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Transcripts For CNBC Squawk Box 20240712

Points the s p which is then up five out of the last six weeks and up the last six sessions in a row is up by 5. 5 this morning and then the nasdaq which has been this incredible out performer for months on end is the other performer this morning its down by 13 points but remember nasdaq was only down friday after being up for several sessions in a row. Setting a new high every one of the closes. The s p is less than 1 from its all time high. Its up back in february the treasury markets youll see right now. The treasury yields are where they have been the ten year is at 0. 556 . Melissa. We have an update on the pandemic the United States surpassed covid cases. It took just six weeks for u. S. Covid cases to double. The growth appears to have leveled off at an average of 54,000 per day over the last week in College Sports news over the weekend the mid american conference scrapped its all football season delaying all fall sports until the spring of 2021 the logistics were too complicate

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Alert: North Carolina says Hall of Fame basketball coach Roy Williams is retiring after 18 seasons with Tar Heels

North Carolina: Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams retiring

Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams retiring after 33-year run AARON BEARD, AP Basketball Writer April 1, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail North Carolina announced Thursday that Hall of Fame basketball coach Roy Williams is retiring after a 33-year career that includes three national championships. The decision comes two weeks after the 70-year-old Williams closed his 18th season with the Tar Heels after a highly successful run at Kansas. In all, Williams won 903 games in a career that included those three titles, all with the Tar Heels, in 2005, 2009 and 2017. North Carolina scheduled a campus news conference for Thursday afternoon on the Smith Center court bearing his name.

Crowded bars: March Madness or just plain madness?

Crowded bars: March Madness or just plain madness? DON BABWIN, Associated Press FacebookTwitterEmail 11 1of11Jillian Smith takes an order from people at Kilroy s Bar & Grill, Sunday, March 14, 2021, in Indianapolis. The NCAA Tournament and bars were made for each other, with fans of powerhouse teams like Gonzaga and longshots like Colgate pouring in to cheer their teams. Until last year, that is, when COVID-19 blew up everybody’s brackets. This year, the tournament’s back, and bars and restaurants, some shuttered for months, are open for March Madness, though things may look a little different.Darron Cummings/APShow MoreShow Less 2of11Jillian Smith pours a beer for a customer at Kilroy s Bar & Grill, Sunday, March 14, 2021, in Indianapolis. The NCAA Tournament and bars were made for each other, with fans of powerhouse teams like Gonzaga and longshots like Colgate pouring in to cheer their teams. Until last year, that is, when COVID-19 blew up everybody’s brack

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