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Enter To Win Free VIP Tickets To A LACUNA COIL Show Of Your Choice

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Italian gothic metal icons Lacuna Coil are giving fans the chance to step inside their dark, cinematic world — and it’s not just another ticket giveaway. Three lucky winners (plus a guest each) will score the ultimate VIP experience on the band’s upcoming run, including:

  • Tickets to a show of your choice
  • An exclusive meet & greet with Lacuna Coil
  • A personal photo with the band
  • VIP laminate and lanyard
  • Limited-edition Lacuna Coil bracelet
  • Sleepless Empire drawstring bag
  • Early entry to the venue
  • First access to official merch

This is your chance to go beyond the barricade and get closer than ever to one of metal’s most enduring acts. Enter for free right here!

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The Chinese Billionaire Who Says America’s EV Market Is Doomed Without Him

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Robin Zeng of CATL can’t build a factory in America, but Ford and GM rely on its technology.



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What went wrong for Iowa in stunning second-round upset in NCAA Tournament? And what’s next for Hawkeyes?

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As time wound down in the first overtime on Monday afternoon, Chit-Chat Wright drove into the paint, collapsed the defense and kicked the ball out to Taylor Stremlow in the left corner. The sophomore’s potential game-winning 3-pointer caught every part of the rim, but instead of falling through the net and sending No. 2 Iowa to the Sweet 16, it rattled out. 

The miss summed up a heartbreaking day for the Hawkeyes, who went on to lose, 83-75, in double overtime to No. 10 Virginia in the second round of the 2026 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament. For the second consecutive year, Iowa’s season has come to an end before the second weekend. 

Ice cold shooting dooms Hawkeyes

Stremlow’s miss, one of 24 from 3-point range for the Hawkeyes, highlighted an ice-cold two-game stretch for one of the best shooting teams in the country. 

During the regular season and the Big Ten Tournament, the Hawkeyes shot 36.2% from 3-point range, good for 21st in the country. Over their two tournament games, they shot 14.3%. Among teams that played at least two games, only Baylor (11.4%) was worse. 

Iowa went 1 of 13 from behind the arc in the first round as they narrowly avoided an upset against No. 15 Fairleigh Dickinson, and then went 5 of 29 against Virginia. 

Wright, the team’s leading 3-point shooter who averages 44.7% on five attempts per game, was 4 of 13 from behind the arc in the two games. The rest of the team was 2 of 29. Stremlow, the second-leading 3-point threat, was 1 of 10 against Virginia and 1 of 12 for the tournament. 

Regular season + Big Ten Tournament

219

605

36.2%

NCAA Tournament

6

42

14.3%

The 3-point revolution hasn’t hit the women’s college game in the same way it has the NBA or WNBA just yet, but it’s still extremely hard to win when you shoot that poorly from 3-point range — especially when you can’t overwhelm the opponent physically like Iowa did in the first round. On Monday, Virginia didn’t have an exceptional shooting performance (9 of 27, 33%), but the Cavaliers still outscored the Hawkeyes by 12 from behind the arc, which helped make up for their 20 turnovers. 

“[Virginia] played really, really well. But with us, I believe we took 20 more shots and we weren’t able to win it. I think we out-rebounded them,” Iowa coach Jan Jensen said. “All the things you should do. But when you look at categories that need to happen, the free throws, the shooting percentage, you just — that hurts because those things are a little bit more controllable.”

Iowa also had a brutal showing from the free-throw line on Monday, and in the tournament as a whole, though that wasn’t as surprising as their poor 3-point shooting. The Hawkeyes shot just 68.5% from the line (278th in the country) in the regular season and Big Ten Tournament. In their two tournament games, they were even worse: 55.5%.

The Hawkeyes were 8 of 16 in the first round and 17 of 29 in the second round. Again, it’s hard to succeed when you’re leaving that many points on the line. 

Notably, just before Stremlow’s devastating miss, Wright had a chance to put the game away at the line in the first overtime. After a review with 22 seconds to play, a foul on Virginia was upgraded to a flagrant, which gave Iowa two free throws and the ball in a tie game. Wright went 1 of 2 on the flagrant free throws and then, when Virginia fouled to stop the clock on the ensuing possession, went 1 of 2 again. Virginia went down on the other end and tied the game. 

Hawkeyes have bright future after exceeding expectations

Iowa entered the second season of their post-Caitlin Clark and Lisa Bluder rebuild ranked No. 21 in the country, and were projected to finish outside of the top five in the Big Ten (the conference didn’t publish full preseason projections). 

The Hawkeyes ended up going 24-5 in the regular season, made the Big Ten Tournament championship, were ranked No. 7 in the final AP poll and earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Monday’s loss was a disappointing end to a successful season, during which the Hawkeyes far exceeded expectations. 

Iowa will lose key seniors Hannah Stuelke, Kylie Feuerbach and Taylor McCabe (who tore her ACL in January), but the future is bright in Iowa City. 

“Well, obviously we had a really tremendous year that ended really with a disappointing moment. You know, I will also have to recall all the good things that happened during this year because when an ending happens like this, it’s always hard to remember,” Jensen said. 

Three of the Hawkeyes’ starters were sophomores — Wright, Stremlow and Ava Heiden — and together they combined for 48.4% of the team’s scoring this season. Heiden was the leading scorer at 17.8 points per game, Wright led the team in assists and 3-point shooting and Stremlow was second in assists and 3-point shooting. 

Add in a highly-touted freshman class featuring Addie Deal, Journey Houston and Layla Hays, and five-star recruit McKenna Woliczko, and there will still be plenty of talent in Iowa City next season for Jensen. And that’s if she doesn’t find some additional help in the transfer portal. 





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229 migrants calling for help found in back of truck in eastern Mexico

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XALAPA, México — XALAPA, México (AP) — Mexican authorities found 229 migrants on Monday packed in the back of a truck traveling through the eastern Mexican state of Veracruz, the first such encounter in months, marking a potential uptick in migration since U.S. President Donald Trump took office.

José Manuel Pozos, the state’s deputy government secretary, said that they found migrants trapped in a truck reported stolen after they began to call for help from a police impound lot. Most of the migrants were from Central America, 17 were minors and a number were dehydrated, he said.

Veracruz is one of a number of states that masses of migrants have historically crossed to reach the United States, and are preyed upon by cartels and other criminal groups. They are often packed into trucks in dangerous conditions to evade authorities while being smuggled north.

But as migration north has plummeted since Trump took office, cases are few and far between.

An employee at the Xalapa vehicle impound lot, where the truck was taken, told The Associated Press that the trailer had been stopped about 45 kilometers (28 miles) southeast of the city and that hours after arriving at the lot, workers began to hear shouting and banging coming from inside.

When they realized people were locked inside, they called emergency services to open the vehicle, said the worker, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

In the afternoon, the migrants were removed from the impound lot in state police buses, but Veracruz police did not report where they were being taken. Generally, migrants without legal status are handed over to Mexico’s immigration agency.

Over the years, migrant smugglers have used all kinds of vehicles to transport foreigners through Mexico, usually overcrowded, in poor conditions, and at risk of dying in the process, as happened in a deadly accident in southern Mexico in 2021 or when 53 migrants died after being abandoned inside a truck in San Antonio, Texas, in 2022.

Many times, trailers are specially modified to smuggle people with hidden compartments in case of inspections. Fake ambulances have even been used to evade checkpoints.

From 2022 to 2024, Mexican authorities greatly increased the seizure of these vehicles and the detention of migrants traveling inside them. While migration levels have taken a nose dive over the past year, migration north appears to be slowly picking up again.

This year, shelters in southern Mexico told the AP that in addition to receiving non-Mexican foreigners deported by Trump, they have once again begun to take in Central Americans heading north, although in very small numbers.

___

Follow AP’s Latin America coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america



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First phase of redevelopment project to set to begin at the state fairgrounds

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – It’s a “go” for a major first step in the fairgrounds redevelopment, with the special board in control of the property voting yes to pursue a list of projects.  The green light is for what’s called “Phase One” of the “master plan,” which includes a new sports stadium, a park, housing, and more. Planners hope it’s something all New Mexicans can be excited for. “This is a true generational […]



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SEPULTURA Play “The Place” For The Very First Time In Australia

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I won’t lie – Australia is usually dealt a pretty shitty hand when it comes to bands touring there – so it’s nice to see Sepultura treating Australian fans to something new as they performed the live debut of their newest single, “The Place.” Fans managed to capture a video of the performance – check it out.

Setlist.fm cited that Sepultura played over 20 tracks on the first night of their Celebrating Life Through Death tour in Perth, Australia last night:

  1. “Beneath The Remains”
  2. “Inner Self”
  3. “Desperate Cry”
  4. “The Place” (live debut)
  5. “Kairos”
  6. “Propaganda”
  7. “Attitude”
  8. “Means To An End”
  9. “Choke”
  10. “Phantom Self”
  11. “Kaiowas”
  12. “Guardians Of Earth”
  13. “Escape To The Void”
  14. “Dead Embryonic Cells”
  15. “Agony Of Defeat”
  16. “Orgasmatron” (Motörhead cover)
  17. “Troops Of Doom”
  18. “Territory”
  19. “Refuse/Resist”
  20. “Arise”
  21. “Ratamahatta”
  22. “Roots Bloody Roots”

Sepultura are due to play another five shows in the land down under before heading back to the United States to start the US leg of their tour at the end of April which will last exactly a month. Then, a week later in June, Sepultura is due to pack it up and head to Europe for a mix of headline shows and festival slots for two months.

You can check out the full extent of their touring schedule here and you can find a list of US dates below.

4/29 Montclair, NJ The Wellmont Theater
5/1 Montreal, QC MTELUS
5/2 London, ON London Music Hall
5/4 Detroit, MI Royal Oak Music Theatre
5/5 Louisville, KY Old Forester’s Paristown Hall
5/6 Nashville, TN Brooklyn Bowl
5/7 Atlanta, GA The Masquerade
5/8 New Orleans, LA The Civic Theatre
5/10 Daytona Beach, FL Welcome To Rockville
5/11 Charleston, SC Music Farm
5/12 Greensboro, NC Piedmont Hall
5/13 Reading, PA Reverb
5/15 Chicago, IL Ramova Theatre
5/16 Columbus, OH Sonic Temple
5/17 Milwaukee, WI The Rave
5/19 Des Moines, IA Val Air Ballroom
5/21 Denver, CO The Ogden Theatre
5/22 Salt Lake City, UT The Depot
5/23 Boise, ID Shrine Social Club
5/25 Las Vegas, NV House Of Blues
5/26 San Diego, CA The Observatory North Park
5/28 Berkeley, CA UC Theatre
5/29 Los Angeles, CA The Wiltern

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How Nvidia Keeps Its Iron Grip on the AI Boom

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The chip giant has invested tens of billions from its fast-growing war chest to become the industry’s most powerful kingmaker.



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RODEOHOUSTON Sees Familiar Faces in Winner’s Circle

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It was a tough set of ropers in the Final Four in Houston with Williams, 2025 NFBR Average Champion Rylee George, reigning world champion Taylor Munsell and three-time NFBR qualifier Macy Young. Williams was the first gunner, setting the bar high with a 2.6 second run. George would take her shot next stopping the clock in 4.4 seconds. Reigning world champion and RodeoHouston champion Munsell was the next to back into the box but came up short stopping the clock in 3.8 seconds.

Williams just had to sweat out one more in Young, who had already picked up the guitar for winning her Super Series. In the Shootout round, she stopped the clock in 2.4 seconds but then got the dreaded news she had broken the barrier to end with a 12.4.

“I knew with Taylor being behind me, Rylee has been on a heater, and you never want Macy Young behind you in Houston because you know she is rank, that I had to take the shot,” noted Williams. “It was a very ugly loop but knew if I didn’t throw and put the pressure on the ladies behind me, I wouldn’t have a chance. We had a great group of girls in the Finals, and it was really fun as we were down there supporting each other. It was cool to experience it with these girls.”

For Mowry this was her third RODEOHOUSTON title having won her first in 2017. It was a little déjà vu for two former WPRA world champions – Mowry and Hailey Kinsel. A year ago, both made it to the Final Four and just like in 2025 Kinsel and Sister set the bar in the shootout round as the first one out this time stopping the clock in 14.22 seconds. Mowry and Jarvis took to the cloverleaf pattern next laying down a 14.19-second run to once again bump Kinsel and Sister to second place. Summer Kosel and LaTricia Duke would try to best these two champions but would fall short in their quest.

“Jarvis is pretty consistent and has been pretty good on his second run with these back-to-back championship rounds,” noted Mowry in the winner’s circle. “I knew with the tough set I had to cut some corners, or I wasn’t going to be fast enough. Every time I think that horse can’t get any better, he continues to wow me. He is incredible.”

Winning RODEOHOUSTON has proven very beneficial for Mowry, who splits her time between the professional rodeo circuit and the barrel futurity circuit where she also excels at a high level. Winning over $71,000 in March makes it easier for Mowry to focus on her futurity colts in the coming months before heading out for the summer run of rodeos in a quest for world title No. 3.

“This is huge,” Mowry said. “This really helps me as I can’t spend a lot of time on the road with all my futurity colts, so this big win makes a huge difference for me. It is good to win this big chunk of money without having to burn up the road as much. I am so thankful.”



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New federal prosecutor to take the helm in New Jersey after months of upheaval

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A career prosecutor is set to lead the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Jersey after successful consultations between federal judges and the Trump administration that were preceded by months of legal fights and significant turnover.

Robert Frazer, who has served in the New Jersey U.S. attorney’s office for more than two decades and was most recently its senior trial counsel, will become the top federal prosecutor in the state.

The chief judge for the district signed a one-sentence order Monday appointing Frazer.

The same day, a letter signed by an assistant U.S. attorney in the office said Frazer’s appointment “followed consultations between the District Court and the Department of Justice’s senior leadership.”

The Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a statement to The New York Times, a Justice Department spokesman thanked the New Jersey judges for working with the Justice Department and appointing Frazer so “criminal prosecutions can resume without needless challenge or delay.”

The appointment follows nearly a year of upheaval after President Donald Trump named one of his former personal attorneys, Alina Habba, as the district’s interim U.S. attorney in March 2025.

Alina Habba
Alina Habba arrives for the world premiere of “Melania” at the Kennedy Center in Washington on Jan. 29.Stefani Reynolds / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Trump then nominated her to fill the role permanently, but the Senate did not act on her nomination. After 120 days passed and her interim position expired, district judges in New Jersey appointed Desiree Leigh Grace, Habba’s first assistant and a registered Republican, to her post.

Attorney General Pam Bondi immediately fired Grace, calling the judges’ appointment “politically minded.” She then made a series of maneuvers to re-appoint Habba, a move that U.S. District Judge Matthew Brann found unlawful. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Brann’s ruling.

The Justice Department then moved to appoint a trio of prosecutors to lead the office, an unconventional move that came under scrutiny from judges in the district, some of whom delayed sentencings and hearings, citing concerns that they could be invalidated under the leadership structure. Brann ruled that the triumvirate was not leading the office lawfully.

Another judge suggested that Habba was still calling the shots behind the scenes.

Habba, who is now a senior adviser to Bondi, congratulated Frazer on Monday, saying he will be “a great champion of this state and the mission” of the Justice Department.

In her post, Habba also suggested the judges had worked with Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. Blanche reposted Habba’s message.

The administration’s appointments for interim U.S. attorneys in other districts have been found unlawful in some districts beyond New Jersey.

In the Eastern District of Virginia, a federal judge ruled that Lindsey Halligan, who unsuccessfully prosecuted former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, was unlawfully appointed. The Justice Department fired her replacement hours after federal judges appointed him.

The same thing happened in the Northern District of New York, where prosecutor Donald Kinsella was fired immediately after judges appointed him to replace Trump’s interim pick, John Sarcone III.



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Jury finds that Bill Cosby sexually assaulted woman in 1972, awards her more than $19 million

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A civil jury in California found Monday that Bill Cosby was liable for drugging and sexually assaulting a woman in 1972 and awarded her $19.25 million.After a nearly two-week trial in Santa Monica, jurors found the 88-year-old Cosby liable for the sexual battery and assault of Donna Motsinger.Cosby’s attorney, Jennifer Bonjean, said in an email that they are disappointed and fully intend to appeal the verdict.The decision came nearly five years after Cosby was freed from prison in Pennsylvania when the state Supreme Court threw out a criminal conviction based on similar allegations.Motsinger had been a server at a restaurant in Sausalito near San Francisco, who said in her lawsuit, filed in 2023, that Cosby had invited her to his stand-up comedy show at a theater in nearby San Carlos. Both were in their 30s at the time. She said Cosby gave her wine and two pills that she believed were aspirin, and that she was going in and out of consciousness as two men put her in a limousine.”She woke up in her house with all her clothes off, except her underwear on – no top, no bra, and no pants,” the lawsuit said. “She knew she had been drugged and raped by Bill Cosby.”In court filings, Cosby’s lawyers argued that the allegations rested almost entirely on speculation and assumption, saying Motsinger “freely admits that she has no idea what happened.”Jurors awarded Motsinger $17.5 million in past damages and $1.75 million for future damages, including “mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, inconvenience, grief, anxiety, humiliation, and emotional distress.” They deliberated for just over a day.They can award even more in a punitive damages phase of the trial that starts later Monday.Cosby did not testify at the trial, whose witnesses included Andrea Constand, the Temple University sports administrator he was convicted of sexually assaulting in a Pennsylvania criminal court in 2018. The state’s Supreme Court threw out the verdict, and Cosby was freed from prison after serving nearly three years of a three- to 10-year sentence.Motsinger first made her allegations anonymously in a 2005 lawsuit filed by Constand.The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they come forward publicly and consent to be named, as Constand and Motsinger have.In 2022, a jury in Santa Monica awarded $500,000 to a woman who said Cosby sexually assaulted her at the Playboy Mansion when she was a teenager in 1975.Motsinger’s lawsuit echoed allegations of rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment made by at least 60 women against Cosby, all of which he has denied.The former stand-up comedy and television superstar, once widely known as “America’s Dad,” became the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era before his conviction was permanently thrown out when an appeals court found he gave incriminating testimony in a deposition only after believing he had immunity from prosecution.

A civil jury in California found Monday that Bill Cosby was liable for drugging and sexually assaulting a woman in 1972 and awarded her $19.25 million.

After a nearly two-week trial in Santa Monica, jurors found the 88-year-old Cosby liable for the sexual battery and assault of Donna Motsinger.

Cosby’s attorney, Jennifer Bonjean, said in an email that they are disappointed and fully intend to appeal the verdict.

The decision came nearly five years after Cosby was freed from prison in Pennsylvania when the state Supreme Court threw out a criminal conviction based on similar allegations.

Motsinger had been a server at a restaurant in Sausalito near San Francisco, who said in her lawsuit, filed in 2023, that Cosby had invited her to his stand-up comedy show at a theater in nearby San Carlos. Both were in their 30s at the time. She said Cosby gave her wine and two pills that she believed were aspirin, and that she was going in and out of consciousness as two men put her in a limousine.

“She woke up in her house with all her clothes off, except her underwear on – no top, no bra, and no pants,” the lawsuit said. “She knew she had been drugged and raped by Bill Cosby.”

In court filings, Cosby’s lawyers argued that the allegations rested almost entirely on speculation and assumption, saying Motsinger “freely admits that she has no idea what happened.”

Jurors awarded Motsinger $17.5 million in past damages and $1.75 million for future damages, including “mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, inconvenience, grief, anxiety, humiliation, and emotional distress.” They deliberated for just over a day.

They can award even more in a punitive damages phase of the trial that starts later Monday.

Cosby did not testify at the trial, whose witnesses included Andrea Constand, the Temple University sports administrator he was convicted of sexually assaulting in a Pennsylvania criminal court in 2018. The state’s Supreme Court threw out the verdict, and Cosby was freed from prison after serving nearly three years of a three- to 10-year sentence.

Motsinger first made her allegations anonymously in a 2005 lawsuit filed by Constand.

The Associated Press does not typically name people who say they have been sexually abused unless they come forward publicly and consent to be named, as Constand and Motsinger have.

In 2022, a jury in Santa Monica awarded $500,000 to a woman who said Cosby sexually assaulted her at the Playboy Mansion when she was a teenager in 1975.

Motsinger’s lawsuit echoed allegations of rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment made by at least 60 women against Cosby, all of which he has denied.

The former stand-up comedy and television superstar, once widely known as “America’s Dad,” became the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era before his conviction was permanently thrown out when an appeals court found he gave incriminating testimony in a deposition only after believing he had immunity from prosecution.



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