said Chicago’s Police Chief of Patrol Jon Hein. He said the victims were four men and four women between the ages of 20 and 35. Police said a 26-year-old man and two other men were pronounced dead and a 27-year-old woman who was shot in the head was hospitalized in critical condition. A 24-year-old woman who was shot six times was hospitalized in serious condition. Three others — two men ages 31 and 25 and a 21-year-old woman — who were shot were in good condition, police said. It’s not the first time police have been called to the home, Hein said, and a neighbor who lives on the block, El Towers, said parties are often hosted there. Towers said he heard at least 10 gunshots followed by people running from the home, screaming, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. Hein did not provide any information about the shooter or shooters, who remained at large, and he was unable to provide a potential motive for the attack. “We’re going to solve this crime and find the individuals that are responsible for this heinous, terrible incident,” Hein told reporters at the scene. Chicago Police had no updates as of Tuesday morning, according to the department’s communications office.
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