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Pandora’s New CEO Turns to Platinum Jewelry to Offset Silver Volatility

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The jeweler aims to reduce dependence on silver as part of the strategy of its newly installed Chief Berta de Pablos-Barbier.



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Oklahoma State upsets BYU, survives AJ Dybantsa’s huge game to boost NCAA profile

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Oklahoma State picked up a desperately needed marquee victory by upsetting No. 16 BYU 99-92 on Wednesday night, despite 36 points from Cougars star freshman AJ Dybantsa. The win is the first Quad 1 victory for the Cowboys (16-6, 4-5 Big 12), who travel to face No. 1 Arizona on Saturday.

The outcome prompted a court-storming at Gallagher-Iba Arena as the Cowboys closed out a win that could prove monumental come Selection Sunday.

Oklahoma State led by as much as 15 in the first half before Dybantsa keyed a furious rally to send the teams into halftime tied at 41. BYU kept the surge going in the second half, building a five-point lead in the opening minutes before the Cowboys finally regained their footing. 

Anthony Roy led the charge for Oklahoma State with 30 points, as the senior guard built on a 26-point performance from Saturday’s win at Utah with another big showing. The Green Bay transfer keyed a 10-3 run late in the second half as Oklahoma State kept the Cougars at arm’s length down the stretch.

Dybantsa finished 13 of 20 from the floor for BYU (17-5, 5-4), but his fourth 30+ point game of the season couldn’t save the Cougars from their fourth loss in five games. BYU committed 16 turnovers, which marked its highest tally since Jan. 7. Oklahoma State capitalized with an 21-8 edge in points off turnovers.

Implications for Oklahoma State

Oklahoma State entered the day among the “First Four Out” in the CBS Sports Bracketology model. Initial projections suggest the Cowboys will move to a No. 11 seed in the next updated bracket after securing their best win to date. While it’s technically the Cowboys’ first Quad 1 win, it’s not their first over a projected NCAA Tournament team. Oklahoma State also owns victories against Texas A&M and UCF, both of whom are on track for at-large bids to the Big Dance. There is a strong likelihood that Oklahoma State will rise into the top 40 nationally in the important Wins Above Bubble (WAB) metric as a result of its victory over BYU.

Fallout for BYU

BYU, projected to remain a No. 4 seed in CBS Sports Bracketology, is grinding through a difficult portion of schedule after a soft opening to its Big 12 slate and has now dropped four of its past five games. While BYU is 4-5 in Quad 1 and has no losses outside of Quad 1, it doesn’t yet have a true marquee victory. Beating No. 8 Houston on Saturday would change that, but BYU will have to snap out of its recent funk to pull that off, particularly on defense. BYU’s past three opponents have each shot better than 50% from the floor.





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U.S. shoots down Iranian drone that approached aircraft carrier

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U.S. shoots down Iranian drone that approached aircraft carrier – CBS News










































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U.S. officials say a Navy jet shot down an Iranian drone on Tuesday, claiming it was “aggressively approaching” a U.S. aircraft carrier that President Trump recently sent to the region. Charlie D’Agata reports.



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Lobo fandom starts young for many in New Mexico

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University of New Mexico fans eagerly prepared for a key Mountain West basketball showdown at The Pit against Utah State, despite a loss on Wednesday night.”Lobo Nation, let’s go!” echoed the enthusiasm of fans gearing up for the game. The tradition of supporting the Lobos starts young for many, including for UNM student Dylan Provencio, who has been a lifelong fan. “I’ve been going since I was seven. My dad, we’d always go and we’d always go right next to the student section. So, I knew when I went to UNM, I had to be in the student section,” Provencio said. Tickets to sit with the Howl Raisers are in high demand, including for UNM student Kaylie Doyle. “You always have to act fast. I think I got my ticket probably as soon as the Mountain West tickets went on sale, so I got them about a month ago,” she said.The excitement isn’t limited to Lobo fans. A group of friends supporting the Aggies flew to New Mexico on Wednesday morning. “Go Aggies,” they cheered. One visitor shared their positive impression of Albuquerque, saying, “I’ve never been to Albuquerque, and I got here, I was like, this place is like nice. We went to the restaurant, the food was awesome.”They enjoyed a meal at Frontier, with one friend adding, “Got some green chile. Really spiced it up.” The group said they were eager to witness a Mountain West matchup between the Lobos and the Aggies and experience The Pit firsthand.UNM student and lifelong Lobo fan Audrey Flores expressed her excitement about the game, attributing the energy on campus to recent athletic successes. “I think the vibe around campus just because football did so good. Everybody’s like super hyped. Let’s keep this going,” Flores said. Despite the late tip-off, the student section was prepared, with free energy drinks being handed out to keep spirits high.The final score was 88 to 66.

University of New Mexico fans eagerly prepared for a key Mountain West basketball showdown at The Pit against Utah State, despite a loss on Wednesday night.

“Lobo Nation, let’s go!” echoed the enthusiasm of fans gearing up for the game.

The tradition of supporting the Lobos starts young for many, including for UNM student Dylan Provencio, who has been a lifelong fan.

“I’ve been going since I was seven. My dad, we’d always go and we’d always go right next to the student section. So, I knew when I went to UNM, I had to be in the student section,” Provencio said.

Tickets to sit with the Howl Raisers are in high demand, including for UNM student Kaylie Doyle.

“You always have to act fast. I think I got my ticket probably as soon as the Mountain West tickets went on sale, so I got them about a month ago,” she said.

The excitement isn’t limited to Lobo fans.

A group of friends supporting the Aggies flew to New Mexico on Wednesday morning. “Go Aggies,” they cheered. One visitor shared their positive impression of Albuquerque, saying, “I’ve never been to Albuquerque, and I got here, I was like, this place is like nice. We went to the restaurant, the food was awesome.”

They enjoyed a meal at Frontier, with one friend adding, “Got some green chile. Really spiced it up.” The group said they were eager to witness a Mountain West matchup between the Lobos and the Aggies and experience The Pit firsthand.

UNM student and lifelong Lobo fan Audrey Flores expressed her excitement about the game, attributing the energy on campus to recent athletic successes.

“I think the vibe around campus just because football did so good. Everybody’s like super hyped. Let’s keep this going,” Flores said.

Despite the late tip-off, the student section was prepared, with free energy drinks being handed out to keep spirits high.

The final score was 88 to 66.



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Siemens Healthineers Core Businesses Offset Currency, Tariff Challenges

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Revenue grew on a comparable basis as results in its imaging and precision therapy business units offset currency and tariff headwinds.



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Portland, led by injured coach, takes down No. 6 Gonzaga

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With the team’s injured head coach navigating the sideline with the help of a knee caddy, Portland pulled off one of the biggest upsets in school history Wednesday night, an 87-80 stunner over No. 6 Gonzaga.

The victory snapped the Pilots’ (11-14, 4-8 West Coast Conference) 30-game losing streak against AP top-10 teams, while the Bulldogs (22-2, 10-1) lost to a team with a losing record for the first time since Jan. 22, 2011, snapping a streak of 141 straight wins, according to ESPN Research.

The win came just days after Portland coach Shantay Legans was injured while playing on the scout team to help his squad prepare for a two-game road trip because injuries and illnesses left the Pilots shorthanded.

“A lot of mentors say don’t get out there and play anymore once you’re 40,” Legans, 44, told the Field of 68 Podcast Network before Wednesday’s game.

“We were just going over some basic zone defense, offense, and I’m on offense and my Achilles popped — the worst thing that could possibly happen at the time,” he said. “Former teammates joked that they stopped playing. ‘That’s not who you are anymore.’ That’s where we are [as a team]: beat up.”

Legans said Portland had been on the cusp of victory in multiple games this year and finally put together a complete game against the toughest opponent on its schedule. The Pilots had previously lost three WCC games that were decided by five points or less.

Against Gonzaga, however, the Pilots made 66 percent of their shots inside the arc and 44 percent of their 3-point attempts, an excellent offensive output against a top-15 defense. Portland freshman Joel Foxwell finished with a game-high 27 points, outdueling Gonzaga star Graham Ike, who led his team with 24 points.

Gonzaga’s last lead in the game came at the 6:55 mark of the first half, when Mark Few’s squad led by two. It didn’t last. Late in the second half, Portland led by 15 points.

The game was Gonzaga’s last trip to Portland before the Bulldogs exit the WCC to join the Pac-12 this summer.

After the win, Legans said this was not the first time he’d suffered an Achilles injury in a basketball game he probably should have avoided.

“Going through the motions, I tore my Achilles [last week], but that’s life. I shouldn’t be out there,” Legans said of his latest injury after Wednesday’s game. “I tore my other one seven years ago playing one-on-one with one of our players. This one was worse, though. But it’s OK. It worked out. We won the game. I’ll take an Achilles [tear] for a couple of wins.”



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Northern Japan hit by deadly snowfall, as warnings issued on more heavy snow

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TOKYO — Heavy snow piling up in northern Japan in the last two weeks has blocked roads and is being blamed for dozens of deaths nationwide.

As of Wednesday, 15 prefectures have been affected, with snow reaching up to 2 meters (6.5 feet) in worst-hit areas. The unusually heavy snowfall is largely due to a cold air mass from the Arctic that has lingered over the Japanese archipelago.

More than 1,700 homes were without electricity, and most train lines weren’t running, including the bullet trains, according to Aomori prefecture.

“We anticipate some roads might get blocked off, and so we are consulting with services that can help with ambulances and fire trucks to get through to their destinations,” Aomori Gov. Soichiro Miyashita told reporters Wednesday.

Emergency vehicles that weren’t able to get to their destinations had parked nearby, and medical staff gone on foot with stretchers to rescue people in need, he said.

Miyashita said he was asking the city of Aomori to try to clear the main roads of snow, implying that the city is falling behind others. Schools in Aomori were shut, affecting thousands of schoolchildren, he added.

Most of the 35 deaths and hundreds of injuries reported across Japan were caused by falls among people trying to clear their homes of snow.

Twelve of the snow-related fatalities were reported in Niigata prefecture, a rice-growing region in northern Japan, including a man who was found collapsed on the roof of his home in Uonuma city on Jan. 21. In Nagaoka city, a 70-year-old is believed to have died after falling from his roof, according to the Niigata government.

Japan’s chief government spokesperson, Minoru Kihara, warned that although the weather was getting warmer, more danger could lie ahead because snow would start melting, resulting in landslides and slippery surfaces.

Injuries nationwide numbered 393, including 126 serious injuries, 42 of them in Niigata. Fourteen homes were damaged, three in Niigata and eight in Aomori prefecture.

More heavy snow is forecast for the coming weekend in northern Japan.

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Yuri Kageyama contributed to this report. She is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama



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Warming trend starts Thursday afternoon across New Mexico

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Cooler air has returned to New Mexico Wednesday, but the break from the warmer temperatures will be brief. A cold front that moved through Tuesday night brought noticeably cooler temperatures across the state this afternoon, with highs running about 5° to 15° lower than Tuesday. That cooldown won’t last long. High pressure builds in Thursday, […]



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BNP Paribas Hikes Targets to 2028

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The eurozone’s largest lender in terms of assets upgraded its midterm targets as it banks on cost-cutting and profit-boosting initiatives already underway to drive growth.



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Kristaps Porziņģis-Jonathan Kuminga trade grades: Warriors, Hawks take upside swings

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It’s been five long years in Golden State, and the Jonathan Kuminga saga is officially over. The Golden State Warriors are reportedly trading Kuminga and Buddy Hield to the Atlanta Hawks for Kristaps Porziņģis. 

This deal seemingly puts an end to Golden State’s pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo, according to Charania. Reports had indicated that the Warriors hoped not to include Jimmy Butler‘s max contract in a deal, which would have meant using contracts like Kuminga’s, Hield’s and Draymond Green‘s to make a deal. With this deal now made and the Bucks having turned down Golden State’s picks-based offer, the Warriors moved on to another target.

The Hawks, meanwhile, continue their retool by trading away their second former All-Star of the season. With Trae Young gone as well, the Hawks no longer have a single fully guaranteed contract on their books for next season belonging to a player above the age of 27. The youth movement is fully on, so let’s grade this deal for both sides.

Golden State Warriors: B

After five years of inconsistent playing time in a system that he didn’t fit within, Kuminga no longer held meaningful trade value. There were reports over the summer that Sacramento was willing to give up a lottery-protected first-round pick for him, but any hope of a deal there seemingly passed when the Kings landed De’Andre Hunter. He had essentially become little more than matching salary, and with the odds of an Antetokounmpo deal seeming low, the Warriors moved on.

Now, if this were a healthy Porziņģis, Golden State would get an A+. The Warriors have spent years looking for this sort of player. Part of the motivation of signing Al Horford this offseason was the need to pair Draymond Green with a center who can shoot. Golden State has never really had a gigantic, stationary rim-protector before, and his size near the rim gives them a dimension they’ve largely lacked as well.

Of course, this is not a healthy Porziņģis. Even if this was the standard, “misses games due to injury, but is great when he plays” Porziņģis the Warriors would come away as clear winners, Instead, he’s struggled with POTS, an autoimmune disorder with a number of troubling symptoms including rapid heart rate, dizziness and lethargy. Porziņģis was spectacular in his first 11 games in October and November, averaging over 18 points and posting spectacular on-off splits. He’s played six times since, mostly ineffectively. It is not clear when or if he will ever be able to play at 100% again, and that doesn’t even factor in the other injuries he’s dealt with for most of his career.

The version of Porziņģis Golden State is getting, at least for now, is a compromised one. Yet it’s still a gamble worth taking for a number of reasons. The risk, for example, was minimal. Porziņģis is on an expiring contract. The Warriors gave up no draft picks to get him. If they have him in the building for three months and decide they don’t trust his health, they can wash their hands of this relatively easily. They even got off of the $3 million guaranteed to Hield for next season, so it’d be a minor win.

But more likely, they look to re-sign Porziņģis to a team-friendly deal. If he can be had for $10-15 million instead of the $30 million he’s making now, the risk-reward calculus shifts quite a bit. The stakes aren’t especially high here. Golden State isn’t betting a championship core on his health. They know they need to hit a home run if they’re going to win anything in the near future, so it made sense to take a high-reward swing. Generally speaking, low-risk, high-reward moves make sense.

And then there are the optics here. It’s no secret that the Warriors are near the end of a legendary run. Stephen Curry is about to turn 38. The only reason they ever seemingly had a chance at landing Antetokounmpo was that their post-Curry future is so bleak their draft picks held theoretical value. Given how little else they have in the cupboard, one could argue that an all-in push for Giannis represented far greater risk than reward. Yet the Warriors had to try. They owe it to Curry. A player of his stature deserves to end his career at least competing in the playoffs, if not for a championship.

The Porziņģis trade isn’t nearly as exciting as an Antetokounmpo deal, but it shows Curry and their fans that they’re trying. He’s a respectable name, someone who has a chance to be very helpful for them, but like Jimmy Butler, doesn’t come at an exorbitant cost. Truthfully, those are the sort of players they should be targeting right now. The goal should be to retain as much of their draft capital as possible to ensure they’re capable of rebuilding once Curry is gone, but still at least making some attempt to give Curry a competitive roster now. This deal straddles that line. It creates hope without a major cost looming down the line, and it relieves the locker room of all lingering Kuminga-related tension. So it makes sense even if this isn’t the best version of Porziņģis.

Atlanta Hawks: B

The Hawks and Warriors are operating one different timetables. They genuinely hoped Porziņģis could form a center tandem with Onyeka Okongwu that they could build around moving forward. That didn’t happen. They simply couldn’t justify paying Porziņģis on a long-term deal. They need certainty at the center position, and he couldn’t provide it. So moving on made sense.

Could they have gotten, say, a meager draft capital return? Sure, but it likely would have been attached to unsavory salary. Atlanta has very valuable first-round picks coming from the Pelicans or Bucks both this summer and next. Maintaining financial flexibility is far more important to them than accumulating draft capital. They need their money to both find a reliable center and look for a shot-creating guard to replace Trae Young.

So, like Golden State, the Hawks took a low-risk, high-reward flyer. Hield is only guaranteed $3 million next season, but because he has two years left on his deal, that can even be stretched across five years if he’s waived. That’s an easy enough contract to dispose of. And Kuminga has a $24.3 million team option for next season. If they need to use him as matching salary in a summer trade, they can. If they want to just get off of the contract for whatever reason, they can do so as well.

If we’re operating under the assumption that Atlanta did not plan to re-sign Porziņģis, turning him into a different potential expiring contract makes plenty of sense. Why not give Kuminga a two-month audition and see if he looks better away from the Warriors? Atlanta does run a system somewhat similar to Golden State’s. The Warriors lead the league in passes every year and in 3s this season. The Hawks are 10th in passes and 11th in 3-point attempt rate. Quin Snyder wants the ball zipping around the court and the 3-pointers flying. But nobody really plays the way Golden State does. 

The Hawks are closer to a normal NBA ecosystem, and it’s worth seeing how Kuminga might fit into one. He does still have stellar athletic traits, after all. We’re talking about someone who just faced Minnesota in a playoff series and averaged 24 points on 55-49-72 shooting in the four games in which he played significant minutes last year. There is clearly something here. The Hawks love their big wing ball-handlers. They already run plenty of offense through Jalen Johnson and Dyson Daniels, though all three have pretty distinct offensive strengths and weaknesses.

Snyder is a creative offensive coach. You can never have enough wings. And the Hawks have made no real commitment here. Considering they’re only giving up a player they seemingly didn’t plan to keep, this is a solid lottery ticket. They were only a Play-In Tournament team anyway, so there’s no harm in devoting a few months to seeing if you can unlock a former high draft pick so that next year you might be something more.





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