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Delta State Polytechnic Shut Down After Gunmen Invaded Students' Hostels, Killed One, Raped Three Others

  The Delta State Polytechnic, Ogwashi-Uku has shut down the institution for one week after some gunmen attacked student hostels killing one and reportedly raping three others. So many other students were also reportedly injured during the attack that happened last week Thursday. Meanwhile, the school authorities have said the closing of the institution would enable management put in place security measures to guard against a recurrence. According to PUNCH, students had all deserted the school for fear of further attacks.

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Delta poly shut down as armed robbers invade students' hostels

Delta state polytechnic in Ogwashi Uku, Aniocha South council area has been shut down for one-week following the incessant attacks on student hostels in

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Delta Poly Closed Over Armed Robbery Attacks

Following the incessant attacks on student hostels in Delta State Polytechnic, Ogwashi Uku, Aniocha South local government area of the State, the school

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D'Tigers defeat Ivory Coast to keep World Cup hopes alive

D’Tigers have defeated Ivory Coast 72-63 in their opening game in the fifth window of the ongoing FIBA World Cup qualifiers.

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Indore: Election of Diocesan Catholic Sabha held

Marshal Periera was elected as the president as the other candidate Remu Raha withdrew his name for the post of president. Meena Khushwah and Bedwin Alvares both received equal amount of votes making them both vice-presidents.

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Welcome to THE COMMONS -- News and Views for Windham County, Vermont

Welcome to THE COMMONS -- News and Views for Windham County, Vermont
commonsnews.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from commonsnews.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Transcripts For FBC Countdown To The Closing Bell 20130404

all-important nonforeign payrolls comes out tomorrow. that's here on fox business, tends to move the market if it is the surprise to the up ore downside. a stimulus surprise. the bank of japan this morning launching a massive easing program that sent the japanese nikke shooting higher, the stocks spiked and the yen plunged. bad news for those making a positive bet on the yen, but don't say we didn't warn you. this week, you were told to stay away from the ugly duckling yen. other guests said the same thing recently, short it, and that's the great bet so far at least. north korea making moves and threats as the country moves the missiles to its east coast. live to south korea for the latest. so far, not affecting the markets, but, listen, one scary headline could move the numbers. let's bring it back to the united states. investors liking facebook after announcing a family of apps called "home." i thought we were mobile now, and now the word "home"? what's the reaction to this? is it what everybody wanted? the stock is higher by 2.5%, for the moment, it's positive. the traders at the floor show. lauren is standing by. we'll get to her in a second, but, first, john corpina, look at the north korea news, getting into it later, and on the surface of it, it looks very scary. yesterday in the show, they said, hey, we approved the use of a nuclear weapon in the u.s., but the markets shrug is off. why? >> the markets have not reacted to this yet, and i don't think the markets are taking the headlines seriously yet. that's concerning to me because at some point i think north korea's going to realize we're not concerned and markets are not reacting and they could ease escalate things to see if the markets react. at this point now, i think we have to take the threats very seriously. there's a very big unknown factor with the new leader who is there, and moving from there is important to watch. liz: okay. kevin, what's your headline today? get from the traders that one thing that matters the most to each of you. >> i think it's the bank of japan doubling their bond purchases. look at what it did to markets overnight, especially in japan, but in the u.s., too, equity markets on the high, yields on lows, and i think that's certainly important, a little more than what most economists expected out of the bank of japan today. liz: okay. at the imex, what matters? >> today in emergency, the natural gas inventory number was a draw of 94 pushing the total storage 2.1% below the five-year average for the first time since september of 2011. liz: looking at what happens here, below $4 a unit here, i don't know if it's focusing on the crux of the markets and why we continue to make records, john. it's amazing with the new york stock exchange and what we see on the big board, 34 points when we were down 11 earlier. it seems to be a market that's resilient. what would shake it? >> resilient and uncertain. look at the last 11 trading sessions we had, one up, the next down, and we've seen that pattern across the board. the economic data we've gotten this week, again, has been conflicting data coming out of washington, and now we get the big jobs number tomorrow. that's the headline to watch. watch the jobs. people, whether the number comes out good, bad, indifferent, the investing public dupt believe the data supporting that number. liz: what are we supposed to believe then? >> i think we have to wait off and get to earnings season next week because they give them an investor of what happened and what the guidance is moving forward, a bigger parameter, and investors like that. that's when more money comes back into the market. liz: best buy, jcpenney monster beverage, names that are flexing muscles at the moment. kevin, when the number comes out for the march jobs report tomorrow, 8:30 a.m. eastern, what's it like on the floor of the cme if we beat to the upside? >> i think it we beat to the upside you're going to see a major selloff in the bond market. i think you'll see more money move to stockholders. recently, you've seen the equity market really hang in there, but not enough momentum in hiring. if there's a good print in job, it may be the catalyst to push it higher, but be careful, certainly with the equity side, particularly in may and the old saying, sell in may and go away, there's not a lot of momentum. liz: at the imex, if you get a better than expected number, does it move gasoline back up where people feel the consumer is healthier, driving more, spending measuring and companies that utilize energy for the products will be using more. >> yeah, that's most likely going to help owl energy markets for the most part. we move headline to headline, and, recently, there's bad economic news in the last couple days with crude selling off. seemings like we expanded the range now from 90 to 98 opposed to being in the $5 ranges. volatility picks up on the selloff, and now crude is 20% which is a high level considering where we've been the last few weeks. liz: gentlemen, thanks. you know, it's great to get your perspectives from a different trading floor. we appreciate it. see you next time. >> thank you. >> appreciate it, liz. liz: any time. facebook stock poking higher after they unvailed the smart phone platform. an app, but it's not an app. what are you hearing? >> facebook is past apps; right? they are the app of the future, i suppose. look, this sounds confusing to me. i'm not really op facebook, liz, but here you go. look at the stock today because investors and wall street like this facebook home announcement. the stock is up well over 2%. we did have the negative facebook earlier this morning, and then at one o'clock eastern time when that announcement happened from their menlow headquarters, it moved north in a straight line. investors liked what facebook announced that was not this facebook phone. it was something a little bit more creative. eventually, it will be a good add revenue screen when facebook is on the phone all the time. liz: some love and hate it. perspectives from both in a minute in a bull-bear debate. two analysts face off. the north korean threat, look, you cannot ignore what's going on, south korea says the north moved missiles closer to its east coast, and then hackers, they are outing the party, aren't they? they apaimptly broke into two of north korea's government-run online sites, but twitter and flickr sites were taken over with caricatures of kim jung un posted. we are in seoul south korea. are they worried? do they seem concerned? >> hi, liz, plenty concern here and defiance on the street. people say they don't understand the north korean leader and seems to want to start a fight for some reason, but we do understand that this crisis does seem to be escalating at the moment as you said. south korea said that north korea moved that medium sized missile to its east coast facing the u.s.. there have been reports in south korea and in japan that the missile could reach the u.s., but the south korean defense ministry denied this, and their defense minister says he doesn't know why the north moved the missile now. it could be a test they are working on. he believes the missile could have a range of 18 # 00 miles. now, north korea, beg your pardon, they could be potential targets, and also u.s. bases such as guam and oak now ya. at the moment, they are deploying a missile defense system over guam to take a few weeks. there has been a lot of tension, as you know, over the last week or so, particularly, because of the joint u.s. and south korean military exercises, they've been flying b-52 is and f-22 stealth fighters over the korean peninsula since these threats have been issued by north korea. they continue to issue then today, there was a statement coming out from the north korean army saying that they are looking at using smaller-like nuclear warheads to attack the u.s., so real concern there. i listened to a few people in the streets of south korea today, and they said if it was a fight, this south korean army could stand strong. back to you. liz: okay. we're looking, by the way, and i know you know because you are there, but the korean juan had a one month low, could be related to the bank of japan or concern of what's going on there, but we are watching it all. thank you very much. we're not so worried that we can't talk pizza and gucci. okay, first pizza, shares of dominoes shrugging off a smackdown from goldman, they downgraded them from a conviction buy list to a lowly buy rating. what's your go-to place for pizza? papa johns, pizza hut, or your local pizza place on the corner? log on to facebook.com/lizclaman and tell us, okay? facebook, speaking of which, trying to take advantage of the global mobile boom. we got the latest from the street on the company's next big bet as a bull and bear battle it out after the break, and, oh, yes, the guy behind gucci. that's ail coming up. ♪ hello! how sharp is your business security? can it help protect your people and property, while keeping out threats to your operations? it's not working! yes it is. welcome to tyco integrated security. with world-class monitoring centers and thousands of qualified technician we've got a personal passion to help your business run safer, smarter, and sharper. we are tyco integrated security. and we are sharper. >> the waiting game is over. they were waiting to unvail it, the new facebook home interface as it's called, a family of apps that showcase on android smart phones different than before. what's that mean for the company? should you like facebook as a stock or is it time to defriend this name from your portfolio? a sell, a buy? we got a bull and bear. our bullish side, victor anthony, topeka analyst senior, and lee hudson leads the bears, llc founder and chief investment officer. lee, to you first, comes out in the hoody, makes the announcement about the family of apps called "home," and you think what? >> well, you know, first of all, go back to the underlying philosophy, building stock portfolios for the lints, my equity manager always reminds me our underlying philosophy is invest in businesses that why in the business to make money. this is a business that definitely makes a lot of money, but they are into their hacker way and not necessarily focused solely on profits, just fundamentally, it's not the philosophy for us. liz: the announcement, gut reaction was what? oh, maybe not so bad or totally lame? >> no, it's fine. there's going to be dpsh here's what we'll find out, liz. wii going to really find out the billion users how many are power users because they graff tait to it to to help analysts, and versus a facebook page. >> victor, one billion people when you saw what they unvailed, was it what you thought? people thought it was a facebook phone. that's not it. perhaps they were smart enough to the to take on samsung or iphone in the game. instead, they announced a family of apps. does that juice the stock beyond today? >> well, you know, that depends; right? that depends on adoption. i agree with lee on that. depends on whether or not the facebook fanatic, the people who are passionate about facebook choose to adopt the app. what it does is essentially takes over the mobile home page, your lock screen, and what it does is ultimately allows greater impression and continuous feed of impression and also advertising on your mobile feed so in the long run depends on adoption. if adoption is steep, that leads to greater potential for facebook. liz: lee, they had good numbers when it comes to adoption of ideas. they've come up with, like, their gift program, and in two seconds made a million dollars, fourth quarter more than five, and you say the people are not that dumb, but are they? you don't like the management. why not? >> i don't like the management because it's suffering from a classic thing called funder's syndrome. you need somebody with hard core silicon valley experience and not the founder in charge. you know, wall street wants to know that this is is a business that's transitioning from a company that just got created in a college dorm, that has been so lucky to make so much money, but that it's focused on profits. look at linkedin with built-in people who promote businesses and careers to sell stuff. that's not on facebook. a change of management makes investors like myself be more interested in are they in for the profits -- liz: got a name? you like cheryl sandberg, anybody else you like to run it? >> she could do a fine job, knows how to do it, right there, knows what needs to be done, but what we need to do is create a post of head hoody wearer and have mark just be, you know, the chairman emmertive and have cheryl control the lanes, tell us to make money, be a business, and we outgrown the hacker way. liz: victor, i think lee is right. just look at goggle. serge ran it, started it, ran it, and somebody said on the board, guys, we have to bring in a grown up, and in came eric schmidt. the company took off. do you agree with lee? >> i disagree. mark is an excellent manager and will continue to manage to profitability. look at f1, you focused mainly on using the engaugement producing a better product for the user. over the past, the focus changedded to how to better monetize impressions on the mobile and desk top feed. look at the products launched, the search end gyp, insa -- instagram, and he's doing a good job. the management team is dramatically different in style compared to going. throw a hundred darts and a few things stick, but facebook took a measured approach. launched a few products at a few time making sure they work. a different management style. i wouldn't compare the two. he's doing a good job. liz: what matters is the cool factor for the tweens and younger generation. time will bear that out. i hear from teenagers i'm not doing facebook anymore. i do instagram. senior analyst and our bear, lee, loc founder and chief investment officer. thanks to you both. closing bell is 39 minutes away. we love luxury, at least business viewers love it. who can afford it? where do they live? we have a fox business exclusive with the man behind gucci, puma, which is super hot, he's coming up next. stay tuned. ♪ liz: concord, massachusetts put a ban on plastic water bottleses, but not so fast. nestle is not having that. we have the latest on the plastic bottle battle. >> you can go to concord, buy a liter of iced tea, soda, sparkling water, but you can't buy a liter of regular old bottled water. nestle is pushing back in wars saying the law deprives people of the product they want. look here. gallops consumed bottle of water in 2011 up 4.1% to 9.1 # billion. sales 11.9 billion, 3.7% more than the year before, and eating into soft drinks, they say, volume of 9.2 billion, down 1%, and sales not much as up as bottled water. in massachusetts, they say people will just drive out of town to buy bottles of water costing local businesses. >> the retailers in concord are loser ons this because the purchase just moved outside the town for someplace else 6789 -- else. you can't tell me because they can't buy water in concord that they forego bottledded water. >> the environmentists argue it takes energy to transport and make the bottles of water that go in land fills. there is a vote to repeal the ban later this month. back to you. lizly won't sell bottled water in news corporation. they don't want, you know, you want a glass of water, get it from the fountain. thank you very much, rich. france is commonly known as an uncommon hot bed for fashion and luxury, but what you may not know is a french fashion conglomerate, ppr, soon is changing its name to caring, with a "k," but it's the brains and business of thee most well-known brands in the entire world like gucci. we are karing group manager about the name change and core consumer you have now. welcome and thank you for being here. >> thank you. liz: from ppr, anybody who has been to paris knows, now to karing with a "k," what's the cig -- cig nans of the name? >> it reflects who we are, we are a group that cares for people that cares for people and the brand, has the care, which reflects our home, and, also, the -- also anglosaxon meaning action and movement. liz: something for everybody, they need a name versus just initials because now you got the al gashings in russia and here in the u.s., the global customer who likes the brands, and, by the way, what a group of brands you have. talk about gucci, 50% of the 2012 revenues came from g urges cci. what's the attraction? >> it did. well, liz, you know, those brands, they refer to exclusivity, desirability, and quality. at the end of the day, it's all about that, and the fact is that those customers, they have in common that they seek for the patterns, but, also, they are specific. we -- each segment of clientele needs to be addressed in the specific way. liz: who buys the most these days in which market? china has to be extraordinary hot with russia. you tell me? >> well, of course, the chinese customers are primary customer base, not only in china, but also as tourists, and the fact is that there are many more, and the number is growing, and, also, they are spending more and more. liz: what brands do you like? you have botega, you are wearing a brioni suit, it's gorgeous. >> thank you, liz. liz: what brands do the chinese love? >> gucci, but watches, they like the ultimate brand, and so they like what reflects status. liz: you have a store called quelinn, and now your sports division is hot. chinese love puma. they love the color of the pumas now, but what is grabbing their attention about puma now? >>ing the -- the fact they love the combination of the sports heritage and the fashion content that they put into the sthiews and apparel. returning to the luxury brand is the quality and image and aspiration they bring. liz: you have 33,000 workers, are you hiring? >> we are, particularly in emerging companies, but also here in the u.s.. it something we are a growing group and proud of. liz: how 1 the u.s. consumer doing? >> very fine, and even better than last year. liz: well, i'm wearing gucci shoes, but i bought them on discount. i did it to welcome you, certainly. we have the gucci shoes. thank you very much, really appreciate it. >> thank you very much. liz: karing group manager director "k," the big name chain. from gucci to a hundred million dollar apartments, what was new york's real estate department telling us months before cypress collapsed? edward is following the trend for us after the bell. he deals specifically with russian customers, but he saw it all coming at 4 p.m. eastern. closing bell ringing in 28 minutes. does your local economy need a boost? which doesn't; right? who are you going to call? how about the wwe, the travel wrestle mania show pumping some 300 million dollars into each town it stops in. we talked to the company's ceo coming up in a fox business exclusive. and is steve cohen the john gody of wall street? i didn't say it. charlie has the latest scoop on who is saying that. discovery channel's live animal planet cam, the live internet stream of cats has been watched # more than 25 million times since it started in september. check out their stock. looking good. scratching all the way up. headed to the break, but we'll be right back. please stay with us. ♪ ♪ girl vo: i'm pretty conservative. very logical thinker. (laughs) i'm telling you right now, the girl back at home would absolutely not have taken a zip line in the jungle. (screams) i'm really glad that girl stayed at home. vo: expedia helps 30 million travelers a month find what they're looking for. one traveler at a time. expedia. find yours. how old is the oldest person you've known? we gave people a sticker and had them show us. we learned a lot of us have known someone who's lived well into their 90s. and that's a great thing. but even though we're living longer, one thing that hasn't changed: the official retirement age. ♪ the question is how do you make sure you have the money you need to enjoy all of these years. ♪ >> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity and turn your life upside down. >> hi. >> hi. you know, can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, ur money and ruining your rutation. that's why you need lifelock to relentlessly protect what matters most... 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>> let's did over, liz, to where it trades, right here. as you see, it's up 1.5%, 37.8 # 5 is your level. that home family of apps will see available for downloads starting at april 12th, but at&t, like you said, has exclusive rights to sell the first htc phones free install with the applications costing about $100. look at all the cell phone carriers, sprint, verizon, metro pcs are up. as you noted before, like google and apple, trading down today. liz? liz: i'm gossipping with charlie. i want to get to you. talking about steve cohen and something somebody said about steve cohen, not me, steve. >> well, we had beau deitl on, the private investigator, e new york city cop. why was he on, has his own table at rayos, which i was invited to tonight, invited me after we had him on, it was not a quid pro quo, -- liz: i'm available, bo. >> he's good friends with steve cohen, and the other night they had a chat where, you know, listen, we don't get people on the air that speak with steven to hen. he's somewhat a recluse, particularly now with the insider trading stuff, but he vented to bo saying the coverage is unfair and bo agrees with, that, but he understands law enforcement. bo said the feds treat you, quote-on-quote, like you're john gaudy of wall street. why is that? bo grew up in south oh zone, he knows the gaudy family, people he grew up with, a cop for a long time, but he was not saying he's like john gaudy, but saying the feds are putting him in that category, and, actually, bo thinks it is unfair, will be vindicated, a and that's key here. it's key when steve thinks i don't like him. i do like him personally. he told that to bo. the thing is is that it's not whether i like him or not. the government thinks something is wrong this. i don't necessarily agree with that, i'm just covering the story, you know what i'm saying? listen, if you think about it, put stuff into context, added up all the trades they worry about, it's a small fraction of what they do. i mean, they trade 3% of the new york state body. >> that doesn't mean anything to the doj. >> i know, but he doesn't run an operation that's premised on criminality. it's -- if you took all the guys that they caught -- liz: you say it like it's fact. >> it's definitely fact. he does not run an operation that's premised on criminality. it's -- it would have to be premised on criminality -- liz: just takes a slip up. >> that's not premise op criminality, okay? the guy trades 3% of the new york stock exchange volume. take all the alleged dirty trades they are looking at, it -- that's daily, it wouldn't be most of the trades. it wouldn't be a third of the trades. it's not based on criminality. that doesn't mean -- he's not being investigated like crazy and that the government clearly thinks there's a problem with him. >> well, the new york post says you have to sell the picasso. he's done deaf. >> why he -- he says i'm innocent, i'll indulge myself. liz: thank you very much. we have breaking news. roger, a name familiar to anybody who saw a movie or read a review died at the age of 70. remember him from ebert, after a battle with cancer. roger ebert was 70 years old. about 13 minutes before the closing bell rings. people may accuse wrestlers and the whole wwe, but, guess what? who cares, profits are real, very real, and we've got the chief financial officer of the world wrestling entertainment company up next in a fox business exclusive ahead of wrestle mania here in new york and, boy, has it just broken tons of records. well, newark, new jersey. how many "likes -- does how many "likes" a company gets on facebook matter to the stock price? one investor banks on the facebook indicator. should you? we break it all down next. earlier in the show, we did ask you, where do you prefer to get pizza from? charlie, wait before you answer. is it your local joint, check it out, pizza hut, dominoes -- >> around the corner. liz: here's some of the responses that we have. brooklyns in edgewater, new jersey is what i like. ♪ hi. i'm henry winkler. and i'm here to tell homeowners that are 62 and older about a great way to live a better retirement. it's called a reverse mortgage. [ male announcer ] call right now to receive your free dvd and booklet with no obligation. it answers questions like how a reverse mortgage works, how much you quafy for, the ways to receive your money, and more. plus, when you call now, you'll get this magnifier with l.e.d. light absolutely free. when you call the experts at one reverse mortgage today, you'll learn the benefits of a government-insured reverse mortgage. it will eliminate your monthly mortgage payments and give you tax-free cash from the equity in your home. and here'she best part -- you still own your home. take control of your retirement today. ♪ ♪ belies liz while the tech world buzzes about facebook's news, there's an index to track the most liked companies' stock performance. do likes equal buys? starbucks, fifth place with 32 million fans. the coffee giant up nearly 8% in 2013. don't ask how much it's low of march of 2009. unbelieve l. converse, a nike brand has 34 million likes. nike up 14%. disney comes in third, the favorite of the group, up 15% this year. what about second? goes to coke coca, 62 million likes. nice job. so far the stock is up more than 10%, and the company with thee most likes on facebook is facebook. got more than 90 million likes, but stock is down 1% this year. that throws out everything. here's how the most pop popular companies do today, everybody's up, not a bad day, dow jones up, nasdaq and s&p moving better as well. don't forget to "like" the countdown on facebook.com. and on twitter, trying to beat charlie. many people accused my next company of not -- call it what they call it -- fake, but the profits are real, no, we're not talking about herbal life, but we're talking about world wrestling entertainment, wwe. wwe's touring live event wrestlemania, now wrestlemania 29 is taking over new york and new jersey this week. look at 6th avenue. we sent a camera awhile ago, lines and lines of people. do you love this? waiting for what? to meet the wrestlers, the superstars to be in wrestlemania. joining me now in a fox business exclusive is the world wrestling entertainment cfo. you have one of the jobs in the world. >> thee best job. my boss says the job description, even the cfo, rare, to put smile on people's faces. from that clip and all week, that's what we do. he says that all the time. liz: it is entertainment when it comes to a very broad appeal. let's talk about wrestlemania, and more specifically what it does for the cities in which it performs because at a time when most cities coffers are running a liart -- little dry, you say each city you go in could at least bring in some $300 million every time? how do you figure that? >> it's over the last five year, we did 300 million in the cities we've been in. we do 60-70 million a year. what we do every year is we conduct the economic impact analysis, a third party firm to come in and look at it, and it's, you know, the reason we drive all of that is because we bring people from all over the world. there's 34 countries represented in terms of in the audience at wrestlemania. liz: it's in new jersey, but tell us the other smaller areas you've been in that you were stunned at the response and reaction? i've seen it in boston, cleveland. >> sure. over the last few years, orlando, phoenix, atlanta, always 65-80,000 at the event. wrestle mainian is a week long event. we started today, you showed the clips of radio city, hall of fame induction saturday. liz: by the way, look at the video. i want to know how many people called in sick from work. what are we looking at on stage? >> that's my boss, mcman in the middle and rock and sena, the main event. liz: john, so popular, the most known just behind kobe bryant? >> number three american athlete between kobe and michael jordan. 13 million facebook follow eres. talking about facebook, if you look at our to be and twitter combined, we're at 140 million, and it goes up a million every day. liz: you have more facebook fans than taco bell and pepsi. >> more than the nfl and that's 32 teams combined. we really view social media as, you know, the mother of all megaphones, a promotions company. we know how to promote, and i tell you, the ir site now has 17 investor -- 17,000 followers, the number one followed investor relations. i believe -- if he has one, we're number one, yeah. liz: fascinating because you wonder about the stock to translate. your stock up 3% year over year, price to earnings ratio of 18. there's 10% shorts floating at that level. we just want to point that out. >> sure. liz: that aside, what's next? a wwe pay channel? >> we said we'll do three things over the next couple years, and investors should watch for. we'll reimagine the paper view business, launch a premium alla cart channel, not wrestlemania, charge between 12.99 and $14.99 for that. second, renew our four top content agreements. we're on the u.s., smack down in the u.s., deal in india, the third largest company, and our deal in the u.k.. those are four big opportunities, and then, timely, monetizing the digital. liz: we have to go, but glenn beck called you "stupid wrestling people." >> he doesn't know us well. i don't know stupid people at wwe. liz: says things about reform jewish people which we didn't like. >> thank you very much. liz: cfo, wrestlemania 29 going to a thousand one day, we know it. >> let's hope. liz: closing bell ringing in five minutes, the last chance to make money after the break. is it facebook, facebook's friends like at&t, or something else? stay tuned. ♪ what's droid-recognition ? understanding you clearly... what is the capital of zimbabwe ? ... the first time you ask with the google voice search. .. droid recognition. droid powerful. you are gonna need a wingman. and my cash back keeps the party going. but my airline miles take it worldwide. [ male announcer ] it shouldn't be this hard. with creditcar.com, it's easy to search hundreds of cards and apply online. creditcards.com. bob will retire when he's 153, which would be fine if bob were a vampire. but he's not. ♪ he's an architect with two kids and a mortgage. luckily, he found someone who gave him a fresh perspective on hisortfolio. and with some planning and effort, hopefully bob can retire at a more appropriate age. it's not rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >> in the championship league. i'm talking to marcus. liz: how about that. esh ashley is in for david asman liz: you have to look at some dow names like mcdonald's. >> this is winner today. it got a price target increase to $108 from goldman sachs. it hit 100 earlier. all-time high for mcdonald's. one. top performers in the dow along with at&t and hewlett-packard. ashley: lauren, panera getting a nice boost from goldman sachs. >> goldman was hungry today. they're saying stocks like panera bread and yum brand and darden will be okay because despite higher gas prices and higher social security payroll taxes this year we're still ating out. consumer sentiment is okay. the job market is doing wetter. panera bread up 3% at last check also, lifetime high. liz: lauren, isn't interesting when big name investors get into a stock and talk about it. that happened to crocs. legendary investor leon cooperman mentioned it. >> the stock is up 5%, really nice boost. also news out of crocs that they have new chief marketing officer. so that stock was a big winner today. ashley: just before the bell starts ringing. it wasn't a phone or operating system but investors liked facebook's new announcement maybe because it wasn't a phone. >> i'm still trying to wrap high head around why we would want to do something like this but facebook investors buying you up the stock today. it was up more than 3% at

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