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USA Today
15-07-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
2025 Hamburg: Alexandrova [16th] vs. Vedder [249th] Prediction, Odds and Match Preview
On Wednesday, Eva Vedder (No. 249 in the world) takes on Ekaterina Alexandrova (No. 16) in the Round of 32 at the Hamburg. Alexandrova has -1099 odds to earn a win in this match against Vedder (+600). Tennis odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Monday at 10:35 PM ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Ekaterina Alexandrova vs. Eva Vedder matchup info Watch the Tennis Channel and more sports on Fubo! Alexandrova vs. Vedder Prediction Based on the implied probility from the moneyline, Alexandrova has a 91.7% to win. Alexandrova vs. Vedder Betting Odds Alexandrova vs. Vedder matchup performance & stats


Boston Globe
07-07-2025
- Business
- Boston Globe
Want more growth? Welcome more immigrants.
Which means the only way to ensure the population base needed to keep the economy growing is to increase the number of immigrants entering the United States. Much of the public supports President Trump's ferocious crackdown on illegal immigration. The administration is obsessed with rounding up and deporting foreigners who have been living in the country without proper documents. Whatever the wisdom of that policy, it ignores the fact that the vast majority of unlawful migrants who enter the country come here to work in peace. The US economy in recent decades has fueled an unprecedented demand for labor, but there aren't nearly enough legal channels to accommodate that demand. The result has been an influx of migrants crossing the border unlawfully. And that in turn eventually triggered the political backlash that helped send Trump to the White House. Advertisement All the while, however, millions of jobs are going unfilled in this country, because there aren't enough working-age Americans to fill them all. Clearly the best way to solve the problem of illegal immigration is to make it easier for foreigners to immigrate to America legally . That, in turn, is the only way the United States can have the expanding labor force necessary to achieve economic growth and higher living standards in the decades ahead. In The authors show that nearly half of the net growth in the US labor force over the past decade has come from immigrants. That might seem surprising since only about 1 in 7 Americans are foreign born. But immigrants are more likely to work than native-born Americans of working age. In 2023, just under 60 percent of US-born natives age 16 and older were working. Among immigrants, the percentage was almost 65 percent. 'Over the past decade, immigrants have filled nearly 40 percent of the new jobs in America,' Vedder, Moore, and Denhart write. And for most of that time, the unemployment rate has remained at historically low levels — evidence that immigrants are not displacing US-born citizens from jobs that would otherwise have gone to them. With roughly Advertisement But what makes immigrants so valuable to the US economy goes beyond their propensity to work. There is also their extraordinary performance as innovators and entrepreneurs. More than 45 percent of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or their children, and immigrants are more than twice as likely as US natives to start a business. In 2023, according to Such statistics are striking, but they also stand to reason. Almost by definition, immigrants have a higher than normal willingness to take chances, to relinquish the familiar, and to try new things. It shouldn't come as a surprise that newcomers from abroad are fired with a passion to dream the American Dream, or that Immigration increases both the labor supply and labor demand, which helps explain why states with the highest immigration inflows, such as Texas and Florida, are associated with lower unemployment than other states. Because immigrants are more likely to work and to start businesses, their presence leads to higher rates of economic growth. 'The parts of the United States with the highest proportion of population coming from other nations have higher levels of total output per capita,' the Unleash Prosperity authors show. Thus, in the 10 states with the highest percentage of immigrants, output per capita is nearly 40 percent higher than in the 10 least immigrant-intensive states. To be sure, correlation may not prove causation, and immigration is not the only factor affecting economic output. But it is hard to dispute that immigration and growth go together. Advertisement What is true nationally is true locally. At a presentation I attended in 2012, Boston's then-mayor Thomas Menino rattled off a slew of numbers that underscored how much foreigners added to the city's prosperity. There were 8,800 immigrant-owned small businesses in Boston, Menino said, producing nearly $3.7 billion in annual sales and employing more than 18,000 people. At the time, immigrants living in Boston were spending $4 billion per year, generating $1.3 billion in state and federal taxes. Since 2012, the To fully understand why robust immigration boosts American prosperity, it is crucial to take into account the contributions of their children . The United States would never have become the world's foremost economic powerhouse if not for the innovations of first-generation Americans — men and women whose parents were immigrants. Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple, was the son of an immigrant from Syria. Larry Ellison, creator of the software firm Oracle, was born to a single mother from Ukraine. Jeff Bezos was raised by Miguel Bezos, who immigrated from Cuba. Henry Ford's father came to America from Ireland. Advertisement Needless to say, millions of other first-generation Americans, though not as famous or as rich as the megabillionaires, have contributed to every American industry and field of endeavor. And in the process they have typically risen to greater heights than their foreign-born parents. 'Since immigrants arriving in America are typically poor (particularly these days because of the large recent inflow of relatively unskilled illegal aliens), immigrant poverty rates are higher than that of native-born Americans,' the three authors observe. 'But poverty among their adult children is typically below that of the native born. Moreover, while immigrants themselves are more likely than native-born Americans to receive graduate or professional degrees, their education is modest relative to their own children, who exceed native-born Americans in terms of high-level educational attainment.' In short, without immigrants and their children, the United States would be a poorer, duller, less influential, less desirable nation. That is especially true given the crisis of America's 'birth dearth,' since immigrants tend, on average, to be younger and to have more children than natives. According to Census Bureau calculations, the number of working-age US-born Americans is projected to fall by 5.3 million between now and 2040. Over the same span, the population of working-age immigrants is expected to grow by 1.9 million. Immigration has always been the great growth hormone of American history. More immigrants have always meant more economic development, more innovation, more cultural richness. That is as true today as it has ever been — and it is compounded by the fact that the US economy desperately needs more workers. Border control is not incompatible with a policy of welcoming immigrants with open arms. And the surest way to dissuade illegal immigration is to create more opportunities for would-be Americans to immigrate lawfully. Advertisement Anti-immigrant demagoguery may excite some in the MAGA camp; there has always been an appetite for Expanding legal immigration is a pro-growth, pro-worker, and pro-sovereignty agenda. It is the best way to strengthen the rule of law, suppress mayhem at the border, and maintain America's role as a safe haven for the oppressed — all while attracting the young and dynamic workforce on which US growth depends. We have always needed more immigrants. Now, as the United States is about to enter its second quarter-millennium, we need them more than ever. To open our gates to striving would-be Americans is to turbocharge the economy and enrich the American way of life. Much has changed since This is adapted from the current , Jeff Jacoby's weekly newsletter. To subscribe to Arguable, visit . Jeff Jacoby can be reached at
Yahoo
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Eddie Vedder Raises Awareness for Rare Disease in New Docu Clip
Eddie Vedder and his wife Jill share why they've become so heavily involved in the Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) community in an exclusive clip from Matter of Time, a new documentary about the Pearl Jam singer and his efforts to raise money and awareness for those suffering from the rare genetic disease. In the clip, Jill Vedder reveals that she first learned about EB when the child of one of their friends was diagnosed with the disease. 'We were just like, 'This is the most crazy, brutal, intense thing I've ever seen,' and what can we do?' she says. More from Rolling Stone MTV's the State Look Back on Early Years in New Documentary: 'It Was Intense in Every Way' New Doc Explores How Julia Sweeney's 'SNL' Favorite Pat Became a Complex Nonbinary Icon USC's SoCal VoCals Are Pitch Perfect in 'Just Sing' Documentary Trailer ''Okay, maybe we can talk about this, and just start small and see what happens.' I see people on the street or when I go to shows when they're playing and there's always an awesome Pearl Jam fan that will come up to me and say, 'My god, I love what you guys are doing for the kids with EB.'' Matter of Time, which is premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival, is set against the backdrop of Vedder's Seattle benefit show in 2023 to raise funds for the disease, and features personal stories from parents and young patients impacted by the disease. 'The closer you get to this community and the more you understand it, you cannot escape how difficult the challenges are for these families,' Eddie Vedder says in the clip. 'We've had to clear some hurdles already that are examples of why you can have faith and why you can have hope, but the tricky part is patience.' Eddie continued, 'If raising funds and raising awareness, if those things are able to fuel the process, and the scientific end of finding a cure and how to apply it. It feels like just a matter of time.' (The film shares its title with Vedder's 2020 song of the same name, a track he wrote in tribute to 'everyone worldwide afflicted with EB.') In addition to Vedder's music, Matter of Time — directed by Matt Finlin and executive produced by Jill Vedder — also features an original score by Broken Social Scene. 'Eddie's presence is in every frame, whether he's physically there or not. His leadership, his love for Jill and their dedication to the EB community, his relentless belief that this can be cured — it shaped the spirit of this film,' Finlin tells Rolling Stone. 'He doesn't just fundraise; he instills purpose. He makes the world stop and listen, then act. I think the real measure of Eddie's influence isn't just what you see onscreen, it's in what you feel after watching it: that we're all part of this, that we must be part of this. 'This is a story of rare disease, but even more so, it's a story of rare community,' Finlin adds. 'A group of people who've decided that this isn't just about surviving — it's about treatments, it's about curing. It's about taking big swings. And they've backed that hope with action. Michael Hund, the CEO of EB Research Partnership has a great quote in the film: 'All of us in this community that have the profound honor of serving those that battle EB, our duty is to give them something to march to, that illuminates an end game.' Matter of Time is a love letter to that fight.' As for Broken Social Scene's score, Finlin said of working with the band's frontman Kevin Drew, 'When I told him about the film, he simply asked the band, 'Are you in?' And they were. They gave their time, their talent, and created something truly special. Their music sits alongside Eddie's performances in a way that feels seamless. The emotional current they bring to the film is something I'm deeply proud of. Honestly, I'd love to hear more of it.' Matter of Time will premiere Thursday at the Tribeca Film Festival; the opening screening will also feature an intimate acoustic performance by the Pearl Jam singer. { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 1, }, pmcCnx: { singleAutoPlay: 'auto' } } }, playerId: "d762a038-c1a2-4e6c-969e-b2f1c9ec6f8a", mediaId: "21101e80-0f42-4df6-80d7-29f307bf559c", }).render("connatix_player_21101e80-0f42-4df6-80d7-29f307bf559c_2"); }); Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked

17-05-2025
- Sport
Hail, Hail: 3 homers propel Mariners to 5-1 win vs. Padres in Vedder Cup opener
SAN DIEGO -- J.P. Crawford homered on Stephen Kolek's first pitch and Rowdy Tellez and Cal Raleigh each added a two-run shot for the Seattle Mariners, who beat the San Diego Padres 5-1 Friday night in the opening game of the inaugural Vedder Cup. Rookie Logan Evans (2-1) pitched six strong innings for the Mariners, who took a 1 1/2-game lead over the Texas Rangers in the AL West. The Padres came in trailing the Los Angeles Dodgers by one game in the NL West. The annual interleague series between the teams that share a spring training complex was informally known since 2011 as the Vedder Cup, a reference to Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder. Vedder, who is actually a Chicago Cubs fan, spent some formative years in San Diego before moving to Seattle and joining the fledgling band in 1990. The two teams formalized the competition in March, with the winner getting a trophy featuring a guitar provided by Vedder. Pearl Jam was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2017. The teams play again in Seattle Aug. 25-27. The Padres and Mariners will support EB Research Partnership, a charity co-founded by Eddie and Jill Vedder dedicated to funding research to discover treatments and cures for Epidermolysis Bullosa. Crawford's homer was his fourth. Tellez also connected to right with two outs in the fourth, with Raleigh aboard on a walk. It was his seventh. Raleigh homered to left, his 14th, after Julio Rodriguez singled leading off the sixth. Evans held the Padres to seven hits while striking out three and walking one. Only four Padres reached scoring position. Kolek (2-1) was coming off his first career complete game in a 21-0 win at Colorado last Saturday. He allowed five runs and eight hits in five innings, with four strikeouts and one walk. Crawford set the tone with his 357-foot homer over the home run porch in the right field corner. Crawford's 14 leadoff homers are second in Mariners history behind Ichiro Suzuki's 37. Mariners RHP Emerson Hancock (1-2, 6.91 ERA) and Padres RHP Nick Pivetta (5-2, 3.05) are scheduled to start Saturday night. ___


San Francisco Chronicle
17-05-2025
- Sport
- San Francisco Chronicle
Hail, Hail: 3 homers propel Mariners to 5-1 win vs. Padres in Vedder Cup opener
SAN DIEGO (AP) — J.P. Crawford homered on Stephen Kolek's first pitch and Rowdy Tellez and Cal Raleigh each added a two-run shot for the Seattle Mariners, who beat the San Diego Padres 5-1 Friday night in the opening game of the inaugural Vedder Cup. Rookie Logan Evans (2-1) pitched six strong innings for the Mariners, who took a 1 1/2-game lead over the Texas Rangers in the AL West. The Padres came in trailing the Los Angeles Dodgers by one game in the NL West. The annual interleague series between the teams that share a spring training complex was informally known since 2011 as the Vedder Cup, a reference to Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder. Vedder, who is actually a Chicago Cubs fan, spent some formative years in San Diego before moving to Seattle and joining the fledgling band in 1990. The two teams formalized the competition in March, with the winner getting a trophy featuring a guitar provided by Vedder. Pearl Jam was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2017. The teams play again in Seattle Aug. 25-27. The Padres and Mariners will support EB Research Partnership, a charity co-founded by Eddie and Jill Vedder dedicated to funding research to discover treatments and cures for Epidermolysis Bullosa. Crawford's homer was his fourth. Tellez also connected to right with two outs in the fourth, with Raleigh aboard on a walk. It was his seventh. Raleigh homered to left, his 14th, after Julio Rodriguez singled leading off the sixth. Evans held the Padres to seven hits while striking out three and walking one. Only four Padres reached scoring position. Kolek (2-1) was coming off his first career complete game in a 21-0 win at Colorado last Saturday. He allowed five runs and eight hits in five innings, with four strikeouts and one walk. Key Stat Crawford's 14 leadoff homers are second in Mariners history behind Ichiro Suzuki's 37. Up next Mariners RHP Emerson Hancock (1-2, 6.91 ERA) and Padres RHP Nick Pivetta (5-2, 3.05) are scheduled to start Saturday night. ___